Current nonfiction authors and books. The latest book reviews, and well talk about the current nonfree open books featured on cspans book tv. And welcome to about books, a program and podcast produced by cspans booktv. Now in a few minutes, well talk with the head of skyhorse publishing, which recently acquired regnery and has become a force in publishing controversy books. But first, heres some of the latest news from the publishing world today show anchor Savannah Guthrie is the latest author to battle scammers who use a. I. Technology within days of releasing her faith based memoir, mostly what god does. Ms. Guthrie was warning her social media followers about book scams that use her name. Quote, so many fakes out there she wrote on her instagram account. I didnt write anything other than the book. Mostly what . God does. No workbooks, no studies, no nothing. The today show followed up ms. Guthries post with an article about the online fakes and tips on how to spot general rated books. Now, earlier this month, sir, can a bookscan reported that 767 Million Units of books were sold last year in the us. Thats down 3 from 2020 to Adult Fiction. Sales grew by 1 . Thats about 1. 5 million books. Its the fifth year of growth in the Adult Fiction sector. The report also noted that young adult sales are driven by dystopian romance and thrillers. Also posted gains. Now childrens books xperia its the steepest decline last year, selling 13. 5 million fewer books than it did in 2022. Now, in the report, circrna industry analyst Christian Mclain offered predictions for 2024 and book sales. She included an expected growth in history and Political Science books. Those genres, quote, typically spike in an election year. She said. If modeled off Market Expectations based on 2016 or 2020, circrna expects a banner year in 2024. And joining us now is the president of skyhorse publishing. So, toni lyons, Tucker Carlson described you as the last radical publisher in the United States. What do you think he meant by that . You know, i think that publishers to a great extent, have become sort of ways for people to just confirm their biases. So, you know, the big Publishing Companies dont want to, you know, published books that upset the people who work for them. They view publishing in a totally different way than i do. So i think that books should be disturbing. They should be dangerous. They should challenge people. That people should seek out books that are controversial shall, you know, that have a totally different point of view than the one that theyre comfortable with. And i dont see the point in people reading books that just sort of confirm all their biases. You know, whats the whats the benefit to the reader there . You know, its sort of maybe easy reading and they can read it while theyre doing Something Else or you know, not you know, theres no need to take notes. There is no need to do any research. Theres no need to think about it. So, you know, i think that that were at this terrible stage in american history, maybe in world history, where people are not interested in really thinking things through and in looking at opposing points of view. And i you know, i find that thats thats really a much bigger danger than the danger of, you know, any ideas. So i think that that there should be this vigorous marketplace of ideas where people disagree, where they, you know, people turn on the television and they hear both sides of all kinds of things. You know, we published a book in the fall of 2020 called the case against Wearing Masks. And at the same time, we published a book called the case for Wearing Masks. And both of them were sort of indepth looks at, you know, what the arguments were. And so i amazon, some of the other big tech platforms took down the case against Wearing Masks because the government had decided that masks were good and that having anything on the marketplace, that challenge, that idea was dangerous. So they were able during that period to get all of the big tech platforms, to get amazon, google, youtube to facebook, instagram, to take down anything that they disagreed with and their, you know, their many cases now that are that are pending where it was clear that people from Government Agencies or people from the exactly of branch actually called up amazon or youtube or other places and told them to take material down and in a sense threatened them. I mean, they have so much power and the Big Tech Companies were scared of, you know, antitrust lawsuit suits or, you know, other regulation. So they pretty much felt that they had to do it. And theres some letters back and forth saying, you know, how do you want this censorship to to go down . Do you want us to just take the book off or take the information off . Or should we amplify it . So those are the kinds of things that i think most americans have believed for for decades in in russia or china, but, you know, not in the United States that here we have access to information and we can decide things for ourselves. So, you know, skyhorse, you know, my goal with skyhorse is to sort of be the preeminent free speech publisher where people can find things that other publishers find are too dangerous to challenging and are afraid to publish. Dont want the hassle of it. So, so i think that theres a real role there and that there are places like regnery that werent doing well because in a sense they were just getting they were getting canceled in the marketplace. And tony lyons, you took that same pro and anti approach with Elizabeth Holtzman and alan dershowitz, the case for and the case against impeaching donald trump. Right. And you know, so so i think thats a thats a really interesting way of publishing books and that, you know, i would like people to buy both of those books and and or to buy the one that they think that they really disagree with. And if their ideas can really stand up, then then they shouldnt be afraid. You know, so if somebody really believes something, why not read the opposite point of view . You know, why not say, where are my strongly held beliefs coming from . Is it that im being indoctrinated . Is it that i just, you know, grew up in a in a certain part of the country . So all the people here have that same point of view. I mean, i grew up in new york city. Im sure that there are a lot of people in new york who have very similar points of view when it comes to politics or some specific issues. And then you go to alabama and you have people with very different points of view. So the narrative in new york is that the people in alabama are, you know, not as intelligent as the people in new york. And im sure that if you ask the people in alabama, they would think that the people in new york are just these crazy woke people who have these misguided views that that cant really stand up. So the idea is that, you know, any idea ought to be able to stand up to argument and, you know, thats what i would like to see much more of in this country. And then theres a theres a much more sinister side of it in that, you know, the big tech platforms, the internet started out as this Incredible Opportunity for just maximum, um, diversity that every kind of idea, you know, was there somewhere and if you were willing to do a little bit of research, you could find it. But then at some point, it kind of all went south. And what happened there is that people discovered that you can control the internet. So that the internet becomes the best possible source of censorship that the tools are so incredibly powerful. So while well, it started out as this opportunity or just this open world where everybody could have a voice, what it winds up being is that you can use bots, you can use specific types of censorship to make sure that its very, very difficult to get opposing points of view. And when it comes to to politics, you can really stifle dissent if you just make sure that nothing that contradicts what your narrative is, you know, can be easily accessed. So that becomes true even with things like, lets say, the iraq war, where we all saw the beginnings of that. So people who said that there werent weapons of mass destruction, you know, were censored, were vilified in some cases, lost their their government jobs. There was a cia agent outed as as punishment for it. So that was the beginning of it. And then you saw things like, you know, the the snowden story where there was a war on whistleblowers. But what its come down to and it really happened during covid, is that anybody who disagreed then just kind of disappeared from the internet. So there were people who who had, you know, decades of building up their online presence, maybe not decades, maybe ten, 15 years, who if the government or if a big tech platform decided that something they were saying constituted misinformation and they could have their whole lifes work just disappear, just taken down with no real recourse, no real way to kind of sue the government or sue youtube or sue google. And that, i thought was just such an incredible turnaround in america, in history and so sad to see. But what it what it winds up being and what it what it really can get to is that any kind of dissent can be labeled as misinformation. So when you looked at at the definition of health, misinformation during covid, it actually became and was described in many places as anything that contradicts the official Government Point of view. So you would have won official Say Something and anybody who contradicted that official then was scrubbed from the internet. So the problem is that once you give the government that kind of power, its not easy to take it back. And, you know, so you can say, well, were in a crisis. So we have to do take certain steps to to protect people, even if there are many people who would then say, well, you didnt actually protect people you protected people making certain products, corporate nations making certain products. But but but thats a long story that doesnt really fit here. But the idea is that you can then take any narrative about any subject and say that its the truth. And because its the truth, anything that contradicts it shouldnt be allowed to be published either in book form or in or in any other form. And that, i think, is sort of fundamentally unamerican. So i really want to combat that. And im working very hard to do that. And and i think, you know, that a company like regnery that has this really story history of publishing conservative views for, you know, 75 years, then sort of found itself not well represented in any independent bookstores for example, many books that that they publish. I mean, i didnt really know the details, but i could see from the books that i was publishing. So when i published Robert F Kennedys book, the real anthony fauci, you know, it was the bestselling book in america. In its first week, it sold 93,000 copies. The New York Times bestseller list made it number seven. They wouldnt accept an ad for it. Big tech platforms wouldnt take ads for it. So it was censored in every possible way. It got no reviews at all. Total media blackout because it was labeled as misinformation, which by the definition that was prevalent then, which was anything that contradict did statements by dr. Fauci were pese misinformation. He represented science. And that was that was where where, you know, the government position had had gotten to. So a book that contradicted him even just by the title. So you didnt have to read any of it to decide that. And the title itself was misinformation because it said that a Government Official might be saying things that were untrue or incomplete or needed further research. Tony lyons, is it fair to say that you published conservative books . I know you just bought regnery and another conservative publisher as well. Yeah. So, you know, we we publish books across the political spectrum. We have many books coming out this this year that are, you know, really solidly can conservative books. We have protrump books, but we also have antitrump books coming out. We have books that are for bobby kennedy. So, you know, its really across the political spectrum with all the different nuances. And thats the kind of publisher that i that i want to be. So when it comes to conservative books, ive been really fascinated by the censorship of those books. So that kind of drew me more towards that kind of publishing and on the, you know, on the democratic side, if, if you have a really wellrespected democrat writing a mainstream book right now, you have five, you know, gigantic Publishing Companies, five companies that, you know, are more than 1,000,000,000 companies that are going to get a bid on those books. But if you have a really great, you know, exciting, interesting, challenging conservative book, there are not many publishers who would be brave enough to publish them now. So thats a its a very strange historical moment. There. And so i wanted to take part in kind of writing what i see as a as a wrong. Youve published woody allen, rfk jr, as you said. Alex jones. So is there anything off limits . You know . Thats always a tough question. And, you know, if if a book explores that point of view and, you know, thats a and its a strong argument for whatever the point of view is, i think its better for the world to have it out there. And i think that that what you find is, you know, when you look at this country now, there really two americas with two totally different narratives of what the truth is. And, you know, i think that thats really, really harmful, really dangerous, but also bad for the American Mind that that we really want the broadest possible spectrum of ideas. And and and the idea that that both sides have, that theres all this missing formation and that that ought to be taken down, you know, really, the truth is decided, like i said before, in the marketplace of ideas and that its much better to have it done in the town square with people making their very best arguments rather than a publisher or or a government or a Big Tech Company deciding for us what the truth is. Some of the other authors published by skyhorse include ted cruz, paul manafort, chris hedges and julian lennon. What where did the name skyhorse come from . The name skyhorse came from an employee who worked at the company many, many years ago. I really liked the name. It doesnt really have much to do with the person that it that it came from, but i had started off thinking that i was going to going to call it pegasus books. And what i what i liked was the idea of something sort of soaring into the clouds, you know, Something Big some some big idea, some new way of publishing. And but at the time that that trademark was taken, you know, theres theres another publisher called pegasus books. So skyhorse seemed like a like a Good Alternative to that. And its a name that i that i really like now, you know, totally separately from the from the history of where the idea of it came from. Well, tony lyons, you started with lions press. Does that still exist . Yes. So my father started lions press in 1985. He was a professor of literature in new york. He he wrote, i believe, 26 books and literally thousands of articles and newspapers and magazines. He still alive. Hes 91 years old, an incredible man. And so he founded lions press and hired me. I had gone to law school, practiced law for about 18 months, and then joined his publishing company. And i helped him run that up until 2001. And then we sold the company and i went with them and and then ran it for the company that bought us for three years. And they are they are still still publishing books. Yes. Well, you keep the regnery imprint two or fold that into skyhorse. Definitely keep the regnery imprint. I think its a great brand and i and id like to, you know, be a good steward of the brands that that we take on. What about i would you publish a book written in a. Yeah. I mean my my feelings there are that you know, its a very complicated area. And i think that that as a free speech publisher that i should be open to all the different historical changes. So, you know, im a little bit skeptical of, you know, sort of how its going to all play out and with certain kinds of books, it it seems like its its its not going to play out. Well. But but but in theory, you know, if it was, for example, somebody was going to write a practical book and it was somebody who was an expert in that area and they had written many, many articles and i then became away for them to sort of shortcut the whole process and say, write a book in my own voice based on my own articles on how to do some specific thing, you know. So to the extent that it would just save them. 500 hours work and then create an author tick book, that was their idea based on, you know, their form of, of, of writing, their style, their ideas, you know, that that, i think isnt a bad thing. And that, you know, any time we can find ways historically to do things more quickly and get a product thats, you know, just y, thats fine. You know, i you know, i think that there are a lot of dangers to it, too. And that word, you know, were starting to to see what some of those are, that theres all kinds of bias that can go into the process of of a i. But but im but im open to anything. Tony lyons founded skyhorse in 2000 657 New York Times best seller. So far more than 10,000 books on the backlist the wall street journal says about him, quote, mr. Lyons doesnt use sensitivity readers and that alone qualifies him as a maverick in todays environment. But hes really an Old Fashioned civil libertarian and wary of power in all its forms. He especially deplores the extent to which social media platforms or traditional media and government seem to have joined hands to combat misinformation. He sees such coercive unity as antithetical to the healthy clash of viewpoints necessary for discovering truth. Tony lyons is the publisher of skyhorse. We appreciate your spending a few minutes with us. Thanks so much. And youre watching about books. A program in podcasts produce by cspans booktv. Well, each week, dozens of new books are published. Heres a few. Author Peter Schweitzer is out with his latest book, blood money why the powerful turn a blind eye while china kills americans. Mr. Schweitzers previous book also focused on china. His 2022 book was red handed how american elites get rich helping china win. Another new book, nick troiano, has released the primary solution rescuing our democracy from the fringes. Mr. Troiano is executive director of unite america, which advocates for election reforms like nonpartisan primaries and independent redistricting. And one other new book to note, former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann and New York University law professor Melissa Murray compiled the four criminal indictments against former President Donald Trump into one book. Its called the trump indictments the historical charging documents with commentary. Now, this book includes a timeline of the four cases. A guide of those charged alongside the former president. And historical comparisons to cases against other former political leaders. Mr. Weissman served as a lead prosecutor in former special counsel Robert Muellers office, and he previously authored the book where law ends inside the mueller investigation. And we want to note one book review this week, the guardians martin pengilly took a look at the washington book, how to read politics and politicians. s by Carlos Lozada of the New York Times. Mr. Pengilly calls the book, quote, an authority of overview of us political publishing in the last decade. And Carlos Lozada, by the way, will be a guest in the coming weeks. On cspans q a program. And this week on book tvs afterwards program, journalist kara swisher talked about her career covering the Tech Industry and its key players. Heres a preview. Burn book is an expression actually mean girls is out now, which is kind of too it is for me, but its a book. You write things you really think about people and youre not. People are supposed to see it. And of course, thats the whole premise of that movie. And you have fun with it. And its sort of gossipy and mean a little bit, but funny. And so i decided thats what i was doing in my memoir of what my 30 years covering silicon valley, the same time that subhead is a tech love story. Because i love tech. Yeah. So i dont want this idea that theres a lot of tropes out there. I know tech is terrible. Its not terrible. Its how how its being used, essentially. And so i want to say i love tech, but let me tell you what happened. Yeah. Yes, journey. Do these people becoming the worlds richest and most powerful people . And a reminder that afterwards airs every sunday evening at 10 p. M. Eastern time on book tv. Well, thanks for joining us for about books, a program and podcast produced by cspans booktv. Well continue to bring you publishing news and new author programs. And a reminder that you can get this podcast on the cspan now app and you can also watch online any time all of our author programs at booktv dot org