How much is an Oscar nom worth? To booksellers,not much. Five of the nine best picture nominees (American Hustle, The Wolf of Wall Street, Philomena, 12 Years a Slave and CaptainPhillips) are based on books, but the Oscar stamp has done little to boost sales. Wolf, Philomena, A Captain's Duty (the source for Phillips) and The Sting Man (Hustle) haven't cracked Amazon's top 200. Only Slave has seen a bump; factoring in all editions (the 161-year-old memoir is in the public domain), Solomon Northup is the 42nd-best-selling author on Amazon, ahead of Malcolm Gladwell.
After the nominations, Slave jumped to No. 3 on The Wall Street Journal's e-book list. Just ahead of it is Lone Survivor, not a best picture nominee but clearly the season's winner. The 2007 best-seller re-entered the WSJ list ahead of the movie's Dec. 25 release and spent three weeks at No. 1. Sales of both have been fueled by e-books priced below other nominees: $3.99 for Lone Survivor, 99 cents for Slave. Slave director Steve McQueen says it has "sold more in the past six months than in the past 150 years combined."
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