As a book publisher I receive manuscipt permissions practically every day. Sometimes two or three books a day. But seven out of ten of these are introductions to libertarianism or introductions to (...) free market economics. I can tell you that we really don't need any more of these. We have plenty of these.

What I don't see enough of are really well written, well researched books on (...) the life of our times. Where's a sort of anarchocapitalist book on the group anonymous? Where's book "Understanding WikiLeaks" and coming to the defence of WikiLeaks? Where's a book on international piracy? There's still not been a very good, detailed book on what happened to banking since 2008. (...) There's so many topics. Unfortunately, they require a lot of research, a lot of time, a lot of work and some competence as a writer, but there's a tremendous opportunity (...) if we're willing to do the work that's necessary. (...) [We need] serious works that are engaging, factual, that actually look out the window, deal with reality in our times and explain our times in the way that animates the theory and makes it more compelling and believable.

Jeffrey Tucker