The content business has struggled on many fronts.
Newspapers have closed as social media and digital publishers have taken readers and advertisers. Websites have largely replaced magazines, and streaming music has made CDs, albums, and other physical formats irrelevant.
Over decades covering retail, publishing, and media, I’ve seen how quickly the market has shifted. Print newspapers, magazines, and CDs have faded, while book sales have changed dramatically.
“Mass market unit sales plunged from 131 million in 2004 to 21 million in 2024, a drop of about 84%,” according to Circana BookScan, and sales through October 2025 were about 15 million units, Publishers Weekly reported.
Overall demand for books has fallen as people have moved to digital formats. Now, a publisher that tried to buck that trend, Callaway Arts & Entertainment, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, according to filings posted on PacerMonitor.
Callaway Arts & Entertainment files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
“Callaway Arts & Entertainment, Inc. filed a 11 chapter bankruptcy in the Southern District of New York bankruptcy court on March 23, 2026. This is a voluntary filing; it was assigned the bankruptcy case number #26-10624,” according to Bankruptcy Observer.
The company operates as a publisher that tried to combat trends in the book industry by creating books that leaned into the advantages of having a physical product.
Callaway boldly called itself “the future of content,” on its website.
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The publisher creates highly visual book formats featuring art work, pop-ups, and other interactive features.
“Callaway’s publications are beautiful, whether created for children, art enthusiasts, or pop culture fans,” Hachette Book Group’s Vice President Todd McGarity said in a press release announcing a partnership between the two companies.
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Callaway Arts & Entertainment Chapter 11 quick facts:
Callaway’s books encompass the visual arts, music, pop culture, fashion, photography, and stories for children of all ages. A few of Callaway’s landmark titles include “The Beatles: Get Back;” the 822-page, 3-volume, 1:1 life-sized “Sistine Chapel” trilogy; “Leonardo by Leonardo,” by Martin Kemp; “Passage,” by Irving Penn; “Mark Rothko: The Exhibitions at Pace,” by Arne Glimcher; “Bob Dylan: Mixing Up the Medicine;” “Obama: The Call of History,” by Peter Baker, and “Georgia O’Keeffe: One Hundred Flowers.”
- Debtor: Callaway Arts & Entertainment, Inc.
- Filed: March 23, 2026
- Court: U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York
- Case number: 26-10624
- Chapter: Chapter 11 (reorganization)
- Business: Publisher of illustrated books and multimedia titles
- Founder: Nicholas Callaway
- Headquarters: New York, United States
Source: PacerMonitor
Callaway faces higher costs
Callaway has built its business around creating books that offer value in a physical format. That’s an expensive proposition, even though the company has focused on a small, heavily marketed catalogue.
“Industry inflationary cost pressures and increased costs across our businesses have continued to impact us,” Simon & Schuster Interim Global CEO Nihar Malaviya told Publishers’ Weekly, noting that higher manufacturing, freight, and distribution costs have hurt profits at major book publishers.
Callaway also faces challenges as an independent publisher.
“The publishing industry has undergone significant consolidation over the past two decades. Five major companies — Penguin Random House, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, and Hachette — now control nearly 80% of the U.S. trade market. This concentration gives them greater leverage in negotiations with retailers, printers, and authors, but it also reduces competitive pricing incentives,” Alibaba reported.
Overall trends have also damaged the publishing industry broadly.
“We’re definitely losing accessibility and that’s a huge thing right now, especially in this country, whether it’s libraries being defunded, book bannings happening, one person saying let’s get rid of 200 books because I don’t want my child to read diverse authors,” New York-based literary agent Shelly Romero told The Guardian.
Prices are a factor as well, she noted.
“At the same time when you’re looking, for example, at kid lit, a 14- or 15-year-old is not going to be able to buy maybe a $19.99 or $21.99 hardcover YA book, especially if they’re working a minimum-wage or babysitting job, so it becomes fully inaccessible whereas they could have just gone and picked something up like a mass-market paperback. That affordability was huge. It’s sad to see,” she added.
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