But it's still a lot of money for a book that isn't expected to sell.
Btw I don't know what the exact figure was, but I recall reading somewhere that it was over a million
If it was over a million, it would be a seven figure number. Not a six figure number, as you have been saying.
Also, the book does have a (low) best seller ranking, so it apparently was expected to sell enough to make it worthwhile for the publisher. The Bugliosi comment that I pointed out was in response to questions comparing this book’s sales to his earlier #1 best selling books. So it is all relative. I think he was also trying to say that the large amount of time he spent writing Reclaiming History was so great that he wasn’t expecting to ever be adequately compensated monetarily. If you calculate seven years of 80 to 100 hours per week, lets say average of 90, that’s 32,760 hours. If you multiply that by an average attorney’s fee of, lets say, $500 per hour (he would actually command much more), that equals $16,380,000. They would have to sell a lot of books to be able to pay Bugliosi that much money. He apparently was saying that his motivations included other things besides money.