This book was born from a single mission: to reveal why some books crack an Amazon Best Seller Rank (BSR) under 75,000—while others never come close—and why a few spike to that elite threshold only briefly. What does BSR 75,000 really mean? According to online sales ranking calculators and our test data, it translates to ~2 books sold per day. At $6.95 profit per book: Daily: $13.90 Monthly (30 days): $417 Annually: ~$5,000 Real-world proof: Aug 17 & Sep 30, 2025: 4 books held BSRs under 75,000. Today (Oct 30, 2025): 5 books have smashed below 75,000. Our test books tell a different story: Top performer (Sep 30): BSR 91,000—with just 4 sales that month (~0.13 books/day). Now (Oct 2025): None under 600,000 BSR (likely due to zero Amazon ads). The harsh reality for most books? BSRs in the millions = 0–1 sale/day = peanuts in profit. We acquired and examined all books reaching a BSR of 75,000 over the past two years. A clear trend emerged: each contained inaccuracies and false claims, such as references to nonexistent coins like a 1967-D Lincoln cent. In the last two months, no new releases have reached this threshold. The investigation grew into PowerPoint presentations cataloging each book’s errors and falsehoods. This revealed deeper issues—authors using aliases with fake/AI profiles and plagiarism error photos, plus coordinated groups inflating books with five-star reviews. Research Goals Understand BSR Dynamics: Why do some books reach and sustain a BSR under 75,000 for weeks, months, or longer? Research shows that books advertised on Amazon, bolstered by farmed reviews, and featuring catchy wording on the cover or in the listing gain a ranking advantage—though it is not foolproof. Why do people buy books from non-credible sources? Uneducated collectors purchase books written by unknown novices. What do book reviews accomplish? Book reviews accomplish little, as few people read them. The star rating can influence sales, but 100% of books ranked under 75,000 BSR are manually managed to keep a rating above 4.0 - A book with 105 reviews and a 4.8-star rating would require 20 additional one-star reviews, without any recent reviews of other star ratings, to lower its average to 4.3. Another 15 one-star reviews would be needed to drop the book to 4.0. What impact does the book review rating have on the BSR? It is apparent that books with a high number of reviews (farmed) attain a higher BSR status. What impact does presentation have on the BSR ranking? Most books share similar color schemes and design styles, but this alone doesn't ensure success. Books with poor cover designs invariably fail. Books touting success with buzzwords to grab attention do have an edge, but plenty of successful books thrive without exaggeration.