Daily Archives: June 22, 2010

News

Apple's iBooks Available In Ireland

iBooksApple‘s iBooks program is now available for download for the iPhone and iPod Touch, but only after users update their iPhone & iPod Touch operating systems to the new iOS4.

Irish readers do not yet have access to paid titles in Apple’s iBookstore, the iTunes for books, but they can download free Project Gutenberg ebooks to the iPod or iPhone and can also read the free Winnie The Pooh ebook that comes pre-loaded in Apple’s iBooks.

Apple announced today that they had sold 3 million units of the new iPad device since it launch 80 days ago. The iPad has not yet been released in Ireland but news on pricing is due and the device is due to go on sale early in July.

There is no word yet from Apple or Irish publishers on what titles and on what basis ebooks will be available on launch of the iPad and iBookstore.

Four of the largest publishers in the UK, Penguin, Macmillan, Hachette UK and HarperCollins had a presence on Apple’s iBookstore when the iPad launched there. They operate an Agency Model whereby the publisher sets the price and pays the seller, in this case Apple, a set commission.

Event Listings

Publishing Ireland Offering A Frankfurt Bookfair Seminar

Publishing Ireland, the Irish book publishers association, is to hold a seminar on Getting the Most out of Frankfurt 2010. The seminar is targeted at those attending Frankfurt Book Fair this year, those who wish to explore the international market and those who want to learn more about how to apply for translation grants.

Clodagh Feehan, Mercier Press and Fergal Tobin, Gill & Macmillan, will speak about their experiences in Frankfurt and will give practical advice to publishers attending Frankfurt for the first time.

Rita McCann from Ireland Literature Exchange will brief publishers on the supports they offer in terms of translation grants.

The seminar takes place next Tuesday, 29th June, 2.30pm until 4.30pm in the Guinness Enterprise Centre. To book e-mail: info@publishingireland.com

News

Irish Publishing News Welcome Sheena Lambert

Sheena LambertLast week, Irish Publishing News welcomed its first new contributer, Robert Maguire. Today we welcomed a second, Danile Bolger and now it is time to introduce a third, Sheena Lambert whose event review from Joseph O’Connor’s talk at the Dalkey Book Festival is now live.

Sheena Lambert has been an engineer, lectured in waste management, owned a clothes shop, became a full-time housewife and had two boys. Lately she has been bitten by the writing bug and feels a bit like a writing addict (where had it been all her life) and with the little time she has each week she has been scribbling away at a screenplay, the skeleton of a novel and a collection of memoirs/letters to her boys.

I’m delighted to have Sheena on board and I look forward to adding more contributors over the coming months.

Eoin Purcell
Editor, Irish Publishing News

Author Events

Event Review: Joseph O’Connor in Conversation with Martina Devlin

Joseph O'Connor @ The Dalkey Book Festival

Image Courtesy Of The Dalkey Book Festival

Event: Joseph O’Connor in Conversation with Martina Devlin
Location: Dalkey Heritage Centre
Time & Date: 3pm Saturday 19th June 2010


If the crowd at this particular event was any barometer, last weekend’s Dalkey Book Festival will be the first of many.

Held in the airy room at of the Dalkey Heritage Centre, the ticketed event was one of many that were held over the three-day festival. The venue, situated near the ancient St Begnet’s graveyard in the middle of the village, was the perfect setting for the celebrated local author Joseph O’Connor to chat about, and read from, his newest book Ghost Light.

In his gentle voice, a mix of south Dublin confidence and undulating Connemara tones, he explained how the seed of the story was planted in his brain as a young lad who regularly walked past the house in which the playwright JM Synge had lived and died on Adelaide Road. The local connections to the story are of course fascinating and the author had the crowd enthralled with his reading of a passage of the book in which Synge and his surreptitious lover, Molly Allgood, would meet on the train at Glenageary station and travel out to Bray where they could court with some anonymity.

Interestingly, O’Connor noted his own belief in the importance of a character-led story, however when questioned by the audience, it became clear how important theme is to him as a bedrock of his work. Whereas Ghost Light is clearly Allgood’s story, the universal theme of how we often carry the burden of another soul with us through our day, be it a parent, a spouse or a dead lover, was a fundamental part of the book.

A full-time writer with a young family, the author noted in an answer to an audience member that it takes him approximately three years to bring a novel from start to finish. He also explained how writing 5,000 words of a new idea is a good way of ascertaining if the idea has legs or not. He expects to put a number of ideas through their paces when his period of promotion of Ghost Light is complete.

Author and journalist Martina Devlin played the role of facilitator admirably, saying just enough to get the author speaking on a particular topic, keenly aware that the 90% female audience were there to hear this attractive man speak and perhaps to gain a small insight into what makes him the author he is.

Ultimately, the gathering was a nice mix of chat and reading mixed with hilarious anecdotes, in particular with regard to some of the author’s own historical editing errors. O’Connor had the room in hysterics with his opening reading, an excerpt from his book The Secret World of the Irish Male, which shed some light on the harsh realities of book tours for the lesser-known author.

It was clear when time was called on the proceedings that the audience would have gladly stayed another hour to listen to this entertaining local-boy-made-good. It wasn’t so long ago that his name was invariably qualified by reference to a more famous sibling. For sure, at the 2010 Dalkey Book Festival, O’Connor was the quintessential Irish male.

Books & Authors

Orange Prize Winner Barbara Kingsolver To Appear In Dun Laoghaire

Barabara KingsolverBarbara Kingsolver whose novel The Lacuna won the 2010 Orange prize will be appreaing at the Pavilion Theatre in Dun laoghaire on 19 July, 2010.

She will read from her novel and answer questions from the audience.

The event is organised by Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown Libraries as part of their Library Voices series. Tickets cost €10.

Announcement

Irish Publishing News Welcomes Daniel Bolger

Daniel BolgerLast week, Irish Publishing News welcomed its first new contributer, Robert Maguire. Today we welcome a second. Daniel Bolger, has posted his first article.

Dan Bolger is an American book editor at an independent publishing company in Dublin and an occasional book reviewer for The Irish Times.

I’m delighted to have Daniel on board and I look forward to adding more contributors over the coming months.

Eoin Purcell
Editor, Irish Publishing News

Comment & Features

Dublin’s Bargain Book Bonanza

Book Value BookstoreThe book remainder business is booming and bargain bookshops are popping up all over Dublin city centre. You can’t have missed them and that’s probably the point.

Any word preceded by BARGAIN printed in large, high-visibility letters is sure to attract customers in large numbers, even just for a look, especially now, at a time when bargain doesn’t carry the same negative connotations it once did; customers want to pay less and are getting used to doing so.

While the idea of remainders (to say nothing of pulping) is an uncomfortable one for publishers, oftentimes it’s a good way of cutting losses on a book that might not be working.

Bargains Galore
If you wanted cheap books before the arrival of this new breed of bargain bookstore, in Dublin, you went to the now comparatively old-school discount bookshops (which stock new books alongside remainders and second-hand books) like Books Upstairs and Chapters, who place emphasis on quality and range, ambience and loyal customers yet still manage to be pretty cheap.

Books Upstairs, Dame StreetThese new shops are essentially louder Hodges Figgis bargain basements with more windows and brightly-coloured signage. The shop floors are dotted with waist-high stacks of hardbacks and coffee table books priced less than the cost of the round-trip bus fare or petrol it took to get you there.

The fiction sections consist mainly of more prominent authors’ backlists with few or no midlist authors, and vast quantities of large-format hardbacks.

‘we don’t have any regular customers really, it’s just impulse buys.’

Competition
The proximity both in terms of physical location and product, of these new bargain book shops to full priced shops would lead one to think that they must be competing with each other.

However, one bargain shop manager said, ‘We wouldn’t see it as competition – we don’t have any regular customers really, it’s just impulse buys.’

Speaking to managers and staff at both bargain and full-priced bookshops around Dublin, the overwhelming consensus at the shop-level is that they don’t see each other as competition.

Bargain stores acknowledge that they aren’t the same kind of shop – they don’t carry the same stock and ostensibly don’t attract the same customers who came into town intending to buy books.

Traditional retailers are more dismissive of the threat, mainly because they haven’t been hurt by the new arrivals. A bookseller on the floor at a large, city-centre chain said, ‘They just have a lot of the stuff we couldn’t sell – backlists and coffee table books that don’t really sell anyway . . . Most of the discount and quantity buying is done at our corporate headquarters, but we’re getting about the same books in we always did.’
Bargain Books, Grafton Street
Impact
Asked whether customers were buying differently, browsing differently, more annoyed about pricing, an employee at another large shop summed it up with a simple, ‘No.’

One possibility is that the impact of the new bargain stores is not yet visible because it is still only very small. Or maybe it hasn’t yet had time to manifest itself in hard numbers or consumer behaviour; which wouldn’t be unusual for new entrants to a market.

it ultimately remains to be seen what this new player’s effect will be.

It may be as simple as people aren’t stupid, they know the difference. Bargain bookshops provide an outlet for customers who aren’t too picky about what they leave with once it’s decent and the price is low enough.

For customers with a specific book in mind or fussier customers, they are less useful: the best case scenario is there will be one or two titles by an author you like, by an author you’ve been meaning to read (which may or may not be the one you’ve heard of), or one you read a review of some months previously but forgot to buy. In any event, you go in with a different set of expectations.

The past couple of decades have seen the arrival of at least three perceived threats to traditional bookselling and publishers alike; the internet, supermarket booksellers and ebooks. All of these have been selling books with strikingly low price tags.

But inasmuch as every bookselling venue has to play to its strengths and as relatively cheap books are becoming such a commonplace sight even in traditional bookstores, making venue even less and less important, it ultimately remains to be seen what this new player’s effect will be.