Monthly Archives: August 2010

News

Merlin Wolfhound To Cease Publishing

UPDATE: CHENILE KEOGH from Merlin has contacted IPN to clarify the position of Wolfhound titles saying, ‘this situation does not effect the Wolfhound list, all the Wolfhound titles are still on sale and will be for the foreseeable future.’


Merlin Publishing the Dublin based non-fiction publisher is to cease its publishing activities for the forseeable future.

In a statement to Irish Publishing News the company said that ‘Due to the very significant downturn in the book trade which has seriously affected the level of sales of books, the Directors of Merlin Books Limited (trading as Merlin Publishing under the Merlin imprint), have made the decision to cease its current publishing activities. As a consequence, Merlin Publishing will not be releasing any new titles for the foreseeable future.’

Gill & Macmillan Distribution, who had acted as the publishers distribution agents, announced that they had ceased ‘acting as distributor to Merlin Publishing with immediate effect.’ They further said that ‘All future orders, returns requests and queries should be addressed directly to Merlin Publishing.’

Primarily known for its true crime titles like, Paul William’s Crime Wars and Gangsters, Merlin also publishes the Wolfhound list which it acquired from that list’s founder Seamus Cashman in 2001.

It is unclear from Merlin’s statement how this move affects the remaining staff at the publisher.

In 2008, following concerns over material about Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB) investigations contained in Paul Williams’ bestselling Crime Wars, Merlin was forced to withdraw the book from sale.

A finding of contempt followed and in January 2009 High Court judge, Mr Justice Brian McGovern imposed a fine of €5000 plus costs on the company.

Later that year Merlin was forced to lay off a number of editorial and marketing staff.

News

Guardian first book award longlist ranges around the world


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Guardian first book award longlist ranges around the world” was written by Richard Lea, for guardian.co.uk on Friday 27th August 2010 14.32 UTC

The past vies with the future and poetry with prose on the longlist of the 2010 Guardian first book award, which was announced today. The 10 debut titles in the running for the £10,000 award range from dystopian fiction to popular psychology, and span the globe from Somalia to Finland, Kashmir to Winston Churchill’s family home in Kent.

War stalks the pages of the best-known novel on the list, Nadifa Mohamed’s Black Mamba Boy, which was longlisted for the Orange prize and has already won the 2010 Betty Trask award. Mohamed takes the story of her father, who left Somalia as a boy and settled in the UK after crossing Africa, and transforms it into fiction inflected by the African tradition of praise poetry. Starting as a 10-year-old boy in 1930s Somalia and journeying through Djibouti, Eritrea, Sudan and Egypt to freedom in Britain, Mohamed’s main character witnesses key moments in the African experience of the second world war and embodies the itinerant experience of the Somali community.

According to the chair of the judges, the Guardian’s literary editor Claire Armitstead, Mohamed is just one of a group of young British authors on the longlist who are expanding the territory of the novel.

“This year’s longlist brings together a younger generation of writers who have moved beyond the social realism of Martin Amis and Ian McEwan, and are pushing at the boundaries of realist fiction,” she said.

Armitstead also cited Rebecca Hunt, whose novel Mr Chartwell imagines the depression that haunts both Winston Churchill and a young woman in Battersea as a huge black dog, and Ned Beauman, who explores Nazism, eugenics and entomology in Boxer, Beetle, as responding to the changes in publishing and wider society with fiction that enlarges the possibilities of the novel.

Speaking to the Guardian, Beauman, who expressed his “delight” at finding himself on the longlist, agreed that there was an impulse towards experimentation, but not necessarily in imposing what he called “the literary equivalent of recessional austerity measures”.

“Paring away plot, character, humour, lyricism, humanity is more often boring than it is bold,” he said. “The Americans know this, and indeed all I did in Boxer, Beetle was smuggle a few postmodern devices across the Atlantic, but at the moment a lot of British readers seem to be falling for this idea that the most interesting fiction has to involve rather dated Modernist self-flagellation.”

After the success of projects as various as Inglourious Basterds and The Kindly Ones, he confessed himself unworried by the difficulty of attracting readers to a story which combines the Third Reich and cockroaches. “What has emerged as a bigger obstacle is that everyone finds all the characters so horrible,” he said, “which had honestly never occurred to me when I was writing it.”

Steven Amsterdam, whose episodic novel Things We Didn’t See Coming considers how we might retain our humanity in a future ruled by environmental and technological catastrophe, and Maile Chapman, whose Your Presence is Requested at Suvanto evokes life in a 1920s Finnish asylum, are the two remaining novelists on the list.

Alexandra Harris looks back at the early 20th century through a different lens in Romantic Moderns, a study of how English writers, painters, gardeners, architects, critics and composers imbued the artistic revolutions coming across the channel with a nostalgic sense of place. Daniel Swift considers the lack of imagination that powers modern warfare in Bomber County, an investigation into the death of his grandfather which was sparked by Robert Graves’s observation that the second world war produced no great poets. Basharat Peer, meanwhile, reports from the frontline of the conflict between India and Pakistan in a return to his troubled homeland of Kashmir in Curfewed Night.

Kathryn Schulz’s Being Wrong, an exploration of how our convictions shape our lives despite being riddled with error, and Katharine Towers’s The Floating Man, a collection of poetry haunted by music and water, complete the list.

Armitstead will be joined on the judging panel by the artistic director of the ICA, Ekow Eshun, the author Adam Foulds, the biographer Richard Holmes, the actor Diana Quick, the Guardian’s deputy editor, Kath Viner, and Stuart Broom from Waterstone’s, who will represent the views of five reading groups hosted in Waterstone’s bookshops around the country.

Last year’s winner was the Zimbabwean writer Petina Gappah, for her collection of short stories, An Elegy for Easterly. She joined a roster of winners from the 12-year history of the award that includes Zadie Smith, Alex Ross and Jonathan Safran Foer.

The shortlist for this year’s prize will be announced in late October, with the winner revealed at the beginning of December.

The longlist

Fiction

Mr Chartwell by Rebecca Hunt (Fig Tree)

Boxer, Beetle by Ned Beauman (Sceptre)

Things We Didn’t See Coming by Steven Amsterdam (Harvill)

Your Presence is Requested at Suvanto by Maile Chapman (Cape)

Black Mamba Boy by Nadifa Mohamed (HarperCollins)

Non-fiction

Bomber County: The Lost Airmen of World War Two by Daniel Swift (Hamish Hamilton)

Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error by Kathryn Schulz (Portobello)

Romantic Moderns: English Writers, Artists and the Imagination from Virginia Woolf to John Piper by Alexandra Harris (Thames & Hudson)

Curfewed Night: A Frontline Memoir of Life, Love and War in Kashmir by Basharat Peer (Harper Press)

Poetry

The Floating Man by Katharine Towers (Picador)

• All titles on the Guardian First Book Award longlist are available at a discount from the Guardian Bookshop. Go to guardian.co.uk/bookshop or ring 0330 333 6846

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

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Irish ebooks Irish Top Ten News

Irish Top Ten Ebooks For August 2010

Starting today with the figures for August, and monthly from now on, Irish Publishing News will report the Top Ten Bestselling ebooks through Eason’s ebook store.

Obviously this is only one outlet and the figures for ebook sales are in that way somewhat biased. However until we can secure more sales data from other sources, they’ll remain the best we have.

Interestingly they represent a very different top ten then the weekly print top ten (for the lastest see here). Though this list will cover fiction and non-fiction, no fiction title has made the list.

According to Stephen Boylan, Eason Books Purchasing Manager, the best selling non-fiction title is Matt Cooper’s Who Really Run’s Ireland, but it isn’t selling enough to make the top ten.

Boylan also said, ‘Non-fiction (including academic) is a strong seller, but it tends to be spread across a wider range of titles whereas the new titles in fiction have repeated hits.’

And so, courtesy of Easons, the first Irish Top Ten Ebooks:

1) Pieces of my Heart by Sinead Moriarty
2) The Help by Kathryn Stockett
3) The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown
4) The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas
5) The Radleys by Matt Haig
6) The Passage by Justin Cronin
7) Legend of a Suicide by David Vann
8) The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver
9) Champagne Kisses by Amanda Brunker
10) Breaking Dawn by Stephenie Meyer

Links

Daily Links 26/08/2010

A rather excellent video featuring Jamie Byng, who’ll be appearing at Mountains To Sea in Dun Laoghaire in September


Hatched | everything I want to say on one page
David discusses blurbs, including his own!
Read more…

Upwardly mobile | moving in and what not
And he discusses new digs!
Read more…

Book Launch: Renegades: Irish Republican Women 1900-1922
Ann was on Pat Kenny yesterday, interesting book this one.
Read more…

Moving on
This really should be read, considered, parsed, filed and re-visited by publishers across the globe. It’s message, however unpalatable, is a vital one!
Read more…

Gollancz appoints Nash as digital publisher
On a very selfish level I admire Gollancz as a publisher, if only because they publish some of the finest sci-fi and fantasy.
Read more…

Miriam O’Callaghan and Mercier Press title
And why wouldn’t they? (I commissioned Moxie while working at Mercier Press)
Read more…

Sell, Socialise and Survive at the Frankfurt Book Fair
Good advice on Frankfurt. IPN will be there so don’t be afraid to send us your stories and releases!
Read more…

Edinburgh
Nice note on Edinburgh from Laura!
Read more…

Waterstone’s to open bar and restaurants
I think this makes sense, but don’t quote me on it!
Read more…

Samsung launches e-reader with W H Smith
When will the ebook and ereading bug bite home here? 
Read more…

PW Select: A Quarterly Service for Self-Published Authors to Launch in December
Publishers Weekly will launch a quarterly magazine in December focusing on announcements and reviews of self-published titles. However, listed self-published titles will come at a fee of $149 to the author and reviews will only be on selected titles.
Read more…

Publicity for Mercier Press titles
Three of Mercier Press titles were reviewed in national papers at the weekend.
Read more…

Reivew: Rules for a Perfect Life by Niamh Greene
IN Rules for a Perfect Life, each of the 27 chapters, like those in some self-help manuals, is headed by a maxim, which will, if followed, apparently change your life for the better.
Read more…

Tales of the Burren, and other places
A nice list of new local history titles
Read more…

Ireland’s desperadoes of the veld
Masked Raiders: Irish Banditry in Southern Africa, 1880-1899, By Charles van Onselen
Read more…

Book Club: Tenderwire by Claire Kilroy
An interesting move this!
Read more…

Review: Jumping in Puddles by Claire Allan
The Balamory lookalike seaside village of Rathinch may look postcard-perfect to summer visitors. But for locals who live there all year, it is a place of squinting windows, a hotbed of righteous gossip.
Read more…

Event Listings News

Tim Waterstone To Discuss The Future Of Books In Dun Laoghaire

Founder of the Waterstone bookshop chain, Tim Waterstone will join, Jamie Byng, whose publishing house Canongate published Barack Obama’s Dreams From My Father and the global success, Life Of Pi, author Matthew Kneale and journalist Rachel Cooke in the Pavilion Theatre, Dun Laoghaire to debate the future of reading, writing and books.

The session takes place on Sunday 12th September at 1.45pm as part of Dun Laoghaire Rathdown’s book festival, Mountains To Sea which is entering it’s second year in 2010.

The discussion comes at a time of great change in the world of books and the panel will explore this new digital landscape. With the launch in Ireland of Apple iPad and news that Amazon’s newest Kindle device is both the best selling Kindle ever and the best selling product on Amazon there will be much to discuss.

Author Events Books & Authors

Peter Andre To Sign Books In Eason O'Connell Street.

Peter Andre is to sign copies of his book, My World In Pictures and Words in Eason O’Connell Stree, Dublin on Saturday 28th August.

The book, published by Penguin, covers Andre’s rise to stardom, his marriage to Katie Price, and the tumultuos times of the break up of that relationship.

It costs €17.99 from Eason and can also be bought from The Book Depository for around €15.

Irish Top Ten

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 21/08/2010

You know that school isn’t far away when the Maths Tables top the charts. Dan Brown scores another stellar week and Stieg Larsson‘s amazing performance continues. Rhonda Byrne, whose The Secret was such a phenomenal success a few years ago is back in the top ten with her new book The Power.

Emma Donoghue has sustained her incredible performance but she and  Sinead Moriarty, whose Pieces of My Heart remains in the top ten (and thus still technically number one in original fiction though Emma also sold 141 hardback copies of Room, which puts her over Moriarty’s unit sales, but who is counting!), are the only Irish writers still in the top ten.

1: Maths Tables , 1,876
2: The Lost Symbol, Dan Brown, 1,829
3: The Girl Who Played with Fire, Stieg Larsson, 1,776
4: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Stieg Larsson, 1,689
5: The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest, Stieg Larsson, 1,590
6: The Help, Kathryn Stockett, 1,492
7: Pieces of My Heart, Sinead Moriarty, 1,448
8: The Power, Rhonda Byrne, 1,445
9: Room, Emma Donoghue, 1,400
10: Don’t Blink, James Patterson, 1,336
Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 21st August 2010

Rights

Jedward Biography Deal For John Blake

John Blake has signed a deal with Prizeman & Kinsella client and Showbiz editor for Irish Sun newspaper, Jennifer O’Brien for an authorised biography of ‘Jedward’, John and Edward Grimes, the former x-factor contestents.

The journalist will have ‘full access to their manic schedule in the run up to the festive season’ according to her agent Yvonne Kinsella.

The book will trace their route from birth to superstardom with exclusive material featuring judges Simon Cowell, Cheryl Cole and Danni Minogue.

According to Kinsella the book will help ‘us understand just what celebrity judge Louis Walsh saw in the two lads who got booed off the stage from day one, only to become overnight sensations securing advertising deals, a number one album in Ireland, their own fashion line, a single due for release in the UK and Ireland for Christmas and a panto role.’

The book will be released in time for christmas and will coincide with the duo’s tur which starts in November.


Images Credit: Flickr user fluterirl
License: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic

News

Irish Independent Launches Book Club

The Irish Independent has launched a book club with a twist.

Instead of hosting the conversation online as with the Irish Times Book Club, the Independent instead is travelling around the country to meet with local book clubs to discuss their monthly choice.

The first book club to feature was The Gutter Bookshop Reading Group which meets once a month in the Gutter Bookshop in Cow’s Lane, Temple Bar.

The book under discussion was Clair Kilroy’s, Tenderwire.

The group is moderated by The Gutter Bookshop’s Bob Johnston, who selects the title for discussion each month.

News

Eason & Son Records €10 Million Loss In 2009

Ireland’s largest bookseller, Eason & Son, lost €10.09 million in the year ending January 31 2010.

The company also experienced a fall in total turnover for all its businesses (including joint ventures and discontinued operations) from €375,355,000 to €313,636,000 or 16.4%.

However the company succeeded in reducing costs in both distribution and administration and had positive cash flow resulting in a €9.5 million cash balance for the year ending 31 January 2010.

At the operating level the company made a small profit of €786,000 and if the loss on discontinued operations is excluded, the firm had an operating profit of €2.3 million on continuing operations.

Although there were exceptional charges in 2009 of €1.65 million associated with the disposal of The British Bookshops Stationers plc, these were considerably lower than the €18.7 million in exceptional charges for 2008.

Among the other details that emerged from their year end accounts is the fact that the deficit of €12.8 million in the pension fund was eliminated by the 2009 rally in stock markets and the fund is now in a modest surplus position of €165,000.

The company also reduced the value of their property assets by €37 million which was the major factor in the value of the assest on the company’s balance sheet falling by 17% to just over €121 million.

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