Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | B&N ‘developing partnership’ with Waterstones over Nook | The Bookseller

US retailer Barnes & Noble is “developing a partnership with Waterstones to add the Nook to its locations this year”, according to reports on news site Bloomberg Businessweek which quotes an unnamed source “familiar with the situation”.

via B&N ‘developing partnership’ with Waterstones over Nook | The Bookseller.

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Briefly Noted | Trollope is star guest of Gleeson – Books, Entertainment – Independent.ie

The wonderful English novelist Joanna Trollope is the first guest author in the DLR Library Voices series which starts next month. Trollope is the author of 16 highly acclaimed best-selling novels, the latest of which, The Soldiers Wife, deals with the difficulties facing a military wife awaiting her husbands return from a tour of duty in Afghanistan.

via Trollope is star guest of Gleeson – Books, Entertainment – Independent.ie.

News

Ennis Book Festival Launches 2012 Programme

The 2012 Ennis Book Club Festival will kick off with a discussion about the future of reading in the digital age. Running from 2nd-4th March this is the sixth year of the festival.

High profile authors attending this year include: Sheila O”Flanagan, Lynne Reid Banks, Patrick Gale, Kevin Barry and Christine Dwyer Hickey, Maureen Gaffney, Joseph Woods and Fergus Finlay.

‘This is our 6th Book Club Festival which is organised in association with Ennis Town Council and Clare Co Library,’ said Festival Chairperson Ciana Campbell. ‘What started from small beginnings has grown steadily into a nationally recognised event attracting book club members and readers from all over the country.’

Books & Authors

Briefly Noted | Tweet Treats Goes Gourmand

Regular visitors to writing.ie may remember an interview Barbara Scully did with writer Jane Travers last year on the publication of her quirky book, Tweet Treats. You can read the article, Tweet Treats is a Treat For All  here.

We were delighted to hear that this fabulous book was nominated for a Food Writing Award recently and so asked its author Jane Travers to fill us in and tell us all about it.

via Tweet Treats Goes Gourmand.

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NBC News enters sizzling e-book publishing world – Political Bookworm – The Washington Post

Interesting news this:

NBC News has now entered the scramble, becoming the latest entrant in the e-publishing universe. The news organization is launching NBC Publishing, which will focus on turning out enhanced e-books using NBC’s current video and archival footage.

“We have over one million hours of archival video content going back to the ’20s and a really low cost structure to edit it and put it together,” Michael Fabiano, general manager of NBC Publishing, told Digital Book World.

via NBC News enters sizzling e-book publishing world – Political Bookworm – The Washington Post.

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Briefly Noted | Apple and digital publishing: A textbook manoeuvre | The Economist

But at the same time as Apple is working with incumbents, it is also encouraging others to attack them. Much like the App Store democratised the creation of software and blogging platforms spawned new media companies, the iBook Author and Apple’s online bookstore will open up educational publishing to new companies and to individual academics who want to create their own texts. This will lead to an explosion of new textbooks, many of which will compete with those of existing publishers.

via Apple and digital publishing: A textbook manoeuvre | The Economist.

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Briefly Noted | Kindle the fire to self-publishing | Money | The Guardian

Without any formal advertising, Wilkinson’s first book, Locked In – first in a series of crime fiction novels – shot up the iTunes and Amazon book charts. “I got a Twitter message from someone I know, asking if I knew that my book was in the iTunes chart. I was somewhere around number 50. Then it just grew and grew.”

He sold his 100,000th copy on Christmas Eve, making it a “No 1 Amazon Kindle bestseller” in the UK. The selling price was 98p, with Wilkinson keeping 35% of that (approximately 30p after VAT). “It’s not as if I’m retiring to the Bahamas. I still work full time. It’s some extra money but it’s not a life-changing amount – not yet.”

via Kindle the fire to self-publishing | Money | The Guardian.

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Briefly Noted | Will Apple make iMovie for interactive books? — Apple News, Tips and Reviews

Interactive books with feedback and rich content on the iPad aren’t only for kids, of course; here’s a list of some with good grown-up oriented content. Plenty of companies have already been using the iPad as a platform to publish interactive kids’ books. A search on the iTunes Store will pop up everything from digital-only publishers like Atomic Antelope that build beautiful children’s stories for the iPad, to TouchyBooks and several interactive book versions of Disney movies. But we have heard Apple’s announcement is geared toward the younger end of the K-12 set, and this could fit with that idea. It also wouldn’t be a huge surprise if people took a new set of tools for building visual stories with rich content and ran with it and it eventually became much more popular outside of content aimed at younger kids and students.

via Will Apple make iMovie for interactive books? — Apple News, Tips and Reviews.

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Briefly Noted | The way ahead for publishing | Books | guardian.co.uk

Finally, the men and women engaged in publishing need to be bold and exuberant. This is an extraordinary age for writing and reading, and it seems to me that this endeavour will go better if it’s done with a sense of purpose and pleasure, rather than defensively. It won’t turn out well for everyone currently in the business, but so what? If publishing is useful and creates value then it will be of value, whoever is doing it.

via The way ahead for publishing | Books | guardian.co.uk.

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | Study: Book Publishers’ ‘Optimism Waning’ As Digital Transition Continues | paidContent

Depressing new research by Forrester indicates that book publishers are becoming increasingly disheartened about the state of the industry: Only 28 percent of publishing executives think their company will be better off because of the transition to digital, down from 51 percent a year ago.

via Study: Book Publishers’ ‘Optimism Waning’ As Digital Transition Continues | paidContent.