Tag Archives: Books & Authors

News

Breaking: Hughes & Hughes Dundrum Reopens

Hughes & HughesThe Hughes & Hughes bookstore in The Dundrum Town Centre has reopened. Staff at the Dundrum Centre confirmed that the store was open and is trading from the ground floor of the old Hughes unit which is located by the Snow and Rock store.

According to the Hughes & Hughes website, Sivota Ltd, a company formed in April, have ‘purchased some of the assets of the former Hughes & Hughes Ltd.’

Dundrum is the first of the chain to reopen, it is not clear yet how many of the old chain will resume trading.

More news as we get it!

Links

Daily Links 20/05/2010

Strong words here by Toibin!

Readers Festival
Nice pics of Laura at the Kildare Readers Festival
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December: Borrowing Habits of a Nation
Pleased that Brooklyn was more borrowed than the lost symbol in December 2009!
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Kobo Powers its First International eBook Store
I have thoughts on this, too much for a link post!
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Broken Spine #26 – Travel Guides
The Culch does travel guides to Ireland!

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JG Farrell wins the Lost Man Booker Prize
This is a really interesting result.
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Comment & Features

Guest Column: My Business Is Your Business

The Gutter Bookshop SignOur guest columnist this week is Bob Johnston a former Hughes & Hughes buyer who left the company back in 2009 to set up his own independent bookstore. The Gutter Bookshop website can be found here and their Facebook page and Twitter stream are very active.


Six months ago we opened The Gutter Bookshop in the middle of a recession and in a climate where small independent businesses are being forced to close at an alarming rate.

Time will tell if we are mad to do it but we went with our eyes, and our ears, open.

The following are statements from the original business plan written in 2007:

  • As other Dublin booksellers have emphasized size and range as key marketing offers, The Gutter Bookshop would concentrate on offering a level of service not available elsewhere.
  • Local customers will be looking for quality, a fast and reliable service, along with a competitive offer and a sense of ownership.
  • Independent bookshops have become successful due to strong links with a local community, innovative offers that are not dependent on price, and by developing their ‘independent’ stance.
  • Customers should have a sense of involvement and recognition in the business.

Small businesses cannot hope to compete with larger businesses by offering their customers the same things as their larger competitors. They need to find a USP (Unique Selling Point) and for many small businesses this involves building personal relationships with their customers.

We currently run a website that includes a personal blog, a Facebook page, a Twitter account, and a monthly mailing list which allows us to talk to and, most importantly, listen to approximately 2,500 potential customers.

We currently run a website that includes a personal blog, a Facebook page, a Twitter account, and a monthly mailing list which allows us to talk to and, most importantly, listen to approximately 2,500 potential customers.

This is on top of our regular in-store events which encourage new people to visit the store and become involved with its development. We also have a number of regular customers who give us feedback on what they like, and sometimes dislike, about the store. It is hard work at times staying on top of it all but it allows us to ‘tweak’ our business to meet our customers’ needs and expectations, and to involve them in the way the bookshop develops.

We use social networking (Facebook, Twitter) to understand our customers but also to make them feel they are part of our business, that they ‘own’ part of our store. We listen and respond to their comments and questions and offer opinions of our own just like any conversation between friends.

Small businesses are personal, and whilst care needs to be taken to remain professional and courteous, it’s also important that people recognize that there are people behind the logos and that these people want to engage and have conversations with them.

Will it be enough to keep this newly born business alive? I don’t know. But I do know that we have a lot of people who are enthusiastic about our business and are willing to engage with us on making it a success, and that gives us a great deal of encouragement, and a sense of purpose.

News

Mary McAlese Announces The Inaugural Laureate na nÓg

Laureate na n-ÓgSiobhán Parkinson has been announced by President Mary McAleese as Ireland’s first Laureate na nÓg in na ceremony today in the Arts Council. She will hold the position for two years.

Established by a combination of the Arts Council, the Office of the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs, Children’s Books Ireland and Poetry Ireland the Laureate will promote children’s literature and build engagement wit young readers. The role is also supported by Eason’s and by the Irish Times.

Parkinson writes for both children and young adults whose work has been translated in several languages.  She has won the Bisto Book award as well as been shortlisted for that award and several others. Most  recently she co- founded New Island’s children’s imprint, Little Island.

Pat Moylan, Chairman of the Arts Council, said, ‘The Arts Council is proud to initiate Ireland’s first laureate for children’s literature. Laureate na nÓg seeks to broaden and enrich young people’s imaginative worlds, to encourage a love of reading and to inculcate the value of literature among children and young people.’

The new laureate Siobhán Parkinson said, ‘I am thrilled and honoured to be chosen as the first Laureate na nÓg. I believe that children’s literature lays the foundations of the imaginative life of a people, and that every child deserves to have access to a reading haven — a well-stocked and well-run library in their school and in their community.’

More information about the Laureate can be sourced here and about Siobhán Parkinson here.

Comment & Features

Harnessing The Ill Wind: Freelancing In A Recession

Proofreading
Alicia McAuley is a freelance editor and book designer. She has run her own business since 2006. You can find out more at www.aliciamcauley.com.


Those of us who provide services to book publishers – copy-editors, proofreaders, indexers, designers, illustrators and so on – depend on those companies for our livelihood. So can we expect that in an unhealthy market, where many publishers are finding themselves in trouble, we will share their fortunes? On the face of it, not necessarily.

On the face of it, in fact, freelancers could be the ones to benefit from the economic ill wind. Redundancies (of which there have been lots, some companies losing up to half their workforce) mean that many publishers’ needs can no longer be met in house. Editing and production are therefore outsourced, leading to a hike in demand for freelancers. Right?

Right. But we must take into account the fact that those who have been made redundant have had to find a new way of making a living. And, in many cases, the very companies that have laid them off comprise the obvious market for their skills. In the absence of new in-house prospects, these people have either left the profession entirely, or – yes – gone freelance. So, as competition in the freelance market increases, it cancels out a good part of the extra demand.

Moreover, publishers have tended, naturally enough, to stretch the resources they have left rather than paying for outsourcing. In-house staff have been expected to mop up a lot of their former colleagues’ work.

And, as we all know, the total volume of work available has gone down. In the academic end of book publishing, cuts in government/university subsidies are now taking their toll, while in more commercial companies there is less sales revenue to play around with. Thus fewer books are being commissioned and there is just less to be done.

Publishers have tended, naturally enough, to stretch the resources they have left rather than paying for outsourcing. In-house staff have been expected to mop up a lot of their former colleagues’ work.

All this seems to paint a grim picture, but, for freelancers, there’s always a bright side to look on. We can take comfort in the idea that, if we do our job well, our existing clients will value us and will keep employing us as and when their resources allow them. A good editor, designer or indexer should and will always be in demand, even if that demand is less than it has been.

Besides, even during the boom, few of us were in it for the money. It is more likely that other things drew us to this way of life. As copy-editors, for example, we probably share a certain delight in the good exercise of judgement, in the acquisition and sound application of knowledge. We probably share the diamond cutter’s satisfaction in the process of grinding, faceting and polishing each idea to its brightest expression. And occasionally, too, we have the pleasure of working on a gem of great value.

We are likely to be independent souls. We like our freedom; we enjoy the control we have over our time and our prosperity. When we find ourselves hunched over a set of proofs at 11 p.m., we don’t resent it because we know that, deadline met, we can enjoy a late start and a long lunch the next day.

A good editor, designer or indexer should and will always be in demand, even if that demand is less than it has been.

Most of the time, too, we have choice. Not being tied down to a particular publisher’s stock-in-trade is a considerable freedom. We may work on an academic monograph one week and a chick-lit novella the next – and, consequently, we will not get fed up with either genre or find our skill set narrowing to the requirements of a certain type of work. Moreover, during these times, there is freedom in not being tied down to the economic fortunes of a single employer.

Perhaps, until the book market picks up, freelance service providers will be galvanised into exploring new markets, developing new client models and finding new directions in which to take our expertise. The recession may well mean that the ways of working that have paid our way in the last few years are no longer viable – at least for now – but, after all, why should that be a bad thing?


Photo Credit


© Alicia McAuley

Links

Daily Links 29/04/2010

DELVIN (Garradrimna) BOOK FAIR
Readings from The Valley of the Squinting Windows by Mary McEvoy and Eamonn Lawlor at the DELVIN (Garradrimna) BOOK FAIR
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Royal Irish Academy
This will be fun I think! See you there?
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A Quick Note On Media 2020
Publishers, why were you not at Media 2020?
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Irish Twitterati | Gadget Republic
David links to Gadet Republic’s take on the Twitterati
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Book Trailers
I’m not a huge fan of book trailers, I think most of them are terrible!
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Python loose in Bantry
Looks like a very good line up!
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News

Gill & Macmillan Acquire Carroll Education Primary Schools List

Mad4MathsGill & Macmillan have acquired the Carroll Education Primary Schools list. The acquisition will bring several classic primary titles into the Gill & Macmillan fold including; Bualadh Bos, Léimis le Chéile, Mad4Maths and Lift Off!

Speaking about the acquisition Dermot O’Dwyer, Managing Director of Gill & Macmillan said “We are excited about this opportunity to increase substantially our profile in the fast growing primary schools market in Ireland.”

The deal also sees a major change at Gill & Macmillan as Jonathan Saint, Managing Director and Publisher of Carroll Education moves to Gill & Macmillan as Publisher: Primary Schools from 4 May 2010.

Carroll Education will provide sales representation for the newly combined primary list a new development for Gill & Macmillan .

Books & Authors

Irish Book Of The Decade Shortlist Announced

The Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards has announced the shortlist for the Irish Book of the Decade.

The public has been invited to vote for their favourite from what is a broad list containing literary fiction, commercial fiction, memoir and autobiography as well as on-fiction, adult’s and children’s titles.

The title with the most votes by the close of voting on May 28th will be awarded a special Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards Irish Book Of the Decade trophy.

The full list is below:

PS I Love You, Cecelia Ahern

The Sea, John Banville

The Secret Scripture, Sebastian Barry

A Long Long Way, Sebastian Barry

There Are Little Kingdoms, Kevin Barry

Havoc in Its Third Year, Ronan Bennett

Heart and Soul, Maeve Binchy

The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, John Boyne

Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer

The Lovers, John Connolly

It’s a Long Way from Penny Apples, Bill Cullen

Bog Child, Siobhan Dowd

Paula Spencer, Roddy Doyle

Tatty, Christine Dwyer Hickey

The Stolen Village, Des Ekin

The Gathering, Anne Enright

Judging Dev, Diarmaid Ferriter

In the Woods, Tana French

The Speckled People, Hugo Hamilton

Foolish Mortals, Jennifer Johnston

Keane, Roy Keane

Walk the Blue Fields, Claire Keegan

Lessons in Heartbreak, Cathy Kelly

With My Lazy Eye, Julia Kelly

This Charming Man, Marian Keyes

Tenderwire, Claire Kilroy

Skulduggery Pleasant, Derek Landy

Molly Fox’s Birthday, Dirdre Madden

Winterwood, Patrick McCabe

Let The Great World Spin, Colm McCann

The Builders, Frank/Cathy McDonald/Sheridan

Memoir, John McGahern

That They May Face The Rising Sun, John McGahern

Back From The Brink, Paul McGrath

The Pope’s Children, David McWillians

A Secret History of the IRA, Ed Moloney

In the Forest, Edna O’Brien

Should Have Got Off at Sydney Parade, Ross O’Carroll Kelly

Star of the Sea, Jospeh O’Connor

Stepping Stones, Dennis/Seamus O’Driscol/Heaney

Yours Faithfully, Sheila O’Flanagan

Netherland, Joseph O’Neill

The Truth Commissioner, David Parks

Connemara: Listening to the Wind, Tim Robinson

Forgive and Forget, Patricia Scanlan

The Parish, Alice Taylor

The New Policeman, Kate Thompson

Brooklyn, Colm Tóibín

The Master, Colm Tóibín

The Story of Lucy Gault, William Trevor

News

Robbie Williams To Endorse Liberties Press Book

Robbie Williams is to endorse, RanDumb: the Random, Dumb Adventures of an Irish Guy in LA by Mark Hayes which Liberties Press will publish in May.

RanDumb follows a year in the life of Hayes, as he moves to the bright lights of LA to pursue a career in acting.

Williams’ endorsement will be four words: “I like book, me”

Comment & Features

Poll: Are Free Author Ebooks A Good Or Bad Idea?


As we reported earlier in the week. Oisín McGann has launched a free ebook partly for promotion and partly as an experiment. But is this development a good idea? Does it devalue content or increase the reader/author link? Let us know what you think!