Tag Archives: News

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.

SPI Table Quiz

Society of Publishers in Ireland (SPI) is running a Valentines table quiz in aid of the Irish Heart Foundation.

Where: Upstairs in the Stags Head, 1 Dame Court, Dublin 2
When: Thursday, February 9, 2012
What time: 19.00-21.00
How much: €20 per table, 4 per team (capacity for 11 teams so it’s going to be first come-first served)
In aid of: Irish Heart Foundation www.irishheart.ie

RSVP (as soon as you can) to: societyofpublishersinireland@gmail.com
For more details please check out SPI’s website.

The New Irish Publishing News

Irish Publishing News has changed. From now on the focus of the site will be weekly rather than daily.

That means that while there may be news stories posted at other times, the majority of stories will go live on Fridays. This may, over time, impact on the type of stories the site covers and how it covers them, but for now the content will be the same.

It also means that accessing IPN daily may not always yield new content*.

For those who dislike this change, I hope time will convince you that it’s a worthwhile one, for those of you who enjoy the shift, great.

Eoin Purcell
Editor & Publisher
Irish Publishing News 

 

* Other than Briefly Noted posts which will continue to be posted as they arise.

New crowdfunded publishing project signs up major names

An interesting development this.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “New crowdfunded publishing project signs up major names” was written by Alison Flood, for guardian.co.uk on Sunday 29th May 2011 10.30 UTC

Bestselling authors including historian and Monty Python writer Terry Jones, Booker-shortlisted novelist Tibor Fischer and the cloud-spotting Gavin Pretor-Pinney have signed up to a new initiative that bypasses traditional publishers to put writers directly in touch with their readers.

The Unbound.co.uk publishing platform, dreamed up by QI’s John Mitchinson and Justin Pollard, and Crap Towns author Dan Kieran, allows writers to pitch ideas online directly to readers who, if they are interested, pledge financial support. Once enough money has been raised, the author will write the book, with supporters receiving anything from an ebook to a limited first edition and lunch with the author, depending on their level of investment.

The founders, who launched the crowdfunding literary website at the Hay festival, say that it “democratises the book commissioning process by enabling authors and readers to make the decisions about what does or doesn’t get published”. Jones, who said the initiative was “brilliant … just what publishing needs”, is contributing one of the first titles on the site, a Roald Dahl-esque story of vengeful phones and hoovers called Evil Machines. This Life writer and chick-lit novelist Amy Jenkins is pitching “a more reflective book about relationships”, The Art of Losing, and a collection of short stories from Fischer, entitled Crushed Mexican Spiders, is also among the site’s first titles.

Pretor-Pinney is pitching an iPad app that would take users inside clouds, while The Horse Boy author Rupert Isaacson and cultural historian and film-maker Jonathan Meades will also be proposing books to potential readers.

Pitching a project on Unbound is free for authors, with the founders planning to make money through a 50/50 profit share on successful titles. If a book fails to raise enough money to be published, then supporters will either be able to use their investment for another title, or have the cash returned to them.

“We can make a book viable by selling 2,500 to 3,000 copies. Books like that are not hugely appealing to big publishing houses, but there are targeted audiences who could be very well served by them. There could be 10,000 people who like Norwegian steam-train systems from the 1930s – if we can put them together with an author, then it’s worth everybody’s while to do it,” said Pollard.

Authors will have a private area or “shed” on the site, where they will be able to blog, post interviews, and meet their supporters. Readers can choose the amount of money they wish to pledge, from £10, which buys an ebook edition, access to the author’s “shed” and the supporter’s name in the back of the book, to £250, which brings lunch with the author, signed and personally dedicated first editions, goodie bags and ebooks, to funding the whole book.

“It’s a way of stirring things up in publishing – removing the gatekeepers in the middle and saying ‘you’re the readers, you’re the authors – come up with what you want them to do’” said Pollard. “In many ways it’s a very old idea – there are a lot of 19th century cases where books were published by subscription. Because of the internet we have crowdfunding, so we can combine the old idea of subscription with finding your audience on the internet, and get the best of both worlds.”

Other authors supporting the project – but yet to sign up with books – include Bernard Cornwell, who called it “a bloody brilliant idea”, Philip Pullman, who said it was “an idea whose time has come”, and Noam Chomsky, who said its “significance could be quite substantial”.

Jenkins, author of the novels Honeymoon and Funny Valentine, has not published a book for 10 years. She found the idea of working with Unbound for her new title, a “novelised memoir about unfortunate relationships and loss”, “more exciting than getting a publishing deal”, she said. “Two things make it appealing – first, the idea of a ‘shed’ where supporters can visit you. Writing is a really lonely occupation and it sounds very nice. The other is that Unbound is set up by writers for writers. What I really hated about my conventional publishing was all the publicity I had to do. So I liked the idea that as the writer, you are in charge.”

Initially the authors on the site will be selected by its founders, who are also talking to agents about potential projects from their clients. “This is practical, initially, as if we were to open it to everyone there would be so much noise it would be difficult to navigate,” said Pollard. But as the site develops, he hopes to open up an area for new writers to pitch ideas, which, if they collected enough pledges, would move onto the main site. Publisher Faber & Faber is supporting the project, and will sell and distribute trade editions of selected titles under the Unbound imprint.

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

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Book Retail Sales Rise In December

The books, newspapers and stationery segment of retail sales saw a very modest increase in December 2010 of .2% volume and .4% in value when compared with November 2010.

However, the newly released Central Statistics Office data on retail sales in December 2010 show that overall retail sales were down 3.9% in volume when compared to December 2009 while in value terms the figure was 4.1%.

The year on year comparison for books, newspapers and stationery were much worse with value plummeting 9.3% since December 2009 and volume down 10.7%.

The comparison figures are much worse than the data from Nielsen suggested earlier this month. That information suggested that a string Average selling price of €12.38 held off the worst of the volume falls with the four weeks to Christmas finishing down only 3% on 2009.

However, that data related only to book sales reported to Nielsen, which covers only around 70% of the Irish market.

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Announcing IPN Premium

Introducing IPN Premium
Irish Publishing News is launching two products under our new IPN Premium brand.

The first of these new products is The IPN Premium Bulletin. The Bulletin will provide a comprehensive round-up of the most important IPN stories from the previous month as well as other essential content. You can read more about the bulletin and sign up for it here.

The second is The IPN Premium Annual Report On Irish Publishing. The report will feature 20 pages of analysis and commentary on the Irish book publishing industry and associated trades. The report will be published annually from 2010. You can read more about the Annual Report and sign up for it here.

While these products are payment based, the basic IPN services including the daily news and features, and the monthly title listings will all remain FREE.

The site will ALWAYS have the same level of free content as it has had to date and no one who likes the current offering will have to pay a cent for it and nor will they ever have it.

But, for those seeking greater detail, more in-depth analysis and good quality market intelligence, then IPN Premium offers you that.

~~~~

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Jonathan Franzen's book Freedom suffers UK recall


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Jonathan Franzen’s book Freedom suffers UK recall” was written by Rowenna Davis and Alison Flood, for The Guardian on Friday 1st October 2010 19.56 UTC

The American author Jonathan Franzen might justly be called a perfectionist: his latest opus, Freedom, took nine years of painstaking effort to complete inside a spartan writing studio – and is now being widely acclaimed as a modern masterpiece.

So it is particularly unfortunate that, thanks to an apparent mistake by his typesetters, the version published in Britain has been found to be littered with errors.

In a highly embarrassing move, publishers HarperCollins were today forced to offer to exchange thousands of copies after Franzen revealed that the UK edition of a novel dubbed “the book of the century” is based on an early draft manuscript, and contains hundreds of mistakes in spelling, grammar and characterisation.

More than 8,000 copies of the faulty first edition have been sold since it was published last week, with 80,000 hardbacks of the book in print. The mistakes were discovered yesterday.

Franzen told the Guardian that the book, the follow-up to 2001′s Pulitzer Prize-nominated The Corrections, contained “a couple of hundred differences at the level of word and sentence and fact” as well as “small but significant changes to the characterisations of Jessica and Lalitha” – the daughter and the assistant of one of the novel’s central characters.

HarperCollins, who say the errors are mainly typographical, have launched a hurried operation to let purchasers exchange their faulty copy via bookshops or pre-paid post. The new version is being rushed through the printers over the weekend and will be available early next week.

“My main interest is in getting the word out that 4th Estate is starting a free exchange programme,” said Franzen, stressing the error was not the publisher’s.

HarperCollins, which runs the 4th Estate imprint, said the crucial mistake happened when a small Scottish typesetter, Palimpsest, sent “the last but one version” of the book file to the printers. Palimpsest was not available for comment.

“It was just a mistake that happened,” said Siobhan Kenny, director of communications for HarperCollins UK. “It’s too early to say whether action will be taken against the typesetters, but we will still use them. We just want to make sure that all the fans can read the correct version of the books as soon as possible,” she said.

“The US version of the book is fine, so is the audiobook and the ebook. These aren’t errors that affect the plot, they are typographic errors. But obviously Franzen spent 10 years writing this book and he wants everything to be read exactly as he wrote it. He is most concerned about his real fans and he wants to give them the book as he wants it.”

HarperCollins UK has set up a “Freedom recall hotline” for customers who have purchased a copy of the mistake-ridden book. A staff member at the hotline described the situation as “quite frantic”.

HarperCollins is not planning a full scale recall of the 80,000 hardback copies in bookshops for logistical reasons. Such a print run would have cost the publisher around £70,000, estimated fellow publisher John Blake, with distribution and other costs ramping the amount up to around £100,000. “My heart bleeds for them on every level,” he said.

A spokesman for the Waterstone’s chain of bookshops, Jon Howells agreed. “My heart goes out to whoever pressed the wrong button,” he said, adding that the bookseller had not, as yet, received any complaints about faulty copies from its customers. “We’ve not been asked to pull it from the shelves by the publisher, so we won’t,” he said, predicting that interest in the first edition could rocket following the news about its errors.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of people start popping in to pick one up because they want to get the sequel to The Corrections without the corrections,” he said. “Maybe it’ll make it an interesting collector’s item.”

But rare book dealer Rick Gekoski said would-be investors would be disappointed. “If it wasn’t such a big print run the rare book trade would love this; it’s a shame because recalled books are a big thing in rare books but with 80,000 copies out there, there will be zero premium,” he said. “I wouldn’t give you 50p extra.”

Poet and author Blake Morrison, who in his review of Freedom for the Guardian called Franzen the best chronicler of the American middle classes following John Updike’s death, said he had not spotted any errors.

“That’s embarrassing to admit – except that I know from my own experience how when you’re correcting a final draft or page proofs you often make changes that are immensely important to you, even if no one else is likely to spot them,” he said.

“So I sympathise with Franzen, despite the fact that the differences between the text I read and the one he approved are probably minuscule.”

Howells agreed. “I didn’t think there was anything wrong with it – it’s bloody fantastic,” he said.

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

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Frank O'Connor award goes to Ron Rash


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Frank O’Connor award goes to Ron Rash” was written by Alison Flood, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 20th September 2010 11.37 UTC

Ron Rash’s “bleak” collection of short stories set in Appalachia, Burning Bright, has won the American author the world’s richest prize for the short story form, the Frank O’Connor award.

Ranging from the American civil war to the present day, and from the story of a pawnshop owner who intervenes when his nephew throws his parents out of their house to fund his meth addiction, to the portrait of the wife of a Lincoln sympathiser in Confederate territory, Rash’s collection Burning Bright was named winner of the €35,000 (£29,000) award in Cork last night. He beat a line-up of five other authors – including the acclaimed writer TC Boyle and three debut authors – to take the prize, which honours renowned short story writer Frank O’Connor.

“I guess I know how it feels to win a beauty pageant now,” said Rash, whose former books include the bestselling Serena, set in depression-era North Carolina, this morning. “It was a great feeling, a real honour. I write novels and poems as well but the short story is my favourite form.”

Judge Nadine O’Regan, arts and books editor for the Sunday Business Post, said that Burning Bright was “technically absolutely beautiful – incredibly well-wrought”. “It’s a very understated collection of short stories in many respects. He tends to compress an awful lot into his sentences, and says an awful lot in a very distilled way,” she said.

“It’s a bleak collection, very bleak, but he has such attention to detail and is a real storyteller, a real craftsman.”

Although many of the stories in the collection are set in the past, the judging panel “felt the themes still really resonated”, she added. “A lot of the characters in the stories are victims of circumstance, stuck trying to navigate a path through life which is virtually impossible. And we thought that in today’s world, with the recession, people losing jobs, the stories resonated through the decades and said something to us on the judging panel about the inevitability of the path life can take when you’re caught in the grip of something much larger than you are.”

Rash said he hoped that “even though the stories are very regional in one sense”, they also have a universal flavour. “Sometimes I think we think of regionality in a negative way, maybe particularly in the US, but you find the universal through the particular – that’s the kind of story I’m intrigued with. The authors I grew up admiring, Faulkner and O’Connor, were able to centre their work on a very specific geographical area and use it as a conduit to the universal,” he said.

“Eudora Welty said that ‘one place understood helps us understand all places better’ and that’s what I hope my work does a bit, as well … It’s up to the reader to decide.”

Rash, who has been twice shortlisted for the PEN/Faulkner award and has won the O Henry prize twice, currently holds the John Parris Chair in Appalachian Studies at Western Carolina University. He joins former winners of the Frank O’Connor prize including Haruki Murakami, Yiyun Li and Jhumpa Lahiri.

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

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Tim Waterstone poised to regain book chain as profits plunge under HMV



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Tim Waterstone poised to regain book chain as profits plunge under HMV” was written by Richard Wachman, for The Observer on Saturday 4th September 2010 23.06 UTC

Tim Waterstone, the founder of the books chain that bears his name, is considering a £100m-plus bid to take the chain private if the parent company, HMV, fails to turn the business around by the new year.

Well-placed City sources say Waterstone is closely monitoring developments at the bookshops, where sales and profits have plunged under HMV’s ownership.

HMV’s chief executive, Simon Fox, is to update the City this week on trading at the group’s operations as rebel shareholders push for a sale following the bungled opening of a new centralised distribution hub in Burton upon Trent.

Waterstone is ready to fire off a bid if Fox decides to sell, and has lined up funding from backers that include a London-based hedge fund.

HMV shareholders are pushing for a sale, although they are prepared to wait until after the all-important Christmas trading period before presenting their case to management.

Waterstone, who last week published his first novel in 10 years – In for a Penny, In for a Pound – founded Waterstone’s in 1982, opening the first store in London’s Old Brompton Road.

He sold the firm to WH Smith in the early 1990s, which in turn offloaded the company to HMV in 1998 for £300m. But in recent years, the business has floundered. Waterstone attempted to buy the firm back in 2006 for £280m, but withdrew his offer following a row over the terms of a deal.

Sources say Waterstone is still keen to regain control and that “it is unthinkable he wouldn’t be in the running” if HMV decided to sell. Analysts say the value of Waterstone’s is not reflected in the HMV stock price, which closed at 59p on Friday, valuing the entertainment group at about £255m.

“According to some calculations, Waterstone’s doesn’t feature at all in the parent company’s market value,” said one broker.

As reported in the Observer’s sister paper, the Guardian, last week, shareholders will demand a sale of Waterstone’s if a turnaround plan unveiled in March fails to reap returns.

Investors were rattled at Christmas when HMV disclosed that like-for-like sales at Waterstone’s had slumped by nearly 9% during a period viewed as peak trading time.

After the collapse of Borders in the UK, Waterstone’s is now Britain’s last major specialist books chain, with a national presence of 300 shops. But the firm has been hit by fierce competition from internet retailers such as Amazon and Play, and supermarkets.

New devices like the Kindle e-reader have raised concern about the long-term viability of high-street bookshops. But Tim Waterstone is understood to believe that rumours of the death of the bookshop have been greatly exaggerated.

Former colleagues of Waterstone say he has been troubled by poor morale at the chain, but is supportive of its new managing director, Dominic Myers, who took over when Gerry Johnson departed earlier this year.

An HMV spokesman said: “We have a clear strategy for the turnaround of Waterstone’s, focused on reinforcing our credentials as a range bookseller and helping stores reflect the local interest of their customers. Although we are only a few months in with this strategy, we are making very good progress and our initiatives have been very well received by the wider book industry.” Insiders said there was no intention to sell at present.

Despite problems at Waterstone’s, HMV revealed last month that group profits had risen by more than 12% after a strong showing from its core music and entertainment business. Fox said then that HMV was “on track” to transform the company into a broad-based entertainment brand after a move into live music and ticketing. The idea is to be less dependent on CD and DVD sales.

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

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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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