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Welcome
to the Vol. 9, No. 2 February 2011Index (scroll down for stories)
1. WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange signs $1.3 million book deal with Knopf 1. WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange signs $1.3 million book deal with Knopf WikiLeaks.org founder Julian Assange has signed a $1.3 million book deal to cover legal costs relating to his arrest and any lawsuits aimed at his controversial Web site. The book is to be published in the U.S. by Alfred A. Knopf, part of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group at the Random House unit of Germany’s Bertelsmann AG.
In an interview with the UK's Sunday Times, Assange, 39, said he is
writing the book in order to cover his mounting legal fees.
"I don't want to write this book, but I have to," he told the Times. "I have already spent £200,000 for legal costs and I need to defend myself and to keep WikiLeaks afloat." Assange, an Australian national, is fighting extradition from the United Kingdom to Sweden, where two women have accused him of sexual misconduct. He is free on bail in England after being arrested on Dec. 7 in London. Assange told the British newspaper that he will receive $800,000 from Knopf while a separate deal with British publisher Canongate is worth £325,000, or approximately $502,000. According to Assange, the site has lost approximately $650,000 since this funding was cut off by PayPal, Visa and MasterCard. At its peak, the site was receiving about $130,000 in daily donations, he said. In addition, Assange said in December that his existing legal costs were approaching £500,000. The site, which has been up and running since 2006, has repeatedly created controversy since April, when it released a video of a 2007 Baghdad airstrike that shows a U.S. army air-to-ground attack that killed two members of the Reuters news staff. In late November of this year, WikiLeaks and five worldwide newspapers began to leak over 250,000 American military and diplomatic cables from 274 U.S. embassies around the world. 2. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’ paramour to bare all in book Title Town Publishing, a small publisher in Green Bay, Wis., announced on Jan. 4 that it will publish a memoir by one-time Clarence Thomas paramour Lillian McEwen. The small Green Bay-based publisher will release D.C. Unmasked and Undressed in early February.
Lillian McEwen was that woman. At the time, she was on good terms with Thomas. The former assistant U.S. attorney and Senate Judiciary Committee counsel had dated him for years, even attending a March 1985 White House state dinner as his guest. She had worked on the Hill and was wary of entering the political cauldron of the hearings. She was never asked to testify, as then-Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.), who headed the committee, limited witnesses to women who had a "professional relationship" with Thomas. Now, she says that Thomas often said inappropriate things about women he met at work - and that she could have added her voice to the others, but didn't. McEwen. now 65, is retired from a successful career as a prosecutor, law professor and administrative law judge for federal agencies. She has been twice married and twice divorced, and has a 32-year-old daughter. After Thomas’ wife, Virginia Thomas, left a voice mail on Virginia Hill's office phone at Brandeis University seeking an apology - a request that Hill declined - McEwen changed her mind and decided to talk about her relationship with Thomas. McEwen says her relationship with Thomas was disclosed to Biden, who had been her boss years earlier. In her Senate testimony, Hill, who worked with Thomas at two federal agencies, said that Thomas would make sexual comments to her at work, including references to scenes in hard-core pornographic films. In his 2007 memoir, the justice calls Hill a tool of liberal activists outraged because he did not fit their idea of what an African American should believe. McEwen's memoir includes explicit details of her relationship with Thomas, which she said included a freewheeling sex life. Given that history, she said Hill's long-ago description of Thomas's behavior resonated with her. "He was obsessed with porn," she said of Thomas, who is now 63. "He would talk about what he had seen in magazines and films, if there was something worth noting." Presented with some of McEwen's assertions, Supreme Court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg said Thomas was unavailable for comment. McEwen recalls writing Thomas a short note before the confirmation hearings, curious about what she should say if she were quizzed about their relationship. She said Thomas preferred that she would take "the same attitude of his first wife," who never talked publicly about their relationship. McEwen, a Democrat, acknowledges growing increasingly irritated with Thomas's conservative jurisprudence and his penchant for casting himself as a victim in the Hill controversy. Thomas himself has obliquely referred to the McEwen both in his 2007 memoir and during his confirmation hearing. McEwen met Thomas in 1979, when both were among a tiny handful of young, black Capitol Hill staffers. A group of them would hold monthly meetings at neighborhood watering holes, and soon enough McEwen and Thomas had struck up a close friendship. At the time, Thomas was married to his first wife and working for then-Sen. John Danforth (R-Mo.). McEwen, meanwhile, had recently separated from her first husband. Over time, she said, Thomas would come by her place for drinks. She said the relationship grew intimate after Thomas left his wife in 1981. She said they broke off their relationship in about 1986. But now, she says, "I know Clarence would not be happy with me." "I have no hostility toward him," McEwen said. "It is just that he has manufactured a different reality over time. That's the problem that he has."
3. Breaking news from the book barons Nora Roberts has joined Stieg Larsson and James Patterson in the Kindle Million Club by selling over one million e-books for Amazon's Kindle. Roberts, has officially sold 1,170,539 million copies on Kindle. By the time this item is read, she will have sold many more. 4. China market for foreign book rights developing rapidly In 2005, fewer than 10,000 foreign book titles were sold to China. By 2008, according to the General Administration of Press and Publication, more than 15,700 foreign titles were bought by Chinese publishing companies, including more than 4,000 from the United States. Among the more popular U.S. titles in China are Dan Brown’s The DaVinci Code, with two million copies in print, and Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, with 800,000 copies in print. Novels currently sell in China for 20 to 36 renminbi (US $3 - $5.40). According to the New York Times, the biggest agency selling rights to mainland China is the Big Apple agency. It represents publishers and imprints from around the world seeking to sell book title rights to the more than 1,000 publishers in China. It generally receives a 10 percent cut on deals. The agency said it sealed more than 2,000 contracts in 2009 and expected that number to increase this year. Big Apple recently resold Chinese rights to J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye for more than $200,000.
5. Baidu tries to cast off links to piracy Baidu Inc, operator of the China’s most popular Internet search engine, has begun official cooperation with book publishers by charging for its e-book services, a first step in its fight against piracy, analysts said in December.
In total, nine categories of books are being offered including lifestyle and technology, while some categories like literature remain empty on the site. The search engine launched its online store quietly. Previously users could download e-books and documents via Baidu Library for free with the use of virtual money earned through submitting or sharing documents or books online. The library stocked nine million documents as of October. But the company's free documents sharing model was not without problems and eventually incurred copyright infringement lawsuits. Shanda Literature Ltd. formed an alliance with copyright owners including China Written Works Copyright Society. The group filed a lawsuit against Baidu Inc. over copyright infringement in December. Some of Shanda Literature's most popular novels can be downloaded from Baidu Library for free due to peer-to-peer sharing functions. Shanda Literature is the digital publishing unit of Shanda Interactive Entertainment Ltd, one of China's leading interactive entertainment media companies. It has over three million copyrighted works in its database. Some domestic publishing houses and writers, like the country's "King of Fairy Tales" Zheng Yuanjie, have lent their support to Shanda Literature Ltd. over the dispute. "This is important for Baidu Library to promote copyrighted books and avoid piracy," said Hai Lei, manager of the user product marketing department with Baidu. "We are negotiating with dozens of publishers and publishing houses that can promote their books via our e-book store," Hai said. Sharing income for e-book sales and inset advertisements with publishers is their cooperation model, according to Hai. (Source: Zhao Qian, Global Times, Dec. 28, 2010) 6. Shania Twain has memoir, show with Oprah, marriage on horizon
Shania Twain, who has been out of the spotlight the last few years, has an
autobiography due out in the spring, and is scheduled to have her own show, “Why
Not with Shania Twain,”
on Oprah Winfrey's new television network OWN, which launched on Jan. 1, 2011. Twain is also engaged to be married, representatives from her record label, Mercury Records Nashville, have confirmed. News of the engagement first appeared on the Internet via Us Weekly, which reported that Twain's husband-to-be, Swiss-born Nestle executive Frederic Thièbaud, proposed to the singer a few months ago. People magazine reported that the engagement was sealed with a three-carat diamond solitaire ring. Thièbaud is the ex-husband of Twain's former best friend, Marie-Anne Thièbaud. During the 2008 dissolution of Twain's 14-year marriage to record producer Robert "Mutt" Lange, it was rumored that Marie-Anne and Lange had an affair, though both parties deny the rumor.
7. Draft bust Ryan Leaf signs three-book deal with micropublisher Former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf is planning to write three books about his life, football career and addiction to painkillers.
Leaf confirmed the book deal. The first book will focus on Leaf's career at Washington State, including the team's 1998 Rose Bowl appearance. Another book will be a broader biography covering his youth in Montana and troubled NFL career. A third book will be about his addiction to prescription painkillers, which resulted in a 2009 indictment while he was coaching quarterbacks at West Texas A&M. In April, Leaf pleaded guilty to eight felony drug charges and received 10 years of probation. 8. Is publishing deranged? Novel purportedly written by Snooki released
Snooki Polizzi’s first novel, A Shore Thing, is unlikely to be remembered
as literature.
To become an expert writer, if we acknowledge Malcolm Gladwell, takes about
20,000 hours of practice. Snooki had yet to finish reading the fist book in her
life when she ann Foolish reviewers have since fawned over the tome purportedly written by Snooki. Excerpts ran in the Washington Post. An example: “I love food. I love drinking, boys, dancing until my feet swell. I love my family, my friends, my job, my boss. And I love my body, especially the badonk.” And again, "Yum. Johnny Hulk tasted like fresh gorilla." TV's Jersey Shore cast member Polizzi did a cameo on The Late Show with David Letterman to offer the "Top Ten Reasons to Buy the New Snooki Book.". Reason number one: "The finest work of literature ever written by an author named Snooki." For anyone who actually believes the book was written by Polizzi, let’s set the record straight, It was ghost-written by Valerie Frankel. A Shore Thing is published by Gallery, $24.
9. News about self-publishing and vanity presses Richard Curtis has an interesting take on whether authors make good publishers in e-reads. The article is at http://ereads.com/2011/01/do-authors-make-good-publishers.html. In it, he looks at three of the most publicized authors who have ventured into the self-publishing arena - Seth Godin, Cory Doctorow and J.A. Konrath. Bottom line of the article is that few authors have what it takes to be successful publishers… How are self-publishers doing selling their wares through Amazon.com’s Kindle store? According to a post by Robin Sullivan on Jan. 3, here are the sales figures for December 2010 for five self-published authors in the U.S.: Amanda Hocking, 109,000; H.P. Mallory, 22,300; J.A. Konrath, 13,000; Victorine Lieske: 11,145; Michael Sullivan, 10,500. Not to be outdone, Stephen Leather piped in a day later to say, “Hey, let’s not forget the Brits. I sold 43,000 copies of Once Bitten, The Basement and Dreamer’s Cat through the UK Kindle store in December, more than 12,000 on Christmas Day and Boxing Day alone!”
10. News about bookstores, publishing, marketing and promotion 11. Borders bankruptcy would hurt major publishers The announcement by Borders that it was suspending payments to certain vendors while it seeks to refinance debt is seen as an omen of imminent collapse of the bookseller. The collapse, most analysts agree, would hurt book publishers in general.
Traditional book outlets such as Barnes & Noble and Borders account for about 49 percent of book sales in the U.S., according to Albert N. Greco, professor of marketing at Fordham University, who follows trends in book publishing and book retailing. While people could go to other retail outlets such as Wal-Mart to buy books at retail, the discount chains typically offer fewer selections. Wal-Mart carries around 1,400 to 1,700 titles, said Greco, while Borders' superstores stock well over 100,000. Publishers as large as Pearson PLC’s Penguin, CBS's Simon & Schuster, Random House and News Corp.'s HarperCollins could lose between $10 million to $50 million in sales if Borders goes out of business, Greco said. Some smaller publishers also would go under. Barnes & Noble is incensed that Borders is getting special terms from its vendors. "We fully expect publishers will require Borders to pay their bills on the same basis upon which all other booksellers pay theirs," said Mary Ellen Keating, a spokeswoman at Barnes & Noble. "Any changes in publishers' terms should be made available to all." Over the years, Borders' has lost ground to its competitors. Goldman Sachs estimates that Borders' share of physical book sales slipped to 8.7 percent in 2010 from 11.4 percent in 2006. Meanwhile Amazon's share rose to 17.5 percent in 2010 from 11 percent in 2006. 12. Low-income homes have only one book per 300 children Cheerios has announced the findings of its national survey that asked moms of children aged two to six about the role reading plays in their daily lives. The survey found that although today's moms are prioritizing reading - 67 percent read to their child at least once a day - nearly two-thirds (61 percent) say "busy schedules" prevent them from spending more time reading. Through its continuing Spoonfuls of Stories program, Cheerios aims to recognize all of the families who read together, while also encouraging those who do not yet read every day to pick up a book and start. The survey examined moms' perceptions of one of the greatest barriers to literacy today - lack of access to books. A separate study (Neuman, Susan B. and David K. Dickinson, ed. Handbook of Early Literacy Research, Volume 2. New York, NY: 2006, p. 31) showed that while in middle income neighborhoods the ratio of books per child is 13 to one, in low-income neighborhoods, the ratio is one age-appropriate book for every 300 children. According to the Cheerios survey, about four in 10 moms do not think there is a drastic disparity between middle and lower-income neighborhoods in the U.S. when it comes to children's access to books. Additionally, nine in 10 moms believe that all kids have access to books through their local school and/or public library - a misconception this year's Spoonfuls of Stories initiative hopes to address. The Cheerios Reading Occasion Survey results are based on online interviews of 1,012 mothers with children ages two to six. Interviews were conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs, Sept. 28-Oct. 4, 2010. This past fall, Cheerios, through its Spoonfuls of Stories program, once again provide more than six million children's books, written in both English and Spanish, free inside Cheerios boxes. Cheerios also made a $300,000 donation to First Book, an award-winning national nonprofit that helps get books into the hands of children from low-income families. Since 2001, Cheerios has donated more than $3.5 million to First Book. "Parents play a key role in helping their children become readers. By putting books inside Cheerios boxes, we hope to inspire families to take a few minutes each day to enjoy a good book together," said Meredith Tutterow, Cheerios marketing manager. "Through its Spoonfuls of Stories program, Cheerios hopes to increase children's appetite for a good breakfast and a good book, paving the way for a productive day and a bright future." Jennie Garth, an actress and the mother of three, joined forces with Spoonfuls of Stories to celebrate the ninth year of the program and to discuss why she feels it is so important to find time to read with her own kids each day. "As a mother of three inquisitive daughters, I know how important it is to take time out of our busy lives to read to our children on a daily basis and to instill this important ritual at a young age. Along with nearly 40 percent of the moms surveyed by Cheerios, I too, was not aware that when it comes to children's access to books, there is a drastic disparity between middle and lower income neighborhoods in the U.S.," said Garth. "That's why I'm thrilled to be a part of an initiative aiming to provide millions of families with access to wonderful children's books and encouraging families to read together." Since Spoonfuls of Stories' inception in 2001, Cheerios has distributed almost 50 million children's books inside boxes. This year's in-pack book offerings, appropriate for children aged three to eight and all from Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing, are:
13. International outlook: The Indian book market at a glance Book publishing in India is booming. It not only meets domestic demand but is playing a key role in international distribution.
Some the big names in Indian book publishing are: MBD Books, Academic
Publishers, Overseas Press India, Manohar Publishers & Distributors, Allied
Publishers, Macmillan Publishers, Anmol Publications Pvt. Ltd., Laxmi
Publications, Asian Books Private Limited, Jain Book Agency (JBA), B. Jain Group
of Companies, BahriSons Booksellers, Jaico Publishing House, CBS Publishers &
Distributors PVT. LTD, Educational Publishing House, D C Books, Eastern Book
Company and Emerald Publishers. 14. Books to movies and movies about books department In 2010, there were 38 book-to-film adaptations, up from 22 in 2009. Word & Film featured "The Year in Books on Film," noting that instead of ranking the best overall adaptations, "we've highlighted specific feats of virtuoso performance, cinematography, score, voice-over narration, limb severing, etc…."
15. How bad is it – and what is the book business doing to cope? 16. Update journalism: Latest skinny on past Southern Review stories Florida sheriff's deputies on Dec. 20 arrested the self-publishing author who wrote a guide on pedophilia. Phillip Ray Greaves II was arrested at his home in Pueblo, Colo. on obscenity charges. Amazon had allowed the book to be sold on its site, but amid an outcry from the public, pulled the book. Fox News reported, "Polk Sheriff Grady Judd says his office was able to arrest Greaves on Florida obscenity charges because Greaves sold and mailed his book, The Pedophile's Guide to Love and Pleasure: a Child-lover's Code of Conduct, to Polk deputies. Judd said Greaves even signed the book." While Greaves lives in Colorado, by selling his book across state lines, he broke the law.
17. The publishing revolution: News of e-books and other new media
18. P-book sales continue to decline as e-book sales soar Total unit sales of all print books through the first 50 weeks of 2010 came to 674.5 million, a four percent decline from the same 50-week period in 2009, according to Nielsen BookScan. The service tracks about 75 percent of the market and does not include e-book sales. Sales of hardcover books declined two percent, to 167.4 million units. Trade paperbacks, the biggest segment by units, suffered a three percent drop in sales, to 360.3 million. Sales of mass market paperbacks, a category that has been troubled for decades, slid 13 percent to 104.8 million. E-books, by contrast, are growing by leaps and bounds. Digital sales at Random House Inc., the world's largest trade publisher, are on track to surpass 250 percent in 2010, according to Chief Executive Markus Dohle. In the most recent survey by the Association of American Publishers, e-books accounted for about nine percent of sales for the major publishers. Among bestsellers, the digital portion can easily top 30 percent, according to trade journal Publishers Weekly. Nielsen executives have said that BookScan will begin tracking digital sales, but a start date has not yet been announced.
19. Google eBooks may give boost to Android operating system Google is said to be ready to reduce the share of revenue it collects from the sale of Android apps. Google broadened its competitive front against Apple and Amazon with the launch of Google eBooks. But Google eBooks remains a sideshow in the company's larger effort to establish Android as the dominant mobile development platform. According to data released on Jan. 3 by Nielsen, Android has become the most popular smartphone operating system in the past six months and is approaching Apple's iPhone in terms of overall consumer market share. With Android set to power a new wave of tablets, many of which were announced at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in early January, Google hopes to encourage news publishers to participate in a digital news showcase for Android devices. According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Google wants to improve news reading on Android devices and is prepared to offer better financial terms and access to data derived from app sales. Presently, Amazon, Apple, and Google offer 70 percent of revenue from the sale of apps or digital news content and keep 30 percent for themselves. The Wall Street Journal says that Google has proposed taking a smaller percentage of revenue and providing customer data about app buyers. Lack of access to this data remains a significant gripe among large content providers and developers. It's not clear whether Google intends to offers a greater share of revenue to all developers selling apps in the Android Market or only select new publishing partners, if the deal happens at all. If Google goes through with this reported plan and offers Android developers a better deal, Amazon and Apple would likely feel pressure to reduce the percentage of revenue they collect in their respective online stores. (Source: Thomas Claburn , InformationWeek, Jan. 3, 2011) 20. Amazon introduces Appstore development portal Amazon in early January launched its Amazon Appstore Developer Portal, the first step towards the creation of its own Android App Store, which will exist outside the official Google Android Market. Although there are several other Android app stores (see story about Google app store above), Amazon's will likely be the first to have a major impact on the Android development community. Amazon's application submission model is going to follow Apple's when it comes to which apps will be allowed into the new marketplace. Google only steps in when the application developer is in violation of its Terms of Service, terms which basically prevent harmful apps or malware from making their way to users' phones and tablets. However, in Amazon's case, apps will be reviewed to ensure that they work properly as outlined by the developer. They also must be safe, both in terms of consumer data privacy and impact to the mobile device itself. Those rules are not all that different than Google's own requirements, but the way Amazon is going about enforcing them is - it will check apps prior to app store deployment, not after problem apps are spotted. The Amazon review process will reportedly be more open than Apple's. Apps won't disappear into a black hole after submission, for sometimes months at a time, but their progress can be tracked at any time using the developer's Dashboard within the Developer Portal. Amazon will also enforce some general guidelines: apps cannot be offensive, illegal, infringe on intellectual property or copyright and cannot contain pornography. However, Amazon says that it doesn't want to stifle innovation by prescribing what constitutes good app design. "Amazon is a big believer in innovation in general," reads an FAQ on the Developer Portal, "and we hope to feature many creative and innovative apps in the Appstore." The biggest change developers will be facing is the pricing model. Instead of the standard 70/30 split, developers tell Amazon what price they would like Amazon to list the app at. But Amazon doesn't have to sell it at that - it will sell it at whatever price it sees fit. Developers will still see a 70 percent cut of revenue generated, unless Amazon deeply discounts the app or offers it for free. Then developers are promised a 20 percent cut of the original list price. Or, in other words, Amazon pays developers 70 percent of the sale price or 20 percent of the list price, whichever is greater. Being listed in Amazon doesn't prevent developers from selling at whatever price they choose in Google's Android Market - the only requirement is that both applications must be updated at the same time. 21. Apple introduces iBooks 1.2, pushes color e-books for iPad According to the New York Times, Apple is making a big push for illustrated e-books in the iBookstore.
More than 100 new color e-books were introduced into the store with iBooks 1.2,
the newest version of Apple's iPad e-reader software, which debuted in December.
These books include children's b Illustrated picture books for kids are a big part of Apple's announcement, the Times said. Publisher Jon Anderson from Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing said his company has been "itching to do it since e-books became possible," but they were limited by the lack of color options. "It finally gives us the opportunity to have our picture books join the e-book revolution," he said. "It gives us great opportunity to monetize our content in a way that we previously haven't been able to." Some of the first books from Simon & Schuster that are included in the color e-books rollout in the iBookstore are Candace Fleming's Tippy-Tippy-Tippy, Hide!; Elise Broach's When Dinosaurs Came With Everything; and Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell's And Tango Makes Three. The Times said that according to Anderson, at the beginning of 2011, color e-books will be released at the same time as a print edition. This is already the status quo for text-only e-books and their print versions. Disney Publishing, HarperCollins, the Hachette Book Group, MacMillan and Workman Publishing are other publishers that will begin producing color illustrated e-books for the iBookstore, Apple told the Times. 22. Google, Amazon put new emphasis on books for browsers
December news about the Google eBooks store and Amazon's Kindle for the Web is
that the Web browser (such as Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox) will play
an Self-publishers can benefit from adding browser-based e-book options to the services they use to sell their books, such as Smashwords, Scribd, and Amazon DTP. This best-of-breed group will get their books in all the dedicated e-book readers, mobile, and multi-use devices, and now, delivered into browsers. In the frenzy of formats, platforms, and devices recently introduced to the market, awareness of the Web's importance as an e-publishing platform faded into the background. One of the advantages of the Web browser is that with proper formatting, HTML can provide a better reading experience on a 19-inch flat-screen or a three-inch mobile device. The browser even gracefully delivers transmedia books with embedded audio, video, images, and graphics - something today's e-book readers are hard pressed to do. Even if a book is enclosed in a container such as the Kindle (providing discovery, sales, and downloads), the browser delivery system lets book buyers access their downloads from the cloud - using any device they happen to be near that has an Internet connection, as long as it has an HTML5-compatible browser. Computers and smartphones are able to take advantage of books in browsers, but many dedicated e-readers can't.
The launch of Google eBooks in December has put books in browsers back in the
headlines. Hours after the announcement, Amazon announced Kindle for Web, making
browsers even more relevant. 23. Graphic novels and comics news Legendary Pictures has launched a new comic books division to publish original graphic novels that can be adapted into film and television projects. The unit, named Legendary Comics, will be headed by veteran comic book editor Bob Schreck, who most recently worked at IDW Publishing, and previously spent nearly a decade at DC Comics after founding Oni Press and also working at Dark Horse Comics. As editor in chief for Legendary Comics, Schreck will oversee the publication of four to six graphic novels a year both for digital and traditional print distribution. The first project will be published in the first half of 2011. 24. New politically correct ‘Huckleberry Finn’ will omit the “N” word An Auburn University professor and Mark Twain scholar is planning to release a new version of Huckleberry Finn, in one volume along with The Adventures of Tom Sawyer that will replace all mentions of the N-word with “slave.” Alan Gribben, who is publishing the new edition through NewSouth Books, explained the substitution in Publishers Weekly. “This is not an effort to render Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn colorblind,” he said. “Race matters in these books. It’s a matter of how you express that in the 21st century.” Hmmm. Maybe someone will expurgate the works of Shakespeare, which are rife with epithets. Can’t wait to read that. 25. Free comic book: ‘Commander X Adventures’ Nemo Publishing, publisher of Jay Piscopo's “The Undersea Adventures of Capt'n Eli” graphic novel series, has released its third annual “Commander X Adventures,” a free online-comic book.
Commander X Adventures” features pulp adventure stories about the renowned time traveler, Commander X, who is an integral character in the “Capt'n Eli” series. This collection of stories has a retro-modern feel. Piscopo noted “Our hero, Commander X, is a classic comic strip and movie serial hero with some high tech gizmos and time travel thrown in.” Piscopo edited the free on-line comic book with a team of creators from the United States and England, including stories by Frank Schildiner, Vito Delsante and Michael Leal. Artwork was created by Marvel cover artist Mike Fyles, Wynn Ryder, Danny Kelly, Robert Caine Jeffcoat and Mort Todd. Piscopo also wrote and illustrated a story and edited the collection. In Piscopo's story, fans meet Commander X as the Undersea Knight. 26. These sites are the most important for selling self-published e-books If you're self-publishing, several sites are important for marketing e-books. The following sites are the most important. They will get your e-book into the largest number of e-tailers and devices, not to mention brick-and-mortar bookstores like Books Inc. and Diesel, who are helping their customers buy digital material.
The sites: A word of caution – these sites are finicky about material that is not formatted to their specifications. Be sure to follow directions. Most of the sites will send you specific messages about what you still need to do before your book is properly formatted for upload. Other sites you might consider for marketing your e-book: • Upload your book to Lightning Source, the POD and e-book arm of Ingram for self-publishers. Ingram is the most important book wholesaler in the nation. • Another important site that sells a lot of e-books but requires special uploading is Fictionwise at http://www.fictionwise.com. If you don’t know how to format an e-book, there are a number of services that will do it for you - for a price. The charge is around $250 at a service like eBook Architects. 27. Fiction tops 2010 ‘USA Today’ best-seller list
While about 80 percent of all books sold in the U.S. are non-fiction, that’s not
the case when it comes to best-sellers.
USA Today
suggested that one contributing factor might be that "readers who wouldn't be
caught dead with risqué book covers in public enjoyed the privacy of reading
romantic e-books" on an e-book reader. 28. Sisters in Crime survey delineates mystery/crime fiction market According to a recently released study by Sisters in Crime, women over 45 constitute the majority of buyers in the mystery book genre.
"The Mystery Book Consumer in the Digital Age," survey was designed to offer an
overview of the mystery/crime fiction book-buying market, using research based
on publishing industry data gathered and interpreted by Bowker's PubTrack
division. 29. Milestones: Records, Prizes and news of note in book publishing Crown Publishing Group on Dec. 22 said the memoir of former president George W. Bush, Decision Points, sold more than two million hardcover and e-book copies since its release in early November. By comparison, former president Bill Clinton's memoir, My Life, has had total sales of 2.2 million copies since it was first published in 2004… 30. American Library Association names Newbery, Caldecott winners The American Library Association presented its Youth Media Awards at its winter meeting in San Diego.
The Newbery medal went to Moon over Manifest by Clare Vanderpool. The
Caldecott went to A Sick
31. Disney Publishing Worldwide hits one million app downloads
Mickey’s Spooky Night Puzzle Book,
Princess Dress-Up: My Sticker Book, Toy Story 3 Read-Along and
Winnie the Pooh: What’s a Bear to Do? Puzzle Book, are among the most
frequently downloaded applications on the iTunes app store. 33. Author tells in Kindle offering how he corrupted Amazon reviews Thomas Hertog, an author who initially wrote the Kindle book Wealth Hazards, claims he's manipulated the Amazon system by buying his book 200 times and posting fake reviews promoting the work. Now he's peddling a new e-book, The Day the Kindle Died, in which he writes:
“They haven't. They pay me royalties every month and recommend the book to people who buy similar personal finance titles. My new book The Day the Kindle Died is even more obvious - but Amazon hasn't noticed. They even recommend it to customers who purchase Amazon's own Kindle publishing manual. Amazon clearly has a problem with ranking books, creating the bestseller lists and making suitable recommendations to customers, but they don't appear to be in a hurry to correct this,” Hertog crowd. But just as hubris leads to ate (pride goeth before a downfall), Hertog had his comeuppance a few days later.
In early January, Amazon removed Hertog's Kindle books - Wealth Hazards
and The Day the Kindle Died - from its Web site. The removal proved
temporary. The books were soon restored to the site, but without their reviews
and rankings. 34. David Sedaris puts out tip jar at signings, makes $4,000
According to a story by Adam Markovitz in Canada’s National Post,
David Sedaris m “A couple of books ago, I put a tip jar on my signing table and I made over $4,000 on my tour,” Sedaris told the Post. “The problem was then I started hating people who didn’t tip me. I didn’t say anything to them, but I would just sit there thinking, ‘You cheap son of a bitch. I just signed four books and you can’t even give me a dollar?’ And why should they? But I just got so involved in it. I had to stop doing it.” 35. Fourth Trivandrum Book Fair concludes in India
The Fourth Trivandrum Book Fair was held at India’s Kanakakkunnu Palace from
Dec. 18 through Dec. 22. International publishing houses like Cambridge University Press, Scholastic; Indian publishers like Orient Blackswan and National Book Trust; and regional publishers like Mathrubhumi were among the companies whose books were available at the fair.
The fair is reported to have sold books worth one crore in its previous year. A Copyrights Table was set up for sale of rights for translation of eight thousand manuscripts. A book reading session by Prof. Valerie Miner of Stanford University was held at the Suryakanthi auditorium. She read excerpts from her work, The Low Road: - A Scottish Family Memoir in an interactive session with the audience. 36. Rural India was theme of Delhi Book and Stationery Fair The dynamics of rural India were presented through fine print at the 16th edition of the Delhi Book and Stationery Fair, which opened in Pragati Maidan, New Delhi, on Dec. 25, and ran to Jan. 2, 2011. The fair is a collaboration of the India Trade Promotion Organization (ITPO) and the Federation of Indian Publishers (FIP). This year’s event hosted 270 Indian and foreign publishers from countries like China, Pakistan and Iran, among others. On display were books on education, academic fiction, non-fiction, literature, children's books, dictionaries, encyclopedias, periodicals, magazines, journals, teaching aids and computer software. India has 16,000 publishers and 30,000 bookshops besides multi-national publishing companies like Oxford University Press, Macmillan, Penguin, Harper Collins, Random House, Hachette, Picador and Rutledge Harvard Business Publishing. Around 70,000 titles are published in India every year, according to statistics compiled by ITPO and FIP. Hindi accounts for the highest number of titles published every year, while 30 percent of all books are published in English. The other major languages of publication include Bengali, Gujarati, Malayalam, Marathi and Tamil. 37. Sixth annual Karachi International Book Fair 2010 held Dec. 24-28 The Sixth Annual Karachi International Book Fair 2010 opened on Dec. 24 and concluded on Dec. 28. Held at the Karachi Expo Center, the KIBF is the largest annual book event held in Pakistan. The event brought 160 publishing and distribution houses together with domestic and international publishers, booksellers, librarians and institutional customers. An estimated 250,000 venders and visitors attended, with business of millions of rupees expected to be done. Publishers from various countries, including Singapore, Iran, Britain, Malaysia and India, participated. One undesirable aspect of the event was the reluctance of Pakistani authorities to grant visa clearances to Indian publishers invited by the Pakistan Publishers and Book Sellers Association to participate. Initially, only three or four of the Indian publishers were given clearances by the Pakistani Interior Ministry. Eventually, 18 Indian publishers were cleared, but they were unable to reach Karachi before Dec. 26. 38. Boston Comic Con moving to Hynes Convention Center The Spring 2011 edition of Boston Comic Con will double in size and move to a much larger venue, the Hynes Convention Center! The move was essential to accommodate the growing popularity of the show. The show will be held April 30-May 1. It will feature superstar creators Frank Quitely, Adam Hughes, Darwyn Cooke, Arthur Adams, Frank Cho, Tim Sale, Dave Johnson, and Golden Age legend Joe Kubert! 39.Major upcoming trade shows, book fairs and book festivals January 2011
Jan. 7
-11. American Library Association's Midwinter Conference. www.ala.org February
Feb.
25-March 1. The National Association of College Stores Conference.
www.nacs.org March
March
25-27. Spring Book Show, Cobb Galleria/Renaissance-Waverly Hotel, Atlanta, Ga.
SBS is one of the largest remainder and bargain book shows in the world.
www.springbookshow.com April
April
11-13. London Book Fair .
www.londonbookfair.co.uk
May
23-26. BookExpo America, New York. www.bookexpoamerica.com June
June
24-29. American Library Association, Washington, DC.
www.ala.org July July 21-24. Comic-Con International, San Diego, Calif. The grandfather of all comics shows, which began in 1970, and capped its attendance at 125,000 three years ago.
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