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    • Indies Battle Amazon – Salon

      Posted at 11:07 am by Laura, on January 3, 2012

      Indies Battle Amazon: By Becoming Publishers – Salon – Steve Almond

      Independent bookstores are stepping up and creating their own small publishing hub to produce more titles. This is a unique competition with Amazon and the apparent threat of ebooks.

      The leap into publishing by indies can be seen as the literary equivalent of the locavore movement. It not only emphasizes local writers, and local subjects, but also asks residents to support a local business with their dollars.

      Teter is under no illusion about the forces arrayed against independent bookstores, not the least of which is the rise of electronic books. But she, along with her compatriots, is cautiously optimistic that small-scale publishing can be part of the answer, by providing an alternative to traditional publishers and Amazon, which are increasingly focused on books they can turn into national bestsellers.

      As Kaplan reminded me, the true value of a great independent bookstore resides in its connection to a particular community: “If someone loves our bookstore, has been coming in for years, understands what we’re trying to do, and you can put a great book in their hands that was published by our store, I mean, who’s going to say no to that?”

      Regardless of your stance on ebooks and ereaders, this is really neat!

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, bookstores, ebooks, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “The Summer Garden” by Paullina Simons

      Posted at 8:00 pm by Laura, on December 31, 2011

      The Summer Garden by Paullina Simons

      Through years of war and devastation, Tatiana and Alexander suffered the worst the twentieth century had to offer. Miraculously reunited in America, they now have a beautiful son, Anthony, the gift of a love strong enough to survive the most terrible upheavals. Though they are still young, the ordeals they endured have changed them—and after living apart in a world laid waste, they must now find a way to live together in postwar America.

      With the Cold War rising, dark forces at work in their adopted country threaten their lives, their family, and their hard-won peace. To regain the happiness they once knew, to wash away the lingering pain of the past, two lovers grown distant must somehow forge a new life . . .or watch the ghosts of their yesterdays destroy their firstborn son.

      The third and last book of the epic Russian trilogy, immensely powerful and moving. It’s difficult to review this as a stand-alone, because I will need to compare it to The Bronze Horseman and Tatiana and Alexander. The first book was extremely detailed, spanning across the beginning of WWII Russia, and mostly revolved around love, heartbreak, starvation, and death. The second dealt with separation, immigration, and the brutality of war. This final one focused on the marriage, spanning across several decades. Tatiana and Alexander grow quickly in this last book – the First Page atmosphere vastly different from the Last Page.

      I enjoyed the trilogy as a whole, but this book alone was not as enjoyable as the first and second. The writing was great, the plot complex and detailed, and Simons excellently drew upon many issues that could/would arise in any marriage. However, one trait that I did not like with Tatiana and Alexander is their passive aggressive arguments. It was reasonable in The Bronze Horseman because they were so young, and most young lovers refuse to get right to the point of an argument so quickly. But in this final book, when their lives span several decades, the did not seem to grow out of it. As someone who likes to get right to the root of an argument, a “just say it!” attitude, I found this a bit frustrating. Beyond this nit-picking detail, The Summer Garden was a good ending to the trilogy.

      Rating: ★★★ of 5

      GoodReads: 4.2 of 5

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: fiction, genre: history, genre: romance, review
    • Best-Selling Book in the US

      Posted at 11:03 am by Laura, on December 29, 2011

      According to USA TODAY’s Best-Selling Books list, The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins is No. 1!

      Other books that made the Top Five list include The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and The Help.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, genre: fiction, genre: young adult, news, newspaper
    • Conversation: The Year in Fiction – PBS

      Posted at 8:47 am by Laura, on December 29, 2011

      2011 trends in fiction, the fate of books and ebooks, and the forecast of independent bookstores – all discussed with The Washington Post book critic Ron Charles in a short 7-minute video on PBS.

      Posted in books, Link | 2 Comments | Tagged books, bookstores, ebooks, tv, video
    • Reading 55 Books in 2011: What I Learned – PW

      Posted at 1:45 pm by Laura, on December 28, 2011

      Reading 55 Books in 2011: What I learned – Publisher’s Weekly – Gabe Habash

      This isn’t publishing news, per se, but it is an excellent and detailed account of what goes on across the year when setting a goal to read x-many books. Nearly everything Habash states (forgetting certain details of books that moved you at the beginning of the year, doing the math, pushing for x+ books once the goal seemed attainable) is similar to what I went through during the 50 Book Challenge. That, and he promotes GoodReads!

      At the time of this writing, I have a beard and I’m finishing up The Colossus of New York. It’s the last book I’ll read this year, which started off innocently enough in January, but by winter became something of a maddening ascetic bender. This is what I learned from reading 15,000 pages in 2011.

      He discusses poor memory and the pros and cons of reading goals. Cool blog post!

      What will your goal be for 2012?

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged 50 book challenge, books, goodreads, magazine, news
    • How Dickens changed Christmas forever…

      Posted at 9:26 pm by Laura, on December 25, 2011

      Barnes & Noble shared an interesting history behind Dickens’s A Christmas Carol.

      Since its publication, A Christmas Carol has been adapted into countless plays, films, and television productions. But many scholars believe it also fundamentally changed the way we view the holiday season. In a few short pages, Dickens managed to create a vision of old-fashioned good cheer and secular morality. But what’s most remarkable about the story is what it leaves out.

      Read on for the full story!

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, history, holiday, news
    • The great ebook price swindle – The Guardian

      Posted at 1:15 pm by Laura, on December 23, 2011

      The great ebook price swindle – The Guardian – Dan Gillmor

      Publishers have two major distribution methods. One is traditional wholesaling: sell the book to a middleman, who typically adds a mark-up to customers, but sometimes discounts a book below cost as a “loss leader” to attract more business for items that aren’t discounted in this way.

      The other model is called the “agency” system. In this case, publishers set the price and the bookstore merely handles the sale to the ultimate customer, for a set fee or percentage of the transaction.

      The “big six” US publishers all sell their physical books via the wholesale model. After years of wholesaling digital editions as well, they moved to the agency model for ebooks, with Random House becoming the final publisher to switch early last year.

      …An ebook priced like a physical book is a terrible deal for the customer. Among other drawbacks, you can’t resell – or even give away – an ebook in most cases. You don’t really own an ebook; you’re just renting it, even if the company you rent from says you can keep it, because that depends on the life span of the seller.

      Read on to see why “publishers are facing an uncertain time in the digital world – but increasing the prices of their ebooks is a retrograde step.”

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 1 Comment | Tagged books, ebooks, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “Sing You Home” by Jodi Picoult

      Posted at 7:11 pm by Laura, on December 22, 2011

      Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult

      One miscarriage too many spelled the end of Max and Zoe Baxter’s marriage. Though the former couple went quite separate ways, their fates remained entangled: After veering into alcoholism, Max is saved in multiple senses by his fundamentalist conversion; Zoe, for her part, finds healing relief in music therapy and the friendship, then romantic love with Vanessa, her counselor. After Zoe and Vanessa, now married, decide to have a baby, they realize that they must join battle with Max, who objects on both religious and financial grounds.

      As usual, Picoult shares an exquisitely compelling story by taking a controversial topic and creating layers of complication that grips the heart and questions moral and ethical issues. Several current social issues combined into one with Sing You Home: divorce, gay rights and relationships, Christianity, definitions of “family,” and gender roles. Picoult is with the times, and writes through the perspectives of Zoe, Vanessa, and Max for a polished work. And, as is her style, the court case is gripping, with several twists and turns that had me question my own opinions in the strenuous mess.

      In an effort to stay distant from politics and without pointing fingers in this review, I believe this book excellently outlines the viewpoints of each side of the gay rights issue. Because of that, I would highly recommend Sing You Home to anyone who wants to understand homosexual relationships, who wants to understand why some Christian extremists lobby against such relationships, and to any allies of the gay community.

      It is a terrific read, with several humorous lines, well-developed and lovable (love to love and love to hate) characters, and several fantastic insights to various social communities.

      Rating:  ★ ★ ★ ★ of 5
      GoodReads: 3.72 of 5

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 1 Comment | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: contemporary, genre: fiction, genre: LGBTQ, genre: romance, review
    • World Book Night 2012

      Posted at 3:17 pm by Laura, on December 22, 2011

      Register for World Book Night 2012 and be a giver!

      World Book Night launched in the UK in 2011 and saw passionate readers across that beautiful country, give 1 million books to light or non readers to spread the joy and love of reading. Reading changes lives and at the heart of World Book Night lies the simplest of ideas and acts – that of putting a book into another person’s hand and saying ‘this one’s amazing, you have to read it’.

      Now, it’s our time to join the cause.

      World Book Night 2012 will be held on April 23 – in the US and the UK – and we’re looking for 50,000 volunteer book givers to hand out 20 copies each – for a total of 1 million free special World Book Night paperbacks!

      There is a fantastic list of books up for grabs, including Orson Scott Card’s Ender’s Game, Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Suzanne Collins’s Hunger Games, Jodi Picoult’s My Sister’s Keeper, and Markus Zusak’s The Book Thief. Fill out the application to become a volunteer giver!

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, world book night
    • No, You’re Getting a Book – NYTimes

      Posted at 11:44 am by Laura, on December 22, 2011

      No, You’re Getting a Book – The New York Times Opinion Pages – Kyle Jarrard

      A book allows you to time-travel, or just plain travel to real and imagined places, a not un-neat trick considering the price of airline tickets or space tourism. It allows you to meet evil, wonderful, mysterious, odd, crazy, fun, and not-fun people who often end up being more “real” in your life than real people. A simple tome of paper links you back, for instance, to the age of François I, Renaissance poet and book collector supremo, when the printing press and its wild spread across Europe was as exciting to us all as are e-books today.

       

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, holiday, newspaper
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    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
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