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  • Tag: publishing

    • Vook Launches E-book Creation and Publishing Platform – PW

      Posted at 4:36 pm by Laura, on March 26, 2012

      Vook Launches E-book Creation and Publishing Platform – Publisher’s Weekly – Craig Morgean Teicher

      Vook, one of the pioneering e-book app developers, is launching a new business today with its Vook e-book creation and publishing platform, a comprehensive, cloud-based tool that allows authors and publishers to turn any document into a professionally styled e-book. Vook’s platform then makes it easy to distribute the finished e-book to Amazon, iBooks and BN.com. The platform also allows users to embed images, videos and other multimedia into e-books to create enhanced e-books. PW has been testing the platform and it could indeed be a game changer, giving small and large publishers fairly inexpensive, one-stop access to e-book publication.

      *impressed, low whistle* Well, there you have it, folks!

      Posted in Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged ebooks, magazine, news, publishing, technology
    • Personal news!

      Posted at 7:49 am by Laura, on March 21, 2012

      Sorry for the lack of posts this week. Either you’re thrilled, because I update sporadically (and with abundance in those random moments) and it may clog your inbox, or you’re sad (to which I’m flattered). I thought I’d offer an explanation, and it’s exciting news!

      I’m in the middle of preparing for a move to the East Coast, so lots of my time has been spent searching for jobs, internships, and apartments. On top of that, I am in my final days (45, to be exact!) of undergrad and need to focus on my schoolwork. My focus is paying off, apparently.

      Remember my review of the memoir Carrier by Bonnie J. Rough? She is currently at my university for our 7th annual In Print festival, where newly published authors and poets come to read to and answer questions from young writers. My professor and the assistant chair of the department asked me to write the introduction to Rough’s reading, and I couldn’t be more thrilled! I spent the majority of my weekend working on several drafts. After reading it in front of my peers and professors, Rough joined me at the podium, hugged me, and thanked me for “the best” introduction she’s received “by far.” A bit of a starstruck moment for me!

      In other news, remember my post about Parragon Books and their new line of baby/toddler/children’s books? I was astonished at the traffic my blog received after they tweeted my post!

      A big thank you once again for noticing my post!

      So now, followers, I’d like to ask you – what’s new in your bookworm/publishing life? Share your stories! I’d love to hear them.

      Posted in Update Post | 0 Comments | Tagged authors, publishing, technology
    • Goodreads’ CEO on Winning the Battle of Book Discovery – PP

      Posted at 7:34 am by Laura, on March 21, 2012

      Goodreads’ CEO on Winning the Battle of Book Discovery – Publishing Perspectives – Otis Chandler (guest contributor, CEO)

      We’ve all known for a while that the most valuable commodity for the sustained promotion of a book is word-of-mouth buzz. Goodreads was founded on the belief that a recommendation from a friend is the best way to find a book, more powerful than a glowing review in the New York Times or a mention on a TV show. There’s something about that trusted friend handing you the book and saying, “You must read this!”

      And it has worked. According to a recent survey of Goodreads members, 79% of them report discovering books from friends offline, and 64% find books from their Goodreads friends.

      Interestingly, the power of a friend’s recommendation has grown. Today, the recommendation doesn’t even have to be explicit, it can be as simple as seeing a friend reading a book. When you see what a friend is reading – whether on Goodreads, through an update on our Facebook Timeline app, or in person – it automatically triggers your interest.  It becomes a new form of a recommendation, social validation.

      Chandler breaks down the “evolving nature of book discovery” through five key points:

      1. word of mouth (quoted above)
      2. pre-launch buzz (authors providing readers with ARCs to write the first crucial reviews before publication)
      3. authors “need a tribe” (readers have stated they’ll read a book by an author they love)
      4. videos & book tours (video chats with authors)
      5. reader needs to see the book several times before reading it
      Posted in Link | 0 Comments | Tagged authors, goodreads, news, publishing, technology
    • Random House Author Portal – PRWeb

      Posted at 8:25 am by Laura, on March 14, 2012

      Random House US Author Portal Online Resource Goes Live March 12 – PRWeb

      Random House, Inc., today announced the launch of the Random House Author Portal, a secure, one-stop online resource that provides thousands of Random House U.S. authors and illustrators with access to comprehensive up-to-date information about their sales, royalties and subsidiary rights deals for their newly published and backlist books.

      Authors get to receive inside information and access about their books and sales? Pretty nifty!

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged authors, books, news, publishing
    • Boutiques at Barnes & Noble – Wallstreet

      Posted at 5:26 pm by Laura, on March 12, 2012

      Boutiques at Barnes & Noble – Wallstreet Journal – Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg

      Barnes & Noble Inc. is expanding a nascent effort to install boutiques within its stores selling books and other items associated with the Penguin publishing house, the latest step by the retailer to boost store revenue amid a shift toward e-books and sales of physical books online.

      200 sq. feet will be dedicated to Penguin titles, totes, mugs, and other merchandise! Personally, I’m very excited about this. I hope it expands to other B&Ns in the future (although apparently there aren’t any foreseeable plans at the moment).

      Posted in Link | 0 Comments | Tagged bookstores, news, newspaper, publishing
    • Indies Choice Nominees Named – PL

      Posted at 8:57 pm by Laura, on March 6, 2012

      Indies Choice Nominees Named – Publishers Lunch

      Winners will be named April 5th!

      Nominees include:

      • 1Q84, by Haruki Murakami
      • The Marriage Plot, by Jeffrey Eugenides
      • Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman, by Robert K. Massie
      • The Tiger’s Wife, by Téa Obreht
      • The Cheshire Cheese Cat: A Dickens of a Tale, by Carmen Agra Deedy and Randall Wright
      Posted in Link | 0 Comments | Tagged news, publishing
    • ALA Asks Random to Scale Back Price Hikes – PW

      Posted at 8:51 pm by Laura, on March 6, 2012

      ALA Asks Random to Scale Back Price Hikes – Publisher’s Weekly – Andrew Albanese

      While ALA president Molly Raphael praised Random House’s “engagement with libraries and its commitment to perpetual access,” she urged Random House to scale back the price increase. “I am deeply disappointed in the severe escalation in e-book pricing,” Raphael said. “The American Library Association strongly urges Random House to reconsider its decision. In a time of extreme financial constraint, a major price increase effectively curtails access for many libraries, and especially our communities that are hardest hit economically.”

      In response, Stuart Applebaum, spokesman for Random House, said the publisher welcomes “continuing discussions on the value we place on the unrestricted perpetuity, as well as the simultaneous release of our titles to retail booksellers and public libraries, the key differentiating factors determining our new pricing to library wholesalers.”

      Remember last week’s news on Random House increasing e-book prices? Here’s the conversation between ALA and Random House.

      Posted in library, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged ebooks, library, magazine, news, publishing
    • E-Books on Tablets Fight Digital Distractions – NYTimes

      Posted at 8:43 pm by Laura, on March 6, 2012

      E-Books on Tablets Fight Digital Distractions – New York Times – Julie Bosman & Matt Richtel

      People who read e-books on tablets like the iPad are realizing that while a book in print or on a black-and-white Kindle is straightforward and immersive, a tablet offers a menu of distractions that can fragment the reading experience, or stop it in its tracks.

      Interesting article! Be sure to read both pages.

      Posted in Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged ebooks, ereaders, news, newspaper, publishing
    • Upcoming Books! [7]

      Posted at 8:26 pm by Laura, on March 4, 2012

      Title: The Back in the Day Bakery Cookbook: Cakes, Pies, Cookies, Bars, and Breads from the Best Little Bakery in the South
      Author: Cheryl and Griffith Day
      Genre:
      nonfiction, cooking
      Publisher: Artisan
      Publishing Date: March 6
      Summary: Food Network star Paula Deen introduces the couple behind Savannah’s Back in the Day Bakery and their cookbook. Broken down by baked good, including “Cupcakes and Cakes,” “Pies,” “Cobblers, Crisps, and Tarts,” and “Cookies,” chapters feature Southern favorites such as baked eggs with grits and ham, and buttermilk chess pie, along with old-time favorites like lemon meringue pie, and strawberry-rhubarb crisp. The author’s “homespun style” permeates the collection—from font and borders to recipes—including the “Savories” chapter, featuring dishes such as roasted chicken and vegetable cobbler (touted as “A potluck favorite”) and vegetable potpie. Sidebars on topics from clever packaging for baked goods to ingredient information for items such as sorghum, as well as a resource pages, add value to this retro-style book that’s all about comfort food.

      ~

      Title: The White Pearl
      Author: Kate Furnivall
      Genre: historical fiction
      Publisher: Berkley Trade
      Publishing Date: March 6
      Summary: “Malaya, 1941.” Connie Thornton plays her role as a dutiful wife and mother without complaint. She is among the fortunate after all-the British rubber plantation owners reaping the benefits of the colonial life. But Connie feels as though she is oppressed, crippled by boredom, sweltering heat, a loveless marriage. . . Then, in December, the Japanese invade. Connie and her family flee, sailing south on their yacht toward Singapore, where the British are certain to stand firm against the Japanese. En route, in the company of friends, they learn that Singapore is already under siege. Tensions mount, tempers flare, and the yacht’s inhabitants are driven by fear. Increasingly desperate and short of food, they are taken over by a pirate craft and its Malayan crew making their perilous way from island to island. When a fighter plane crashes into the sea, they rescue its Japanese pilot. For Connie, that’s when everything changes. In the suffocating confines of the boat with her life upended, Connie discovers a new kind of freedom and a new, dangerous, exhilarating love.

      ~

      Title: The Rescue of Belle and Sundance: One Town’s Incredible Race to Save Two Abandoned Horses
      Author: Birgit Stutz, Lawrence Scanlan
      Genre: nonfiction
      Publisher: Da Capo Press
      Publishing Date: March 6
      Summary: In December 2008, snowmobilers spot two abandoned horses high in the Canadian Rockies. Starving and frostbitten, the horses have trampled the ten-foot-deep snow into a narrow white prison. Those who reach them bring hay but also a gun, in case the horses are too far gone. A glint of life in the horses’ eyes earns them the hay. The harrowing yet inspiring story of their near impossible rescue–involving the volunteer efforts of an entire village, first the excavation of a trench six feet deep and over 3280 feet long, and then a nearly 20 mile descent at negative 40 degrees–is sure to be read in one breathless sitting.

      ~

      Some books to look forward to in the future include:

      • Time magazine writer Lisa Cullen’s debut novel THE PASTORS’ WIVES, following the lives of three women whose lives converge and intertwine at an Atlanta evangelical mega-church, a dramatic portrayal of the private lives of pastors’ wives, caught between the demands of faith, marriage, duty and love, inspired by her magazine reporting
      • Nicholas Mennuti’s debut EXILE, written with SAFE HOUSE screenwriter David Guggenheim (originally announced by publisher as Guggenheim’s book written with Mennuti), a fast-paced, Hitchcock-esque thriller about an American businessman living in exile in Cambodia, who gets mistaken for a mysterious government operative
      • Two-time National Book Award finalist Melissa Fay Greene’s WONDER DOG, based on the NYT Magazine story, about a pioneering service-dog-training school in rural Ohio, the challenged children and families whose lives are transformed by the dogs trained there, and the modern science of human/canine interactions underpinning the joyful and life-saving breakthroughs

      Happy reading!

      Posted in Upcoming Books | 0 Comments | Tagged genre: fiction, genre: history, genre: nonfiction, publishing, upcoming books
    • Random House Raises E-Book Wholesale Prices Significantly – PL

      Posted at 9:52 pm by Laura, on March 2, 2012

      Random House Raises E-Book Wholesale Prices Significantly – Publisher’s Lunch – Michael Cader

      Random House announced their library ebook pricing, effective as of March 1, which will dampen some of the enthusiasm for the house’s commitment to the “unrestricted and perpetual availability of our complete frontlist and backlist of Random House, Inc.” in ebook form. The new prices, which librarians tell The Digital Shift represent up to a tripling, are calibrated to “bring our titles in price-point symmetry with our Books on Tape audio book downloads for library lending. These long have carried a considerably higher purchase price point than our digital audio books purchased for individual consumption.” The new price structure for library wholesalers is:

      • New hardcovers, “for the most part” are $65 to $85.
      • Titles available for several months, or generally timed to paperback release, move to a range of $25 to $50.
      • New children’s hardcovers are $35 to $85.
      • Older children’s titles and children’s paperbacks are $25 to $45.

      The response to this depends on the various libraries, and also each library’s ebook lending patterns from patrons. Pricing levels, of course, will adjust accordingly.

      Posted in library, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged ebooks, library, news, publishing
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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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