As Book Expo America opens (for
educational programming today, and floor exhibitions tomorrow), the American
Booksellers Association reports to the AP
that their membership rose again--adding 55 members, now totaling 1,567, up
3.6 percent from last year. That is the third consecutive gain for the
organization; this time a year ago, the ABA reported adding 102 members,
following their merger with the Association of Booksellers for
Children. (In 2010 they added 9 members--gains, while always good, do not
necessarily reflect a change in the entire store landscape, since not all
independent bookstores are members of the national organization.) The current
member total is close to where ABA ranks stood
in 2007 (at 1,580).
More positively, the ABA also cited Nielsen
BookScan data that indicates number of printed books sold by approximately
500 reporting indie stores rose by 13.4 percent (in units) this year, through
mid-May.
As co-owner of the Regulator Bookshop in
Durham, NC Tom Jackson notes, "It's down compared to five years ago, but
it went down when the whole economy fell. It's since come back up and
stayed up. Given what's been happening with digital books, the competition
from Amazon and so forth, that seems pretty good."
Bowker's
complete report on new books published during 2011 is embargoed until
Tuesday, but at Sunday's self-publishing event at BEA Kelly Gallagher said
they recorded ISBNs issued for 211,269 self-published titles in 2011, up from
133,036 titles in 2010. (Bear in mind that not all self-published books carry
ISBNs, now including ebooks that are exclusively published through sites that
don't use an ISBN for ebooks, such as Amazon.)
eBooks comprised 41 percent of the
self-published books talled by Bowker, but Gallagher said they comprised only
11 percent of overall sales, reflecting the much lower average price of
ebooks versus print-on-demand titles. Create Space was the biggest
self-publisher by volume (by far), with 57,602 titles.
BEA is just a few hours old -- and the
show floor won't even open until Tuesday -- but for now some of the biggest
announcements are in the deals department. Random House Publishing Group has
acquired Carly Simon's
autobiography, which will cover "the discovery of her life-altering
stammer, her meteoric rise and unparalleled career in music, and her loves,
including her marriage to James Taylor, with Simon saying "after years
of keeping journals and writing lyrics for my tunes, I have developed a
strong interest in seeing how my life might just string together in a longer
form."
In November, Putnam will release Dolly Parton's
DREAM MORE, a book of inspirational wisdom, "exploring the four great
hopes she has for each of us: to dream more, learn more, care more, and be
more, drawing on examples from her own life." Riverhead will publish the
trade paperback edition of the book as the imprint's Jake Morrissey will edit
the book, and a younger readers' edition of the book will follow at a later
date.
HarperCollins has reportedly
acquired Cissy
Houston's memoir THE WHITNEY I KNEW, about her late daughter,
having promised publishers the full story in meetings: "It's going to be
the bad, it's going to be the good." And in tech celebrity deal news,
Twitter co-founder Biz
Stone's THINGS A LITTLE BIRD TOLD ME, about creativity and
different ways of thinking, including personal stories from his life and
career, sold to Grand Central, which plans to publish in 2014.
Separately, the new Dennis Lehane Books
imprint officially announced their acquisition of Attica Locke's
thriller THE CUTTING SEASON for September publication, though the galley
has already been in circulation.
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Former leading New Zealand publisher and bookseller, and widely experienced judge of both the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, talks about what he is currently reading, what impresses him and what doesn't, along with chat about the international English language book scene, and links to sites of interest to booklovers.
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