The LA Times profiled
recently-opened bookstore Bank
of Books, Malibu, highlighting the "novel ways" the
store attracts customers, including books and magazines catering to surfer
crowds and a rare books section featuring a 1613 King James Bible (with a
$48,500 asking price.) Owner Clarey Rudd opened the store in July, after
opening stores in Oxnard and Ventura County in the mid-1990s.
Owner of M is for Mystery Bookstore Ed Kaufman, 82, died
Dec. 20 at a Palo Alto Hospital from complications of kidney disease. Kaufman,
a mergers & acquisitions lawyer in Los Angeles, opened the San Mateo
mystery bookstore in 1996 and operated it until his retirement in 2011, after
which the store closed. Kaufman was given a Raven Award for services to the
mystery community by the Mystery Writers of America in 2013.
Former publisher of Perseus's Vanguard
Press Roger Cooper
is launching a publishing consulting firm, Roger Cooper Associates. He will be
working with publishers and literary agents with ebook publishing programs
to acquire digital content, and with business authors and companies to develop
print and digital properties. He can be reached at rcoopernyc@gmail.com.
The Guardian ran their annual
feature in which they survey a number of well-known UK editors to find out
"the book that made my year," the one "I wished I had published
(here the favorite was Zadie Smith's NW),
and "the book that deserved to do better." Among those titles that
editors think should have resonated more are:
Light
of Amsterdam by David Park (Alexandra Pringle at Bloomsbury UK)
Light Lifting by Alexander MacLeod (Robin Robertson at Jonathan Cape)
The Illicit Happiness of Other People by Manu Joseph (Roland Philipps at John Murray)
The Heart Broke In by James Meek (Jamie Byng at Canongate)
Light Lifting by Alexander MacLeod (Robin Robertson at Jonathan Cape)
The Illicit Happiness of Other People by Manu Joseph (Roland Philipps at John Murray)
The Heart Broke In by James Meek (Jamie Byng at Canongate)
The Guardian also
profiled Christopher
MacLehose on the occasion of MacLehose Press's fifth
anniversary and the publisher's more than 45 years in the business. Of his time
at Harvill when it was folded into Random House in 2002: "The promises of
total editorial freedom – every one of them – were overlooked." But
MacLehose has many more positive things to say about his company's breakout
success with the Stieg Larsson trilogy after many other publishers had passed
on the project: "A publisher should go where the books are, wherever that
may be. The fact that Larsson is in translation has been completely
overshadowed in readers' minds by the fact that it is something they want to
read. Surely that's as it should be."
Penguin's June 20 suit against MacAdam/Cage
for licensing ebook royalties to Susan Vreeland's GIRL IN HYACINTH BLUE despite
not having the legal right to do so appears to be nearing an end. On November
9, New York Supreme Court Justice Saliann Scarpulla imposed a default judgment
requiring MacAdam/Cage to pay the $22,000 owed to Penguin after months of not
responding to the publisher's summons and failing to show up for appointed
court dates. Penguin in turn submitted a proposed
order on December 12 asking the court to award them an additional $550 in
legal costs as well as "interest to be calculated by the Clerk at the
statutory rate from May 8, 2012 through and including the date of entry of this
judgment."
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