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CILIP Scotland will later this month launch an advocacy
strategy for school libraries, pledging
to campaign for libraries at national level.
In the document, CILIP Scotland pledges to commission research on the
impact of school libraries and librarians, provide advice and support to
individual librarians, and advocate for school librarians at a national
level.
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In the latest salvo from an increasingly confident
conservative regime in Tokyo bent on revisionism, officials have requested
that a US author and his publisher remove historic references to Japan's
war time sex slaves from a history textbook.
The publisher of Traditions
& Encounters: A Global Perspective on the Past by Jerry H
Bentley and Herbert Ziegler, McGraw-Hill Education, has declined the
request, according to a statement issued to the Wall Street Journal.
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Lawyers for free speech groups have argued that a ban placed
on a performing artist preventing him from publishing his memoir is an
“unpredictable threat to freedom of expression”.
The artist’s ex-wife was granted a temporary injunction
after saying that the contents of the memoir would be distressing for his
son to read. The artist cannot be identified for legal reasons, and
his publisher is known only as STL during the case.
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HarperCollins imprint the Borough Press has signed a new
novel after publisher Katie Espiner mentored the author through the
WoMentoring programme.
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Hodder & Stoughton's personal development imprint
Yellow Kite is to host a two-day online festival to help people stay on
track with their New Year’s resolutions.
This is the Year, which takes place this Thursday 22nd and
Friday 23rd January, will help “transform your body and mind, get you
back on track with your resolutions and guarantee to make 2015 the year
that you live a better life”.
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Le Livre de Poche, the paperback subsidiary of Hachette
Livre, will soon publish a compilation of texts from some of its authors
in tribute to the victims of the shooting at Charlie Hebdo nearly two
weeks ago.
The publisher’s profits from sales of the as-yet-untitled
book, which will retail for €5, will go to the satirical weekly. Culture
minister Fleur Pellerin also announced yesterday (Monday 19th January)
that the government would provide funds to ensure the financially-strapped
magazine survive.
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Nathan Filer has added the Writers’ Guild Award for Best
First Novel to the accolades for his debut The Shock of the Fall (The Borough
Press).
The awards were held last night (Monday 19th January) at
RIBA in London and presented by writer and comedian Sandi Toksvig.
Filer won the Best First Novel award, beating shortlisted
novels A Girl is a
Half-Formed Thing by Eimear McBride (Faber & Faber) and Barbarians by Tim
Glencross (John Murray).
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Eleni Lawrence has been promoted to the new role of Hodder
and Stoughton communications director, among several staffing changes in
the publisher's press office.
Former publicity director Lawrence will now be focusing on
Hodder's corporate PR strategy, as well as continuing to work on a
portfolio of titles.
Other changes see Veronique Norton promoted from publicity
manager to senior publicity manager and Rebecca Mundy promoted from
publicist to press officer.
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Little, Brown’s Piatkus Constable Robinson
division has acquired a “beautifully written” memoir about mental
illness.
Publishing director Andreas Campomar bought UK and
Commonwealth rights in The
Spaces In Between: A Memoir of Mental Illness by
Caroline Jones from Kerry Glencorse at Susanna Lea Associates.
Jones, who grew up mainly in east Africa, developed bulimia
at the age of 17. She suffered for 14 years before finding a therapist
who was able to help.
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Headline imprint Tinder Press has partnered with The Reading
Agency to hold an open submissions period for unagented manuscripts.
Unagented authors will be able to send their manuscripts
direct to the imprint for two weeks in March, with the event being held
to celebrate two years of Tinder Press.
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Mark Zuckerberg’s second book for his Facebook book club is The Better Angels of Our Nature
by Steven Pinker (Penguin).
The book is currently showing as not in stock on
Amazon.co.uk until January 21st, and on Amazon.com until January 24th.
The book is showing as available on the Waterstones’ website, and is
showing as available for despatch in two days via Foyles.
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The identities of the finalists for the Costa Short Story
Award 2014 have been announced, with writers from England, Scotland,
Wales and Northern Ireland making the shortlist.
The shortlist was chosen by a panel of judges including
writers Patrick Gale and Victoria Hislop; Richard Beard, director of the
National Academy of Writing; Fanny Blake, novelist, journalist and Books
Editor of Woman & Home magazine; and Simon Trewin, agent at William
Morris Endeavor.
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