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The JS Group has seen “significant” growth in the take-up of
e-textbooks last year, helping it to a 14.5% increase in higher education
UK revenues. However, a decline in legal print sales and the reduction in
value of a contract with the Ministry of Justice meant the Hammicks legal
arm saw a decline of 18.1% in revenue last year.
The company also exited its operations in Ghana in its
International arm, but saw revenue in its Botswana operations grow by 9.4%
before currency movements. |
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Author Mal Peet has died, his agent Peter Cox has announced.
Peet died last night (2nd March), after being diagnosed with
cancer just last Christmas.
The writer, whose latest novel The Murdstone Trilogy came out in 2014,
won a number of awards during his career, including the Carnegie Medal, the
Guardian Children’s Book Prize and the Branford Boase Award. |
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Twelve members of staff left The Folio Society in January, the
publishing house has confirmed.
A spokesperson said the job losses came as a result of a
"fundamental restructure" of the company, with The Folio Society
now employing a total of 58 people. The job losses came from marketing,
operating and systems but did not affect production or editorial. |
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A busy publication schedule drove change across all the major Bookseller charts last
week, with titles from James Patterson, David Walliams, Jeffrey Archer and
Helen MacDonald all chalking up number ones in their first week of sale. |
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Writer Julia Donaldson and illustrator Lydia Monks have created
a sequel to What the
Ladybird Heard, entitled What
the Ladybird Heard Next, which will be published by Macmillan
Children’s Books (MCB) in September. |
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Toby Mundy, the founder and former c.e.o. of Atlantic Books, is to become the
first director of the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-fiction. Meanwhile
submission deadlines for publishers will change to “accommodate the
timelines and deadlines of the publishing calendar”. |
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Four staff at the British Museum’s digital and publishing
department, which includes British Museum Press, have taken voluntary
redundancy as part of a restructure.
Last autumn the museum said it was restructuring the department to help deliver the
museum’s “strategic goals for digital” and consulting on 10 roles. |
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Libraries and bookshops are preparing to mark this year’s
World Book Day tomorrow (5th March) with a series of storytime events and
author visits.
More than 70 branches of Waterstones are hosting events,
ranging from storytime to dressing up competitions and events with schools,
and will stock this year’s range of World Book Day £1 titles, with books by authors
including David McKee, Chris Riddell, Michael Morpurgo, Holly Smale and
Daisy Meadows. |
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The Catholic newspaper the Tablet
is to host the first UK Catholic literary festival, sponsored by
Bloomsbury, as part of celebrations for its 175th anniversary.
Among the speakers at the June event at the Library of
Birmingham will be Lady Antonia Fraser and David Lodge.
The Tablet Literary Festival's theme will be "the
Catholic imagination in literature", with speakers from Catholic and
non-Catholic backgrounds, and from the literary, theological and historical
worlds. |
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Ebury Press is to publish the memoir of Chrissie Hynde,
frontwoman of The Pretenders, acquired in a “major deal”.
Publisher and deputy m.d. Jake Lingwood bought world English
and translation rights, excluding North America, while Gerry Howard, v.p.,
executive editor at Doubleday, Penguin Random House USA, bought North
American rights in a co-deal from Creative Artists Agency (CAA) on behalf
of Chrissie Hynde and Quietus Management. |
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English PEN and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
have urged the Mexican president to take stronger steps to protect freedom
of expression during his current state visit to the UK.
English PEN has a campaign focus on Mexico in 2015, the same
year which will see the country as the Market Focus at the London Book Fair. |
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