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Publishing digitally first can help authors to learn about the
publishing process, make writers more critical of their own work and help
reinvent an author. However, the author Stark Holborn warned that the
format should only be used in the right context as there is “a difficulty
in marketing something that has no physical presence”.
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Senior commissioning editor Bill Swainson is to leave
Bloomsbury in a cost-cutting restructure at the publishing house.
Swainson, who has been at Bloomsbury for 15 years, will depart
at the end of June.
Bloomsbury editor-in-chief Alexandra Pringle said the company
was having to "restructure and reduce the costs of its trade editorial
department" in response to "the changing publishing
environment." The announcement of Swainson's departure was made
"with great sadness", she said.
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Simon & Schuster UK will this October publish a collection
of essays by American YouTuber and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
(LGBT) activist Tyler Oakley.
Oakley currently has 6.9m followers on his YouTube channel, where
he campaigns for LGBT rights and discusses social issues such as education
and healthcare.
In Binge,
a collection of essays, Oakley will “spill his best untold off-camera moments
and allow his fans an intimate look at his life away from the screen”, said
S&S.
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Publishers have been upbeat at the 41st Buenos Aires
International Book Fair, which concludes today (11th May), highlighting
strong sales in the Argentine market of adventure, fantasy and self-help
books. They told The
Bookseller that they planned to focus on these genres as they
sign new talent.
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HarperCollins Australia has apologised to former Australian
prime minister Paul Keating and agreed to pulp unsold copies of a book
about him following a legal battle, according to the Australian press.
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Scarlet Ibis by Gill Lewis (OUP
Children's) has won this year’s Little Rebels Children’s Book Award for
radical fiction.
The award, which is for children’s fiction for readers any age up to 12
that promotes social justice, went to Scarlet
Ibis because it “raises awareness of the care system, mental
health issues and the challenges facing young carers”, said the judges.
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A "Golden Ticket" competition launched by Blink and
Alfie Deyes on Friday night (8th May) had to be cancelled on Sunday (10th)
after a technical problem that informed hundreds of entrants that they had
won.
Deyes announced the competition on his YouTube channel on
Friday evening. Viewers who had bought The
Pointless Book 2 with the corresponding app were able to scan a
designated set of pages in the book using the app to see if they had won a
golden ticket.
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Coronet is to publish a sequel to Graham Hancock’s Fingerprints of the Gods,
which was published 20 years ago.
Fingerprints of the Gods was a “radical
re-evaluation of man’s past” and has sold nine million copies worldwide
since its 1995 release, said Coronet.
To coincide with the 20th anniversary, Hancock has written Magicians of the Gods,
which is “set to reveal explosive new research and evidence to support his
sensational claims of a lost civilisation”.
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Quadrille is launching The Knowledge, a new series of
non-fiction pocket guides to a variety of subjects.
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Pan Macmillan’s Bluebird is to publish “an enchanted
illustrated enquiry into the pursuit of happiness”, which was first
self-published.
The Well of Being: A Children’s Book for Adults by
Jean-Pierre Weill is a pictorial narrative which “tells the story of a man
as he searches for the wellbeing he longs for and dimly remembers yet no
longer believes in”.
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A former Barnes & Noble digital strategy executive, Jade
Roth, has joined Kortext as senior vice-president.
Roth will join the Bournemouth-based e-textbook platform and
use her experience in North American higher education market to support
Kortext’s international expansion.
Roth worked at B&N for over 30 years and was most recently
vice-president for books and digital strategy and chief product officer for
digital education.
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The Bay Bookshop in Colwyn Bay, North Wales, has closed after
30 years.
Owners Andy and Debbie Morley have closed the long-lived store
after a three-month closing-down sale. It was originally opened by Andy’s
parents Rachael and Raymond Morley in 1972.
Morley told
News
North Wales that competition from the internet had impacted
on sales.
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