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Lee Child achieves a personal best this week as his latest
thriller tops the Official UK Top 50 for a third consecutive week. Personal (Bantam) sold
22,680 copies in the seven days ending 9th May and marks the first time a
Jack Reacher thriller has spent more than a fortnight at the top in a
single format. Sales were down 41% in volume terms week on week but more
than 7,000 copies ahead of the week’s highest new entry, the paperback of
David Nicholls’ Us
(Hodder). Personal has now sold 93,515 copies in less than one month.
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Jamie Oliver’s new book will focus on healthy eating,
following a “personal journey” taken by the TV chef.
Penguin Random House’s Michael Joseph division will publish Everyday Super Food in
August this year, to tie in with a new six-part Channel 4 series.
The book will contain recipes for 30 breakfasts, 30 lunches
and 30 dinners, and ideas for healthy snacks and drinks.
Oliver has also “taken advice from top experts in the world of
nutrition, health and sleep and the result is what Jamie does best, lots of
bite-sized information and delicious recipes”.
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The Department for Culture, Media and Sport has confirmed that
Ed Vaizey will remain in place as culture minister.
Vaizey, who has filled the role since the coalition government
formed in 2010, will now serve under his fourth culture secretary, John
Whittingdale.
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Independent publishers have taken the majority of spots on the
15-strong longlist for the Jerwood Fiction Uncovered Prize 2015.
The prize celebrates great British fiction and each year
awards a group of eight writers with £5,000 each.
This is the first time the prize has made public a longlist.
Independent publishers whose books have made the list include
Canongate, with Animals
by Emma Jane Unsworth, about a friendship between two women.
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The Quarto Group has announced that its chief financial
officer Mick Mousley is retiring.
Mousley, who has been with the company for 28 years, will remain in his
position until a successor can take over. Quarto has started its search for
the executive role and said it will make an announcement soon.
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Belinda Hollyer, author and former m.d. of Random House Children’s
Books, has died aged 70 following an illness.
Born in New Zealand, Hollyer moved to London in the 1970s,
working first for Macdonald and then The Bodley Head, where she set up
their paperback list Red Fox. She was appointed m.d. of RandomHouse
Children’s Books following the merger of Cape, Chatto and The Bodley Head.
After Random House, Hollyer moved to Philips, where she ran
the London office.
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Sales at Hachette UK fell 4% year-on-year for the first
quarter of 2015, partially due to an “unfavourable” VAT effect on e-books,
parent company Lagardere has said.
Hachette UK said it had “steady sales in print and digital” in
the first quarter of the year, with its performance “broadly in line with
expectations in what is a relatively quiet quarter for sales”.
Hachette UK made the comments as its parent company Lagardere
released its results for the first quarter of 2015.
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Viking has appointed Katy Loftus as commissioning editor,
where she will report to publisher Mary Mount.
Loftus, who is currently an editor at Avon Books, will take up
the post on the 18th May. Viking said her “energy and experience will be a
wonderful addition to the fiction editorial team and we look forward to
seeing her take the list in new, exciting directions”.
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Fiona Allen and Eloy Sasot have been promoted to the Harper
Collins’ UK Executive Committee.
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Amazon is to open a new distribution centre in Dunstable,
Bedforshire.
At 310,000 sq ft, the new hub is the company’s ninth in the UK
and second in the East of England.
The company said it would create 500 new jobs.
Amazon's UK operations director John Tagawa said the firm
looked forward to the new site playing an "integral role" in the
business.
"Over the last two years, we have added well in excess of
2,000 new employees to our UK workforce and we are delighted to be able to
create a further 500 permanent jobs at our new Dunstable centre," he
said.
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Arrow has acquired a book commemorating Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird,
to be published ahead of the release of Lee’s Go Set a Watchman (William Heinemann).
Publishing director Jenny Geras acquired UK and Commonwealth
rights, excluding Canada, to
Scout, Atticus & Boo by Mary McDonagh Murphy from Richard
Pine at Inkwell Management.
In Scout, Atticus & Boo, McDonagh Murphy commemorates more
than half a century of
To Kill a Mockingbird by “exploring the great novel’s history
and how it has left its indelible mark”.
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Emma Cox, a headteacher from Devon, has won this year’s New
Children’s Author Prize, organised by the National Literacy Trust and
Bloomsbury.
Malkin Moonlight, chosen from a shortlist of
six books, is about a cat who is looking for his friend Roux. He comes
across a group of cats at a recycling centre and is soon involved in their
fight with a gang of villainous cats who live in the nearby wasteland.
Rebecca McNally, publishing director at Bloomsbury Children’s
and one of the judges, said Cox’s book has “real warmth, humour and a
strong sense of jeopardy”.
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