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The €100,000 International Impac Dublin Literary Award is looking
for new sponsorship after the trust fund established to back to prize ran
dry last year.
The
Irish Times has reported that for the first time in its
20-year history, the prize will be entirely publically funded by Dublin
City Council while another sponsor is sought. The award will retain its
name, though, while the search is ongoing, the newspaper said. |
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Bloomsbury Information m.d. Kathy Rooney has left the company
as part of a restructure.
Rooney, part of the senior management team at the publisher,
left at the end of May to pursue other opportunities, beginning with a
non-executive role at information management platform Librios.
Vafa Payman, currently international business development director
at Bloomsbury, will now head up Bloomsbury Information. |
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E-book sales in the US declined by 6% in 2014 compared to the
year before, statistics released by Nielsen show.
Information presented at BookExpo America and derived from
PubTrack Digital, which collects e-book sales data from more than 30 of the
largest publishers in the US, showed that in 2014 just under 223 million
e-books were sold in America, down from almost 240 million units in 2013.
E-books made up 26% of all book sales in 2014, down from 28% in 2013. |
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Waterstones has launched a new promotion on classic literature
entitled Rediscovered Classics: The Best Books You’ve Never Read, with
Francoise Sagan's Bonjour
Tristesse its first choice.
The promotion will see a new classic title every month
promoted by Waterstones shops throughout the 287-strong estate, along with
online support and direct email marketing. The company said the new
promotion follows the success of its Book of the Month titles. |
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Malorie Blackman has urged the next children’s laureate to
speak their mind, despite describing her "surprise" at the
“vitriolic reaction” she had received to some of her own campaigns.
Blackman is coming to the end of her two-year stint in the
role and the new laureate will be announced next week. |
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The Authors Guild of America has launched a Fair Contract
Initiative to “address the major inequities in many boilerplate contract
terms today” and educate authors on what terms they can negotiate on.
The initiative, announced on Friday (28th May) at BEA, aims to
“restore balance to the author-publisher relationship and help authors
achieve a fair return for the efforts they contribute to the joint venture
of book publication”. |
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Citing 48 new regular member companies in the last year,
the American Booksellers Association (ABA) leadership is
declaring an end to a six-year crisis in US independent bookshops.
At its annual meeting at BookExpo America in New
York City on Thursday (28th May), c.e.o Oren J Teicher told
the assembly, "We are engaged in decoupling the word
'endangered' from 'bookstores'." |
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Usborne has given all its members of staff a £100 bonus after
the publisher was the top-selling children’s imprint in April and May.
For the four weeks ending 16th May, Usborne Publishing’s sales
totalled £1,211,170, ahead of second-placed Puffin Books’ £1,198,985
through Nielsen BookScan Total Consumer Market (all children’s sales). |
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Alan Bennett, Robert Macfarlane and Chris Riddell received Hay
Medals this weekend at the Hay Festival. The medals are awarded annually to
celebrate important contributions to literature. |
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Jonathan Harris is the new honorary president of the
Independent Publishers Guild.
Harris joined the IPG in 2000 shortly after setting up his
publishing company, Learning Matters, which he sold to SAGE in 2011.
His experience in publishing includes the launch of Blackstone
Press and being m.d. of Letts Educational.
Since selling Learning Matters, Harris has advised and
mentored start-up businesses.
Harris succeeds Sonny Leong as honorary president. Leong will
continue to be involved with the IPG as the coordinator of its newly
created foundation. |
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Two Roads has bought the “true story behind the heart-warming
and miraculous tale of a stray dog who captured the hearts of millions the
world over when he joined a team of Adventure Racers”.
Kate Hewson, in her first acquisition for the John Murray
Press imprint, bought UK and Commonwealth rights, excluding Canada, in Arthur: The Dog Who Came in from
the Jungle by Mikael Lindnord from Simon Trewin at WME at
auction.
The book will be ghost-written by former publisher and editor
Val Hudson. |
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The audio adaptation of Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book won
three awards at the US Audie Awards, which recognise achievements in
audiobooks. |
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