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Marian Keyes has notched her tenth UK Official Top 50 number
one, returning to the pole position for the first time in over two years.
Keyes’ The
Woman Who Stole My Life (Penguin) sold 24,139 copies through
Nielsen BookScan’s Total Consumer Market, an impressive 27% rise on its
first week sales. She bumps David Nicholls from number one after his
one-week reign with Us
(Hodder) which had a week on week volume decline of 22.7% selling 19,195
units and dropping to third.
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Booksellers have welcomed a new title in the Fifty Shades of
Grey series but have mixed opinions on how well a fourth book will
sell.
News there would be a new title in the series told from
Christian Grey's perspective and entitled
Grey: Fifty Shades of Grey as told by Christian broke yesterday (1st June) via author E L James’
Twitter account, and was a surprise to retailers, even though the book’s
release date is set for 18th June, in just over two weeks’ time.
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Manchester University Press (MUP) has acquired 58 titles in
politics and sociology which had been scheduled to appear with Bloomsbury.
Earlier this year, Bloomsbury Academic announced it would no longer be commissioning books in the fields of
politics, international relations or sociology as it looked to focus on
other areas in the humanities and social sciences.
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Books written by women or men from the perspective of a female
character are less likely to win major literary awards than books written
from a male perspective or about men, research by author Nicola Griffith
has found.
Griffith analysed the last 15 years of winners for six fiction
awards – the Man Booker Prize, the Pulitzer Prize, the Hugo Award, the
National Book Award, the National Book Critics’ Award, and the Newbery
Medal.
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Literary agency David Higham will incorporate Toby Eady
Associates, following an acquisition of the business.
Toby Eady Associates was set up by Eady in 1968, and
represents authors including Bernard Cornwell, Rachel Seiffert and John Carey.
Under the new arrangement, Eady will continue to work
independently, looking after English-language rights to his authors' work,
while utilising David Higham's resources in film, TV and translation
markets.
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"Vested interests" profiting only a few will attempt
to hold up the reform of copyright, Andrus Ansip, vice president for the
digital single market (DSM) at the European Commission, has said.
Speaking at the European Digital Forum in Brussels yesterday
(1st June), Ansip said that copyright rules in Europe are a “mess”, and “we
need to act with some urgency” to reform them. He also said that people
“were tempted into illegal downloads” because they could not access their
content when they went abroad.
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Blackwell’s Oxford is holding what it is calling the first
ever Empathy Festival from 5th-12th June.
The company’s flagship bookshop will host five events over
five days on the subject of empathy in conjunction with Roman Krznaric,
author of Empathy: Why
it Matters and How To Get It (Rider).
The festival will look at why 98% of people have the ability
to empathise but very few fulfil their empathic potential.
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Nosy Crow has said it has broken the one million sales mark
for the first time with its
The Rescue Princess series, written by author Paula Harrison
and illustrated by Sharon Tancredi.
The publisher has sold almost 10,000 copies of the books in
the UK through Nielsen BookScan Total Consumer Market. The vast majority of
the remaining sales were of export sales in other countries, and very small
number of e-books.
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Ebury Publishing will publish the "autobiography" of
“Only Fools and Horses” character Derek ‘Del Boy’ Trotter, titled He Who Dares.
Kelly Ellis, senior commissioning editor, acquired world
rights in all languages from the John Sullivan estate.
The comedy character, a South London entrepreneur, was
portrayed in the long-running BBC sitcom by actor David Jason.
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Blink Publishing has singed a book by TV star Amy Childs, who
first appeared on ITV2’s “The Only Way is Essex”.
The book will recount Childs’ rise to fame and her business
career.
Blink’s acquisitions director Clare Tillyer bought world
rights to the book from The Can Group.
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John Murray is to publish
Natural Histories, a book of a major BBC Radio 4 series which
begins today (2nd June).
"Natural Histories" is a weekly series, presented by
wildlife expert Brett Westwood, which explores the stories of 25
“unexpected species that have managed to get under the skin of human
society and change the way we see the world”. The series is a partnership
between Radio 4 and the Natural History Museum.
The book will be written by Brett and Stephen Moss, who wrote Tweet of the Day
(John Murray) and is scheduled for October.
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Little Brown Books for Young Readers (LBBYR) has acquired the
debut children’s novel by Ed Clarke, head of film and television at Shoebox
Films.
Rowan and the Heart of Oak is a fiction title
about fairies and how a girl deals with the disappearance of her mother.
One day Rowan runs away to London’s Hyde Park where, underneath a beech
tree, her tears open up a world of fairy clans.
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Walker Books has acquired a children’s non-fiction series that
helps children explore science, maths, politics and geography through
football.
The books are written by Alex Bellos and Ben Lyttleton and the
first, The Football
Academy, will be published in hardback in September 2016.
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