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World Book Day director Kirsten Grant said she was “delighted”
with the event this year, as sales of children’s books increased 24% week
on week in the wake of the March event.
“I was so delighted with World Book Day this year, it was so
much bigger than in 2014,” she said. “I felt we turned the corner not only
in book sales and token redemption but also in terms of the huge saturation
of media coverage.”
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Nick Poole, chief executive of the Chartered Institute of
Library & Information Professionals (CILIP), has written
an open letter to Birmingham City Council, urging it to keep its
libraries open and professionally staffed.
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Amazon’s founder Jeff Bezos has responded to a New York Times article
describing alleged ruthless work practices at the company after the article
sparked outrage on social media.
The NYT
has written an in-depth expose on the working culture and practices at the
online giant in the US after interviewing more 100 current and former
employees.
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Author Ali Smith has used her appearance at the Edinburgh
International Book Festival to warn how the closure of public libraries was
threatening the “democracy of reading”.
Smith, who was interviewed at the festival yesterday (16th
August), said the continued closing of libraries would have an impact on
the next generation of writers, and that creating “community libraries”
meant that in the end the libraries would “fall apart”.
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Conran Octopus has commissioned a colouring book inspired by
iconic images from British Vogue
in the 1950s.
The book, illustrated and authored by Iain R Webb, explores a
“glamorous dream wardrobe of luxurious ballgowns and soigné cocktail
dresses, smart suits and dramatic accessories”.
Captions will offer fashion and style tips, and are taken from
the original pages of Vogue.
Readers will be able to colour in their own cover, with Conran
Octopus encouraging people to post artwork to Instagram using the hashtag
#voguecolouringbook.
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Online festivals will continue to grow, although traditional
festivals remain the best way to forge connections with readers and fellow
writers, authors have told The
Bookseller.
Writers said that online festivals offer authors the chance to
be inventive and connect with fans around the world simultaneously, with
the advantage that they do not significantly disrupt writing time.
Writer Helen Smith founded the BritCrime online festival,
which took place in July.
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Pan Macmillan has appointed James Long as publishing
operations director.
Long, who joined Macmillan 10 years ago as a project manager
at Nature and moved to Pan Macmillan in 2008, will take on his new role
with immediate effect.
At Pan Macmillan Long has up to now been responsible for
website platform development, the e-book programme, new digital publishing
projects and most recently the company's data and insights service.
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The Shanghai International Children’s Book Fair (CCBF) is
launching a competition for illustrators aged between 18 and 39.
The competition is now open
and illustrators, publishers and art schools from anywhere in the world can
submit published or unpublished work produced during the past two years.
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