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This year's Bookseller 100—our annual list of the main movers
and shakers in the book trade—marks a generational shift.
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Publishers roll out their Black Friday deals to consumers.
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Bloomsbury won three awards at the 2015 British Book Design
and Production Awards, including the "coveted" Book of the Year
award.
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The Libraries Taskforce has received funding for a further
four years, its c.e.o Kathy Settle has revealed, as it delivered its
six-month progress report.
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The number of children in the UK who took part in The Reading
Agency’s Summer Reading Challenge this year was down 2.8% on last year’s
figure.
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Michael Tamblyn has been made c.e.o of Kobo, taking over from
Takahito Aiki, who was in charge of the company for just under two years.
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David Goldblatt’s study of the “changing face of English
football and how it reflects the nation as a whole”, has been named the
winner of the 27th William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award.
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James Dawson has spoken of his frustration that a group of
parents in Alaska are trying to get his non-fiction YA title This Book is Gay
banned from the local library, saying there are some “hate-filled people in
this world”.
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Faber has signed Content
Provider, a new book from award-winning comedian and writer
Stewart Lee.
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Thomas Morris, Catherine Nixey and Duncan White are the
recipients of the 2015 winners of the RSL Jerwood Awards for Non Fiction.
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Michel Faber has won the 2015 Saltire Book of the Year award
for The Book of Strange
New Things (Canongate).
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Penguin Random House has three titles shortlisted for the DSC
Prize for South Asian Literature 2016 which reflects “the variety and
vigour” of South Asian fiction writing and writing about South Asia.
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