Friday, February 26, 2016

The Te Papa Tupu Writing Incubator is back for 2016!


Books as Experiences, not Things

Books as Experiences, not Things

by Marcus Greville - The Read, Booksellers NZ

The landscape of retail has been changing significantly over the last seven or eight years, essentially since the global financial crisis of 2008. The art of consumption has been shifting away from material possession towards the experiential; meaning people are placing more value on what they have done and how they have done it rather than the shiny object that now lives third draw down in that old desk in the spare bedroom. Ironically, it seems consumers are moving from the physical to the substantial.

Photo  Mark Tantrum - the next generation of consumers

In a piece in the The Atlantic, James Hamblin noted that “over the past decade, an abundance of psychology research has shown that experiences bring people more happiness than do possessions.” Apparently happiness is awesome. If experiences are the new shiny, then this begs the question: where do books and bookshops live on the spectrum of the experiential and the material? Read on

NZ title shortlisted for the Sunday Business Post/Penguin Short Story Prize



Alex Reece Abbott's story, Mrs Horgan's Surprise, about an Industrial School girl in rural Wairarapa during 1913, has just been shortlisted for the Sunday Business Post/Penguin Short Story Prize. The winner will be announced at an awards event in Dublin next month.

WRITERS WEEK IS NEARLY HERE






Writers Week is fast approaching: from 8—13 March you can get your fill of stimulating discussion.
Opening the festival in style - and packing quite some punch - is the Gala Showcase: Fighting Talk on Thu 10 March. Five writers who have never appeared on stage together before have been busily preparing their personal stories on the theme of 'rapprochement' {nounthe development of friendlier relations between countries or groups of people who have been enemies}. Robert DessaixMariko TamakiEtgar KeretCourtney Sina Meredith and Sally Gardner are coming from all corners of the globe to be in Wellington, and each have a tale to tell of conflict, and possibly of resolution. 
There is something for every interest at Writers Week: from running and the science of endurance, to genetics and brain surgery, to selling books and special effects, to slam poetrymonsters and magical worlds

Latest Book News from The Bookseller including Rick Stein to open bookshop, and, Lord of the Rings colouring book coming

Penguin Random House UK
Penguin Random House has launched a "Creative Responsibility Manifesto", which includes a formal programme to improve diversity, in a bid to become a “force for good in society above and beyond” the books it produces.
Rick Stein, Sarah Stein, Ron Johns
Celebrity chef Rick Stein is set to open a bookshop with his wife Sarah and Cornish bookseller Ron Johns next month.
The Edinburgh Bookshop
A record year for submissions has led to the highest ever number of regional shortlisted entries in this year’s British Book Industry Awards Independent Bookshop of the Year category, sponsored by Gardners Books.
Sarah Odedina
Sarah Odedina, former m.d. of Hot Key Books and children’s publisher at Oneworld, has been appointed to the new role of editor-at-large of Pushkin Children’s Books.
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy Colouring Book
HarperCollins, in partnership with Warner Bros Consumer Products, is publishing the official The Lord of the Rings Trilogy Colouring Book. 
To Kill a Mockingbird
Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird is the most popular reading group title in the UK, according to new research from The Reading Agency.


Barnes & Noble
Barnes and Noble has revealed plans to launch a new "prototype" store later this year, a US conference has heard.
headline
Headline has made two promotions within its press office, with Caitlin Raynor made deputy communications director.
French flag
Forty-one French graphic novel publishers have threatened to boycott next year’s Angoulême International Comics Festival unless the organisers revamp the event entirely.
Sepp Blatter
Disgraced Fifa president Sepp Blatter is releasing a memoir called Sepp Blatter: Mission Football through Swiss publisher Werd & Weber.
Simple: effortless food, big flavours
Mitchell Beazley has announced the tenth cookbook from award-winning cook Diana Henry.
A digital reading museum is set to open in Paris. 

The Roundup with PW

Publisher Sues Tommy Mottola: The music mogul is facing a $150K lawsuit filed by Hachette for failing to deliver a book on business.

An Exiled Salvadoran Writer: Jorge Galan was forced to leave his country after receiving death threats over his novel on the 1989 murder of six Jesuit priests by the Salvadoran Army.

Visiting the Oldest American Bookstore: Learn about the 270-year-old Moravian Book Shop in Bethlehem, Pa., and its resident ghost.

New UC Davis Bookstore Opening in June: The renovated bookstore will reopen by June 6 featuring an Amazon store, e-book services desk, and more.

French Publishers Protest Comics Fest: Over 40 publishers in France are threatening to boycott next year’s Angouleme International Comics Festival unless it changes significantly.

VIEW ALL »

How publishing has changed

The Open Refrigerator 

By - February 23, 2016 - The Millions




A few decades ago I was sitting in a college seminar room listening to the professor discourse quite penetratingly on Thomas Mann’s monumental and once ubiquitous novel The Magic Mountain when my mind wandered to the question of just how this novel came to be published. Presumably, that callow and ignorant undergraduate in the basement of Goldwin Smith Hall thought someone — some editor — must have read the thing and recognized it for the great book that it was. And how hard could that have been anyway? 
Hell, even I knew it was a great book, if a bit long and occasionally opaque in meaning. I was a senior and the unpleasant prospect of graduation and the necessity to find some paying work was weighing on my mind. Why couldn’t I become that guy? I loved books, loved them even more than my other obsession, basketball. That might be a satisfying line of work.
MORE

Simon & Schuster Creates Muslim Children's Imprint

Shelf Awareness

Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers has created Salaam Reads, an imprint that will publish books that feature Muslim characters and stories and highlight the experience of being Muslim, the New York Times reported. The imprint will publish at least nine books a year, including board books, picture books, middle grade titles and YA books.

Heading Salaam Reads is executive editor Zareen Jaffery, who told the newspaper that as a Pakistani-American Muslim girl growing up in Connecticut, she read a lot. "I remember looking at books to try to figure out, 'What does it mean to be American? Am I doing this right?' The truth is, I didn't see myself reflected in books back then."
She noticed the problem even more in the past three years, when she began reading books with her young nieces and nephews. "It was hard not to notice that none of those books really reflected their experience," she said.

The imprint will release four titles in 2017: Salam Alaikum, a picture book based on a Harris J. Others song; Musa, Moises, Mo and Kevin, a picture book about four kindergarten friends who learn about each other's holiday traditions; The Gauntlet of Blood and Sand by Karuna Riazi, about a 12-year-old Bangladeshi-American who tries to save her brother from a supernatural board game; and Yo Soy Muslim, a picture book by poet Mark Gonzales.

'The Romance of a Bookshop'

Shelf Awareness

"There is nothing like the romance of a bookshop. A living, breathing behemoth where people wander around in dreamy circles, bump into interesting strangers, flirt, buy a book, go for coffee, fall in love, get their hearts broken, then go back for consolation. 
We know this from films of old, from 84 Charing Cross Road and The Big Sleep to Manhattan, Notting Hill and You've Got Mail. This is the 'How We Met' story that we would like to tell our children and friends: 'Oh, we met in the poetry section of that old bookshop in 1984, and look at us now!' "

--Arifa Akbar in an Independent story with one of our favorite headlines: "Bookshops are back--because you can't meet a lover on your Kindle"

Hundreds Of Thousands Flock To India’s Book Festivals

artsjournal:  

“As the festivals have blossomed, they have also turned into something more than strictly literary: a mixture of the public square and the television studio, or forums where India talks to itself.”

Amazon Is Secretly Developing A Used E-book Marketplace

Book2Book Thursday 25 Feb 2016

Amazon is in the process of developing a secret project that will allow users to sell their e-books. When digital books are resold a portion of the revenue will be paid to the rights holder. This should placate publishers who can earn revenue on used products, something they can't do with used bookstores in the real world.


Good Ereader

Blatter Book On Hold For Final Chapter On Fifa Debacle

Book2Book Thursday 25 Feb 2016

Sepp Blatter has postponed publishing his book on 18 years at the top of scandal-plagued FIFA because he wants to squeeze in the final chapter on his ban from soccer, his publisher said on Thursday.


Reuters

Jeffrey Archer's Novel Goes To Number One In The USA

Book2Book Thursday 25 Feb 2016

Jeffrey Archer's new novel, Cometh the Hour, has shot to the top of the bestseller list in the USA.
The former Conservative MP learned that the book, the sixth and penultimate instalment in the series, The Clifton Chronicles, had reached number one in the USA Today chart shortly before the launch of the novel at the Telegraph's London headquarters.
Lord Archer told an audience that he had originally only intended the series to be five parts.


Telegraph

Poets House exhibit teams two artistic temperaments

BY LINDSAY BU | Visual art and poetry may not always share common ground, but they do exhibit commonalities. Both rely heavily on the audience to interpret what is presented before them, and to consider the full story behind a single image or a line. But grappling with visual art and poetry is very different when the two are combined.

Fay Lansner: “Hot Turns” (1982. Pastel on paper with collage, 38 x 44 in.). Image courtesy Poets House. Image courtesy Poets House.
Fay Lansner: “Hot Turns” (1982. Pastel on paper with collage, 38 x 44 in.). Image courtesy Poets House. Image courtesy Poets House.

At Poets House (10 River Terrace), the exhibit “Metamorphosis: The Collaboration of Poet Barbara Guest & Artist Fay Lansner” features a creative dialogue between the two women, by presenting a number of Lansner’s portraits of Guest, as well as her charcoal and pastel pieces that incorporate lines of Guest’s poetry.
The poetry of Barbara Guest (1920–2006) began to rise in prominence during the late ’50s, when she was considered among the New York School of Poets — whose other members included John Ashbery, Frank O’Hara, and James Schuyler.

Fay Lansner: “Portrait of Barbara Guest” (1970s. Oil on canvas, 60 x 36 in.).
Fay Lansner: “Portrait of Barbara Guest” (1970s. Oil on canvas, 60 x 36 in.).


Influenced by surrealism and abstract expressionism, Guest’s work is characterized by the lyricism and musicality of her words; a painterly impulse that evokes gentle but poignant images. Fay Gross Lansner (1921–2010) was a prolific member of the abstract expressionist movement. Affiliated with well-known artists such as Willem de Kooning and Joan Mitchell, Lansner was committed to figurative painting and symbolic imagery.   MORE

11 Books Coming to a Movie Theater Near You



Off the Shelf
By Erin Flaaen    |   Thursday, February 25, 2016
I’m not really a film critic. When it comes to book to movie adaptations, though, I suddenly become the one person everyone wants (or doesn’t want) to go to the theater with. That’s because I will laugh, I will cry, and I will critique. Here are eleven book-to-movie adaptations that I look forward to dissecting in copious detail in the coming months. READ MORE

How Two “Slavery With a Smile” Controversies Are Changing the Conversation About Diverse Children’s Books

A Birthday Cake for George Washington

By

When I think back to how my peers and I learned about atrocities like American slavery and the Holocaust when we were kids in the 1980s and early ‘90s, I realize that these difficult lessons were often introduced through stories about people hiding. My favorites of those books — like Who Comes With Cannons?, about Quaker conductors on the Underground Railroad, and Number the Stars, which involved a Christian girl helping her Jewish friend escape to Sweden from Nazi-occupied Denmark —provided a sideways entrance to the truth, through the perspectives of characters less vulnerable to violence and oppression. Yet to read about the lengths that people went through to escape was also to obliquely understand the unnamable horrors they left behind.
…Read More

Dr. Carla Hayden Nominated As Librarian of Congress; Would Be First Woman and First African American In the Post

Publishers Lunch


President Obama has nominated Dr. Carla Hayden, ceo of the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore, MD since 1993, to serve as the 14th Librarian of Congress. President Obama noted, "If confirmed, Dr. Hayden would be the first woman and the first African American to hold the position – both of which are long overdue." The position was vacated last September when James Billington retired ahead of schedule, after 27 years.

The President said, "Michelle and I have known Dr. Carla Hayden for a long time, since her days working at the Chicago Public Library," and declared: "Dr. Hayden has devoted her career to modernizing libraries so that everyone can participate in today's digital culture. She has the proven experience, dedication, and deep knowledge of our nation’s libraries to serve our country well and that's why I look forward to working with her in the months ahead." Among her previous posts, Hayden was president of American Library Association from 2003 to 2004, and in 1995 she was the first African American to receive Library Journal’s Librarian of the Year Award. She has served on the National Museum and Library Services Board since 2010 (for which she was confirmed by the Senate).

Last fall, the Librarian of Congress Succession Modernization Act of 2015 put a 10-year limit on the term of the Librarian of Congress, though the President can reappoint the Librarian to serve additional terms. Dr. Hayden's nomination is subject to confirmation by the Senate. 

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Antiquarian Book News

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NLS buys 'lost' manuscript.

 A medieval manuscript written in a Scottish abbey about 700 years ago has been bought by the National Library of Scotland. The manuscript has been missing for 300 years.

The early 14th-century breviary, the origins of which can be easily traced to the historic Sweetheart Abbey, near Dumfries, is said to be an extremely rare example of a medieval religious manuscript written and used in Scotland. The manuscript had been mentioned in various historical records but nobody knew where it was.

It is expected to go on public display at the library in Edinburgh once it has been conserved and researched. Experts say the entire volume from what was to become the last Cistercian monastery to be built in Scotland has survived in a “remarkably good condition”, with 200 vellum leaves intact.

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Airbag

A William Blake book containing a first draft of Thom Yorke’s ‘Airbag’ was found at an Oxfam charity shop. It is predicted to be sold at auction in March for upwards of £3,500. Yorke has agreed to donate the proceeds from the sale of Songs of Innocence and Experience to Oxfam.

The book, Songs of Innocence and Experience, was donated by Yorke in early 2015 along with a batch of other books. Mispriced initially by volunteers working in the shop who weren’t aware of who its donor was, the book was found by another volunteer in the 50 pence section of the shop.

‘Airbag’ is the opening song on Radiohead’s classic 1997 album OK Computer, inspired by a car crash Yorke and his girlfriend had in 1987.

A spokesman for Bloomsbury Auctions, the group that Oxfam uses to sell books that are likely to be too expensive for usual store customers,  said that it was difficult to determine exactly how much it was worth. Although the auction will not be until 18 March 2016 there has already been a good deal of interest


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The Charlton Heston Collection

Los Angeles – Bonhams and Turner Classic Movies (TCM) present The Charlton Heston Collection, an auction of more than 300 items from the home of the Oscar-winning actor on March 22 in Los Angeles.

Charlton Heston (1923-2008) is known in Hollywood history as one of the most remarkable period drama actors, winning accolades for his portrayal of Moses in The Ten Commandments (1956), the chariot-racing lead in Ben-Hur (1959), a Spanish warrior in El Cid (1961), Michelangelo in The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965), John the Baptist in The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) and Mark Antony (1970 and 1973), among others.

The actor called his Beverly Hills mansion home for close to half a century, sharing it with his wife and their two children. Featured in the sale are contents from the home, including movie memorabilia, props, scripts, fine art, jewellery and rare books.

"Bonhams is pleased to present this tremendous collection of property from the home of Charlton and Lydia Heston," said Director of Entertainment Memorabilia Catherine Williamson. "We think Heston's many fans will enjoy getting a glimpse into the man behind the myth."

"Their fascinating and varied collections reflect not so much a love of things but a joie de vivre, a passion for life and everything in it," said Fraser C. Heston, the actor's son.

Charlton Heston started off in the industry doing low budget film and television productions until director Cecil B. DeMille casted Heston as a circus manager in The Greatest Show on Earth (1952), which went on to win an Oscar for Best Picture. The turning point in Heston's career came in 1956 when DeMille asked him to play the role of Moses in The Ten Commandments. He went on to win an Academy Award for Best Actor for William Wyler's Ben-Hur, a film that won a total of 11 Oscars that year.

The actor and social activist kept many items from his movies at his Beverly Hills home, such as a director's chair with his name on it (estimate U.S. $800-1,200) the door knockers from Ben-Hur (estimate $3,000-5000), which were used on the doors of his study, as well as his script for Ben-Hur (estimate $12,000-18,000).

In their two-story library, Heston had numerous rare copies of William Shakespeare's plays including Macbeth: A Tragedy, acted at the Dukes-Theatre, London, and printed for William Cademan in 1673 (estimate $25,000-35,000) and The Tragedy of Hamlet Prince of Denmark, acted at his Highness the Duke of York's Theatre, London and printed by Andrew Clark for J. Martyn and H. Herringman, 1676 (estimate $15,000-25,000).

Heston was a passionate fan of Shakespeare and made his Broadway debut in Antony and Cleopatra in 1947. Then, in 1970 and 1973 took on the role of Mark Antony in Julius Caesar and Antony and Cleopatra, respectively, and also performed in Macbeth on several occasions.

Lydia Clarke Heston took up photography on the set of The Greatest Show on Earth (1952), and made a number of photographs on-set of her husband's movies. The auction includes several portraits of the actor by Lydia Heston as well as some of her treasured cameras. The couple also shared an interest in collecting works of photography, including examples by Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879) Portrait of Kate Keown (estimate $15,000-20,000); Ansel Adams (1902-1984) Redwoods, Bull Creek Flat, California (estimate $12,000-18,000) and other works by famed photographers such as Henri Cartier-Bresson and George Tice.

Aside from being a renowned actor, Heston also served as the President of the Screen Actors Guild (1966-71), Chairman of the American Film Institute (1973-83) and President of the National Rifle Association (1998-2003). These organisations are represented by several items in the sale, including a personalised National Rifle Association seal (estimate $300-500) and a 14k gold SAG membership card (estimate $1,500-2,000).

Three paintings by 20th century illustrator J.C. Leyendecker are also featured in this auction. These were covers of Carter's Monthly magazines, owned by an ancestor of Heston (born John Charles Carter), each estimated at U.S. $10,000-15,000. Among the highlights in Lydia's collections are: an emerald, gold, and platinum ring (estimate $15,000-20,000); a diamond, ruby, and bicolor gold collar (estimate $12,000-18,000); and a pair of diamond, emerald and 18k bicolor gold bracelets (estimate $10,000-15,000).

View the catalogue online.
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Ibookcollector © is published by Rivendale Press. 





Visiting author Peter May and Bookman Beattie

I spent a very pleasant half hour this morning chatting with Peter May (Coffin Road - Quercus) who is on his way to Dunedin where he is speaking at the Dunedin Writers & Readers Festival and the Centre of Irish & Scottish Studies at the University of Otago. 


Twenty one New Zealand books the NZ Book Council is looking forward to in 2016

Gecko Annual
Edited by Susan Paris and Kate De Goldi
Gecko Press, October 2016
The Gecko Annual is a 136-page miscellany – a contemporary spin on the much-loved annuals we all remember, with a good dose of sophistication and subversiveness. We wanted to give 9-12 year olds – an age group currently under-served – a heady mix of fiction, comics, poetry, essays, how-to’s, art, games, satire, and a film script. It’s a feast of content that can be dipped into, pored over, returned to again and again – and like all good annuals this one has something for everyone in the family. The content has been commissioned exclusively from New Zealand writers and illustrators and introduces a number of new names – a feature that will be ongoing. It promises to be smart, dynamic, elegant and playful – a timeless and beautiful package thanks to the exemplary design and production values of Gecko Press. We can’t wait!
Pre-order here.
Mansfield and Me
Sarah Laing
Victoria University Press, October 2016
Sarah Laing’s autobiographical comic, Mansfield and Me, charts her obsession with Katherine Mansfield.
“I’m quite interested in her transgressive behaviour – how she was like a punk in her time, how she had affairs and dabbled in the occult, reinventing herself over and over. I’m interested in how she defines what it means to be a writer in New Zealand, and how central she is to the notion that New Zealanders are good at writing short stories. The graphic novel is going to dovetail into a personal account, and I’ll use her experiences to explore my own parallel ones.” — New Zealand Listener Two minutes with Sarah Laing
Women of the Catlins: Life in the deep south
Diana Noonan & Cris Antona
Otago University Press, April 2016
A haunting, off-the-beaten-track destination, the little-known Catlins region of New Zealand is as mysterious today as it ever was. In this first in-depth look at the lives of its inhabitants, award-winning writer Diana Noonan and photographer Cris Antona collaborate to capture the thoughts and feelings of 26 women from this remote outpost. As the subjects speak for themselves on topics as diverse as family, work, isolation and their relationship with the environment, there is, at last, an opportunity for readers to enter into the heart of this rugged, unknown landscape where few venture and only the strongest make it home

Applications are now open for 2016 Shanghai International Writers’ Programme

Michael King Writers' Centre Trust  Enewsletter
View from Executive Director's desk Jan 2016
Applications are now open for
2016 Shanghai International Writers’ Programme
Michael King Writers’ Centre
New Zealand China Friendship Society

25 February 2016
  
New Zealand's literary exchange with China continues with the call for applications from New Zealand writers to attend the international writers programme run by the Shanghai Writers’ Association in September and October 2016.

The successful writer will receive free accommodation in an inner-city apartment, a small stipend for living expenses and return economy class air travel.
For the first time, New Zealand screenwriters may apply.

This opportunity is available through a partnership between the New Zealand China Friendship Society, the Michael King Writers’ Centre, the Shanghai Writers’ Association, and Shanghai People’s Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries.

Since the exchange began in 2013, two Chinese writers have enjoyed a residency at the Michael King Writers’ Centre on the slopes of Mount Victoria at Devonport in Auckland. In 2013 Huo Yan, a young writing star from Beijing, took up the first Rewi Alley Fellowship and in 2015 acclaimed novelist Xiao Bai from Shanghai was the second resident.

In 2014 Alison Wong was the first New Zealand writer selected to join the international writers’ programme.  Alison writes of her experience:  “The Shanghai International Writers’ Programme was invaluable as research for my new book, but also for stimulating fresh creativity and inquiry through exposure to a completely different environment, language and culture. The connections made, whether with Chinese or other international writers were personally and professionally rewarding. I recommend the residency to writers with a sense of adventure and curiosity.
Writers are invited to take part in discussions and literary events and are required to write an article on a nominated theme before the residency starts. Apart from that obligation, the writers are able to work on a project of their choice.

Up to seven writers from all over the world are in the programme each year. Many celebrated writers have taken part, including Malaysian Tash Aw, who was long-listed for the 2013 Man Booker Prize.
New Zealand applications close on Thursday 31st March at 5pm and should be emailed to the Michael King Writers’ Centre. Application details can be found on the MKWC website at http://writerscentre.org.nz/international_residency.php, or on request via email to the centre, and at www.nzchinasociety.org.nz.  The selection will be managed by a panel appointed by the Michael King Writers’ Centre and the NZ China Friendship Society.

For further information, please contact:
Ka Meechan, Michael King Writers’ Centre, PO Box 32-629, Devonport, Auckland 0744
Ph/fax: 445 8451  Mobile: 021 676 497   Email:  ka.meechan@writerscentre.org.nz
George Andrews, NZ China Friendship Society, PO Box 147080, Ponsonby, Auckland 1144
Tel: 09 307 9196, Mobile 021 631 261 Email: gageorge08@gmail.com

Latest news from The Bookseller

Mari Evans
Mari Evans has been appointed as the new managing director of Headline, with Jane Morpeth becoming chair of the group.
Joanne Harris
Joanne Harris has announced she is pulling out of a literature festival “for the first time in my life” because of its demanding contract terms and has called for an industry-wide standard to be introduced.
The subscriber list and review archive for mail-order book business the Good Book Guide has been acquired by book review and recommendation site Lovereading, following a “turbulent” decade for the Guide.
Jungle Books, a library for migrants set up in the French port city of Calais, is at risk of eviction after half of the camp has been threatened with demolition.
Matt Haig
Author Matt Haig has withdrawn from appearing at this year’s Emirates Airline Festival of Literature in Dubai following a campaign against the event, spearheaded by author Jonathan Emmett and blogger Zoe Toft.
Claudia Connal
Simon & Schuster UK has appointed Claudia Connal as editorial director of non-fiction.


Joe Wicks
Joe “The Body Coach” Wicks has held the Official Top 50 number one spot for an eighth consecutive week, selling 22,809 copies for £189,888, according to Nielsen BookScan.
Hachette Children’s Group has appointed Paul Rockett as publishing director of education.
James Patterson
Author James Patterson has launched a competition to give one student the opportunity to co-author a book with him.
The Romford Pelé
Century is publishing The Romford Pelé, the autobiography of Arsenal "legend" Ray Parlour.
Elizabeth Masters
Elizabeth Masters, currently PR manager for Tinder Press at Headline, has been appointed deputy publicity director for Quercus.
Canelo
Canelo is to publish Last Light, the first in a new series from CJ Lyons, and will reissue her “hugely popular” Lucy Guardino FBI thrillers.