Publishers Lunch
RatPac Entertainment, run by media
mogul/heir James Packer and film director/producer Brett Ratner, is creating a
book imprint, RatPac
Press, designed "to bring more Hollywood related projects
to market in both non-fiction and fiction genres."
Their first announced project is author of Accidental Billionaires
and Bringing Down the
House Ben
Mezrich's new novel SEVEN WONDERS. They will publish in a joint
venture with Running
Press in late spring 2014, the first title under their joint
publishing agreement. Ratner says in the announcement, "We are very
excited at RatPac Press to be in business with Running Press and Perseus. Their
years of experience in publishing and distribution enables us to publish
commercial books for a worldwide audience that we can also potentially turn
into blockbuster films. Ben Mezrich's book does exactly that. Seven Wonders is
a very commercial and global book that will definitely translate to the big
screen."
Movie rights to SEVEN WONDERS were sold to
20th Century Fox, with RatPac Entertainment and Beau Flynn at FlynnPictureCo
producing. About the seven wonders of the world, the project is conceived of as
a trilogy and planned as "a big summer action / adventure film."
Random House Children's Books
announced it has acquired online teen community for writers and readers Figment.com. That
partnership makes sense given that Figment co-founder (with Dana Goodyear) and
former ceo Jacob Lewis joined Random House this summer as publishing director
of Crown, Broadway and Hogarth.
RH Children's president and publisher
Barbara Marcus says in the announcement the company's "new relationship
with Figment supports our ongoing strategy and increasingly important efforts
to communicate and engage directly with our readers. The team that founded
Figment created a dynamic community that we will continue to grow and expand,
and we are so pleased to have the opportunity to continue the conversations
with this audience of teens who love young adult books." Lewis says,
"It validates our optimism about how important it is to give young readers
a place to talk, share, and write. With their incredible digital curiosity and
expertise, Random House is the perfect home."
In a modest bit of irony, Random House now
owns the remnants of the teen writing website created by Harpercollins in 2009,
Inkpop. Figment acquired
Inkpop from Harper in early 2012. At the time, HarperCollins Children's
publisher Susan Katz told the WSJ, "we're really a business focused on
readers, and there are many more readers out there than there are
writers."
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