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Booksellers are anticipating a much-desired boost over the
next week with the arrival of Valentine’s Day on Saturday, followed by half
term.
Chain retailers across the country have rolled out romantic
point of sale (POS) posters in the hope of capturing some of the
Valentine’s Day shopping market, while children’s departments are
sharpening their displays and wheeling out discounts on educational titles
and children’s fiction to entice parents to part with money over the half
term break.
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Indie Book Day is set to make a mark on the UK this year after
starting in Germany two years ago and quickly spreading across Europe.
The campaign – which hopes to become comparable to the
American Record Store Day event, but for books – wants readers to flock to
independent bookshops on 21st March to buy a title by an independent
publisher.
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Blink Publishing has acquired world rights to the
autobiography of former boxing promoter, Kellie Maloney.
Clare Tillyer, acquisitions and rights director, acquired the
book, titled Frankly
Kellie, from Tim Bates at Pollinger Limited.
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Female authors account for the vast majority of this year’s
Waterstones Children’s Book Prize this year, with 15 of the 18 titles
written by women (see full shortlists below).
The prize is divided into three categories – best illustrated
book, best fiction for 5-12s and best book for teens – with six books
shortlisted in each section. The only men shortlisted are G R Gemin for Cowgirl (Nosy Crow) in
the fiction section, and Steve Antony for The Queen’s Hat (Hodder) and Rob Biddulph
for Blown Away
(HarperCollins) in the illustrated book category.
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Yellow Kite is to publish
The 22-Day Revolution, a book about the benefits of a
plant-based diet, with a foreword written by Beyoncé.
Founded on the principle that it takes 21 days to make or
break a habit, The
22-Day Revolution by exercise physiologist and nutrition expert
Marco Borges is a “practical guide for anyone seeking a healthier
lifestyle, to lose weight, or to reverse serious health concerns”.
It contains advice, recipes and tools, including a detailed
22-day meal plan, for switching to a plant-based lifestyle.
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Blackwell’s and Foyles are both offering discounts to people
who pre-order Harper Lee’s forthcoming novel Go Set a Watchman (William Heinemann).
Go Set a Watchman, written by Lee before her
bestselling novel To Kill a Mockingbird but featuring some of the same
characters, will be released on 14th July as an £18.99 hardback.
Blackwell’s is offering the book at £13.99, a discount of £5,
for those who pre-order, while Foyles is offering a 24% discount to anyone
who pre-orders, making the book £14.43.
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Alma Books has ordered a 15,000-copy reprint of Travelling to Infinity
after demand soared following the film version’s triumph at the Baftas on
Sunday (8th February).
Travelling to Infinity is the memoir by Jane
Hawking based on the inside story of her marriage to Stephen Hawking, which
inspired the film "The Theory of Everything", currently out in
cinemas and starring Eddie Remayne.
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Mike Abbott is leaving Penguin Random House as a result of the
publisher's international sales team restructure.
Abbott has been in the Random House UK international team for
11 years, working first as group sales and marketing director for Europe,
and later as group sales and marketing director for Europe, Middle East,
Latin America, Africa and the Caribbean.
He also served as chairman of the PA European working party
between 2008 and 2014.
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HarperCollins imprint Fourth Estate has appointed Anna Kelly
to the position of commissioning editor. Kelly, who is currently assistant
editor at Hamish Hamilton, will take up the role on the 17th March.
Kelly said she is “very excited” to join the company. “Fourth
Estate is home to a dazzling group of authors and its publishing is
inventive and imaginative – I can’t wait to begin commissioning for such a
prestigious and inspiring list and will be looking in particular for
outstanding new voices from the UK and Ireland as well as fiction in
translation.”
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Nottingham City Council is to distribute Ellie Levenson’s book
about democracy for children, The
Election, to primary schools in the county.
Debra La Mola, head of democratic services at Nottingham City
Council, said she ordered copies of the book to help children learn about
voting in an election year.
“The children will be encouraged to take the books home to
read and, through a message we have included with the book, their parents
and carers will be reminded at the same time that they need to register to
vote ahead of the elections in May,” she said.
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Faber has acquired the rights to publish two books based on
the BBC comedy panel show "Would I Lie to You?".
The publisher beat seven other publishers to acquire the
rights and the first, Would
I Lie To You? Presents the 100 Most Popular Lies of All Time,
will be released in October. The book is a collection of 100 well-known
fibs, including ‘I didn’t even notice she was pretty’ and ‘I’m working from
home tomorrow’. A second book will follow.
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