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Last week two books—Eric Carle’s The Very Hungry Caterpillar (Puffin) and
Michael Rosen’s We’re
Going on a Bear Hunt (Walker)—achieved a unique feat, notching
up their 1,000th week in BookScan’s Total Consumer Market Top 5,000. The
two books are the UK book trade’s only remaining Evergreens: titles which
have never fallen out of the TCM Top 5,000 since records began.
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Penguin Random House UK’s group commercial director, Nigel
Waters, is to leave the business at Easter.
The company is still working out where Waters’ team will
report, and an announcement about some new roles and responsibilities is to
follow in the coming weeks, PRH said.
Ian Hudson, deputy c.e.o. of PRH UK, said Waters had decided
over Christmas that "the time had come to try something new and we
have reluctantly agreed”.
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Ron Johns above is to open a fourth bookshop, adding to his
portfolio of West Country outlets.
The book trade veteran will open his latest shop in
Dartmouth’s bustling Foss Street, 12 years after he opened his last
venture, in St Ives.
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Sales of To
Kill a Mockingbird have increased by 1,000% at Waterstones and
500% at Blackwell’s Oxford since the news of a second novel by Harper Lee
was announced.
Penguin Random House’s William Heinemann, part of the
Cornerstone division, will publish Go Set
a Watchman, a novel written by Lee before she penned To Kill a Mockingbird
and featuring some of the same characters, this summer.
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A project to create a national digital network for all public
libraries in England has begun, with a £30,000 grant from Arts Council
England.
The creation of a unified digital platform for library
resources, including book catalogues and IT training, was one of the
recommendations of the Sieghart report into public libraries. The Society
of Chief Librarians (SCL), which is leading the project, has appointed
Canadian firm BiblioCommons to begin research in the project, with the
first phase expected to be completed at the end of March.
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Simon & Schuster has signed two more books from Everyday
Sexism founder Laura Bates, in a deal for UK and Commonwealth rights.
Commissioning editor Abigail Bergstrom signed the rights from
Elinor Cooper at Rochelle Stevens & Co.
The Everyday Sexism project has collated more than 80,000
person stories documenting sexism, harassment, discrimination and abuse. A
book of the same name was released last year, and was shortlisted for the
Waterstones Books of the Year and Political Book Awards Polemic of the
Year.
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