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A new task force for libraries, which met for the first time
last week, will focus its attention on sharing best practice between
councils, promoting the role of digital and shaping a workforce for the
future.
One of the key aims of the Leadership for Libraries task force
will be to highlight to council decision-makers the wide variety of roles
that libraries play in their communities—be it boosting health, safety or
information agendas. It will also look to help services to share their
skills and showcase their value.
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Sainsbury’s book buying manager Phil Carroll has left the
retailer after nine years.
His departure follows a period of head office consultations at
the supermarket, announced in January when the new boss Mike Coupe revealed
500 positions would go across its offices in London, Manchester and
Coventry.
A regular in the Bookseller 100 list, Carroll increased book
sales year-on-year in his time at the grocer, leading it to win both Chain
Bookseller of the year in 2011 and Children's Bookseller of the Year in 2014.
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Faber has a launched a new membership programme, which will
offer special collector's editions of some of the publisher's titles.
The new programme, Faber Members, will offer both a free and a
premium tier costing £500 a year, with each giving members a different
range of features.
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Nick Poole has been appointed as chief executive of CILIP, the
Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals.
Poole will begin at CILIP in June. He is currently c.e.o. of
the Collections Trust, a UK charity which works with libraries, archives
and museums, and has previously been a trustee of CILIP, and was CILIP
treasurer between 2012 and 2013.
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The Switzerland-based Peter Lang Academic Publishing Group is
coming under new ownership after a group of senior management and board
members announced a management buyout.
The new management team – chairman Claude Béglé, c.e.o. Kelly
Shergill, c.f.o. Vanessa Weber and head of warehouse and logistics
Abdurahman Kaymaz – did not reveal the size of the deal but said the change
in ownership will be fully effective by mid-2015.
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A new Rebus novel by Ian Rankin will be published this autumn.
Orion Fiction m.d. Jon Wood bought UK and Commonwealth rights
to Even Dogs in the Wild,
Rankin’s 20th Rebus novel, and one other book from Peter Robinson of
Rogers, Coleridge & White.
Rankin teased fans on Twitter earlier this year with news of the new novel.
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The European Commission (EC) is committed to reporting the
first results in its ongoing investigation into the legality of Amazon and
Luxembourg’s tax arrangements in the next quarter, after the European and
International Booksellers Federation (EIBF) submitted evidence to its
inquiry.
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Pushkin Press is launching a new imprint for crime fiction in
translation, Pushkin Vertigo, which will publish crime classics from around
the world.
The list will issue crime and thriller classics from the 1920s
to the 1970s written by international authors, many of whom are well known
in their native countries. While some of the titles have been published in
English, others have never been translated into English before.
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WH Smith is to open six outlets at Australia’s Sydney airport
following a “competitive tender process”.
The new stores are part of the airport’s plans to transform
the T1 terminal and the first outlet will open in August, according to the Sydney
Morning Herald.
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Harper Lee's agent Andrew Nurnberg has issued a full and
emphatic denial of claims that novelist Harper Lee has been subjected to
"elder abuse" linked to the publication of her novel Go Set a Watchman,
describing allegations made against her care as "shameful" and
"sad".
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Children in Scotland could be issued with library cards from
birth under a new scheme discussed in a parliamentary debate, according to
the Sunday
Times.
During a debate on the importance of libraries, culture
minister Fiona Hyslop said 30 local authorities have already voiced their
support for the scheme.
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Penguin Random House Children’s has acquired two further
novels in Robin Stevens’ Murder
Most Unladylike series.
Books four and five in the series, as yet untitled, will be
published in 2016 in paperback (£6.99) and will continue to the story of
1930s schoolgirl detectives Daisy Wells and Hazel Wong.
Natalie Doherty, fiction editor at Penguin Random House
Children’s, acquired the UK & Commonwealth rights from Gemma Cooper at
the Bent Agency.
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