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The ongoing terms negotiation between Amazon and HarperCollins
in the US has been reported by Business Insider, the online newspaper that
counts Amazon founder Jeff Bezos among its investors.
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Paula Hawkins’ The
Girl on the Train (Doubleday) climbs sixteen places to claim
the UK number one on the Official Top 50 in its 11th week on the chart.
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A series of high-profile acquistions have galvanised this
year’s Bologna Children’s Book Fair, including Alex Scarrow’s sensational
move of publisher, an Egmont series on coding and a science fiction twist
on the “sick lit” genre.
Macmillan Children’s Books announced a “substantial”
three-book deal for Scarrow, bringing the TimeRiders author over to MCB
from his long-time publisher Penguin. MCB 6+ publisher Venetia Gosling
bought world and digital rights from Veronique Baxter at David Higham
Associates.
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The last independent bookshop in the Forest of Dean is set to
close after 40 years.
The Forest Bookshop in Coleford, the only remaining
independent bookshop in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, is closing
its doors after 40 years due to competition from online retailers and
unfavourable conditions for shoppers. Septuagenarian owner Douglas McLean
explained on The Forest Bookshop’s website that online book services and
the introduction of parking charges in the town in 2012 were forcing him to
shut up shop.
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Exhibitors at this year’s fair have said business has been
strong, yet there have been few break-out trends.
Adrian Soar, commercial director at Nosy Crow, said his stand
was “fantastically busy” but said there was no change in what people were
looking for: “People want fiction and picture books. In fiction, it is
funny books and in picture books a lot of visitors want novelty. There is
also a lot of demand for beautiful picture books.”
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Penguin Random House has said there are no plans to change
Jeremy Clarkson’s publishing schedule, and that it is committed to the
television presenter, after he was sacked from Top Gear for hitting a
producer.
Currently Michael Joseph publishes books by Clarkson, while
BBC Books, an imprint of Ebury, publishes the Top Gear books.
Michael Joseph released Clarkson’s last book, What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
in hardback in September 2014, with the paperback due in May this year.
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In two major announcements for heritage brands at yesterday’s
Bologna Children’s Book Fair it was revealed that Pippi Longstocking will
appear in e-book for the first time and there will be a new title in
Hachette’s Asterix stable.
Oxford University Press inked the first-ever deal with the
Astrid Lindgren Estate to publish the three original Pippi Longstocking
stories as digital books.
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The fourth book in the late Stieg Larsson’s Millennium series
will be called The Girl
in the Spider’s Web.
Quercus today (31st March) revealed the title and the UK cover
for the book, which has been written by Swedish author David Lagercrantz, co-author of footballer Zlatan
Ibrahimovic’s autobiography
I Am Zlatan Ibrahimovich (Penguin).
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A book charting the challenges of rural living, an examination
on what the food we buy and eat says about us, and a humourous look at
middle-class wine drinking were among the winners at the annual André Simon
Food & Drink Book Awards.
The awards, hosted by novelist Julian Barnes and cookery
writer Annie Bell last night (31st March) at the Goring Hotel in London,
showcase the best in contemporary food and drink writing.
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The Wellcome Trust, the National Library of Scotland and the
Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals are among the
groups calling on fair copyright for libraries and archives across Europe.
The groups have signed up to the London Manifesto, put
together because “non standardised copyright laws across Europe are failing
to support the vision of a digital single market because they currently
prevent fair access and use of digital content”.
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Foyles is adding to its range of book related gifts and
stationery with an electronic bookmark which can sense when a reader has
fallen asleep and wake them to continue reading, called boo!mark by
Foyles™.
Created by LIDA, boo!mark by Foyles™ uses patented (pending)
Snornar® technology to monitor breathing patterns in order to detect any
snoring or heavy breathing before waking readers from slumber with a “boo!”
that is available in a range of volume settings.
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Andy Coles is to leave Little, Brown after 30 years with the
publisher.
Coles, who works in the sales team at the Hachette-owned
company, will officially leave the publisher on 30th April, but his leaving
party was held last night (31st March).
Robert Manser, group sales director for Little, Brown and
Orion, said Coles’ leaving was “bittersweet”.
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