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E L James’ Grey
had its second straight 300,000-plus weekly print sale—pushing the book's
combined UK e-book and physical sales over the 1 million unit mark—while
the overall British print books market has experienced its first half-year
rise in seven years.
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Apple did conspire with publishers in the US to fix the prices
of e-books, an appeal court has found.
The technology company had appealed against an earlier
decision by Judge Denise Cote, who said that Apple and publishers were
guilty of conspiring to raise the prices of e-books
Apple appealed the decision and yesterday the Second Circuit Court of
Appeals upheld Cote's decision.
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It is "incredibly blinkered" to
only target traditional newspaper reviews for books, The Pool c.e.o. and
co-founder Sam Baker has said.
Speaking at The Bookseller's Marketing and Publicity conference yesterday (30th
June), Baker also admonished the industry for its obsession with the
hardback, saying that publishers needed to "remember real people buy
paperbacks".
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Amazon UK has launched Prime Now in London, which will allow
customers in the capital to receive purchases within one hour of ordering
them.
Only Amazon Prime members are eligible for the service, in a
further move to encourage customers to sign up to the £79-a-year
membership.
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Authors are not used enough in marketing and publicity by
publishers, writer Liz Fenwick has claimed.
Speaking at The Bookseller's Marketing and Publicity
conference Fenwick, who is published by Orion, said that she thought in
general publishers did not speak enough to authors, or on a regular enough
basis.
"Most authors are interacting with our readers on a daily
basis," she said, meaning that authors know their readers best.
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A complex thriller set in China, a
detective drama set in Catalan and new take on Sherlock Holmes are the
first three titles to be released by new digital publisher Canelo.
The digital-only start-up,
founded by former Profile digital publisher Michael Bhaskar and former
Quercus employees Iain Miller and Nick Barreto has already signed 30 titles
since its creation in January, with the first three titles to be released
next week on 13th July.
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Trevor Gibbon, who was found guilty of murdering former children's
publisher Alison Morrison, has been jailed for life.
Gibbon was
convicted of Morrison's murder last week. He stabbed her dozens of
times as she walked to work in Harrow in December 2014.
The attack happened shortly after Morrison had obtained a restraining order
against Gibbon, who had been harassing her family.
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Christopher Fowler and Pierre Lamaitre
are among the winners of this year's Crime Writer's Association's (CWA)
Dagger Awards, with Quercus taking home the most awards for its authors.
At a ceremony last night where the winners of the Daggers were revealed,
the CWA also announced the shortlists for three further awards, The
Goldsboro Gold Dagger, The John Creasy (New Blood) Dagger, and the Ian
Fleming Steel Dagger.
The CWA also announced it would be launching a new scheme called Dagger
Reads, more details of which are due to be revealed later this month.
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James Spackman, former managing director of Watkins Media
[pictured], has left the company to concentrate on agenting and publishing
for cycling books.
He will be placed in his role by the owner, US entrepreneur
Etan Ilfeld.
Spackman was appointed
as Watkins m.d in June 2012, leaving his position as sales and trade
marketing director in Hodder to do so.
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Scribd has announced to publishers and distributors that it is
"making some adjustments, particularly to romance" in its
$8.99-per-month ebook subscription service.
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In the first staff announcement following completion of the merger
to create Springer Nature, the setting-up of a new global policy and
external relations team and a new communications team, also with global
responsibility, has been announced.
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