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Authors must “take up the challenge” to excel at social media,
building communities around their work, while publishers must build
“meaningful digital experiences powered by social media, data and
technology”, Harkable co-founder Will Francis has told The Bookseller’s
Marketing and Publicity Conference in the first keynote speech of this
morning (30th June).
But Francis also said that he thought social media users were
becoming more passive, and that while social media was not dead, it was
“the end of the era of social media as we know, or knew, it”. |
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Cambridge University Press is set to close its distribution
company in Japan - United Publishers Services - and has put its staff into
consultation.
The publisher bought the 60-year-old Tokyo company, which
distributes over 150 academic publishers in addition to CUP titles in 2007,
and The Bookseller understands the company will be wound up by November
this year. Its staff, thought to total around 40, have all entered
consultation for redundancy. |
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Fifty Shades of Grey author E L James has written
a new romance, and is halfway through writing a second, she revealed in a
Twitter chat with UK fans.
The writer took part in the online gathering yesterday (29th
June), but the hashtag for the chat #AskELJames was hijacked by people
criticising James' writing and her portrayal of people who practice BDSM.
Asked how she dealt with negativity about her books, James said: "I
think any writer just wants to be read... and for me I never thought that
would happen - so I concentrate on that." |
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Neurosurgeon Henry Marsh has won the £3,000 PEN Ackerley Prize
2015 for his memoir Do
No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery (Weidenfeld
& Nicolson).
The prize, the UK's only literary prize devoted to memoir and
autobiography, had also shortlisted Other
People's Countries by Patrick McGuinness (Jonathan Cape), An Encyclopaedia of Myself
by Jonathan Meades (Fourth Estate) and The
Setting Sun by Bart Moore-Gilbert (Verso). |
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John Wiley has announced a partnership with data repository
organisation Figshare, part of Macmillan's Digital Science business, to
support authors who wish to openly share their data. |
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Vlogger Matthew Santoro has signed a global deal with Penguin
for a book featuring a “collection of weird, hilarious and crazy facts
about the world around us”.
Santoro has 4m subscribers on his YouTube channel,
where he posts videos featuring collections of facts.
In a co-publishing partnership, world rights for Santoro’s MIND=BLOWN went
to Joel Rickett at Viking UK, Marian Lizzi at Perigee in the US and
Justin Stoller at Penguin Canada. |
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YouTube star Marcus Butler is to go on a 13-date book tour to
support publication of his forthcoming book Hello Life (Headline).
Butler has 3.7m subscribers to his YouTube channel and two
million Twitter followers. Hello
Life, released on 28th July, is part memoir, part self-help
guide.
The book signings will be ticketed, with the purchase price
including a pre-signed book. |
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Kindle users can now share quotes with specific friends
through social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter, Amazon has
revealed.
Users of the Amazon device can now employ apps such as
Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp as well as email, texting and more to share
quotes, highlights and recommendations with specific friends. Friends who
receive a share can instantly start reading a free book preview right from
their phone, tablet, or PC—"no need to sign up, sign in, or install an
app," the company said. |
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Former BBC special correspondent is to take over as chair of
the board of the Edinburgh International Book Festival from October, with
current chair Lady Susan Rice, stepping down.
Rice has been at the helm of EIBF since 2001. |
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Orchard Books has acquired The
Ethan I Was Before, the middle-grade debut about friendship and
grief, from debut author Ali Standish.
Jessica Clarke, editorial director at Orchard Books, brokered a five-figure
two-book deal with Polly Nolan at the Greenhouse Literary Agency, acquiring
UK & Commonwealth Rights.
The book is about a boy who moves with his father to a seaside town,
following the death of his best friend. While struggling to make sense of
the past, a mysterious new girl enters his life.
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Award-winning author and illustrator Benji Davies has created
a bespoke window for Waterstones Hampstead based on his latest book Grandad’s Island (Simon
& Schuster).
The window features delicate handmade birds and characters
from his new picture book, which tells the gentle story of little boy
coming to terms with the loss of his much-loved grandfather. |
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Young people aged six to 20 were
yesterday (29th June) announced as the winners of this years Wicked Young
Writers Award.
Launched by the production team behind the "Wicked"
musical in 2010, the award encourages writing and creativity in young
people aged five to 25.
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E
L James’ Grey had its second straight 300,000-plus weekly sale while the
overall UK print books market has experienced its half-year rise in seven
years.
James’
Grey (Arrow) shifted an astonishing 302,343 copies through Nielsen BookScan’s
Total Consumer Market and in just two weeks of sale has become the
biggest-selling book of the last year.
Grey’s 688,323-copy total eclipses the
almost 650,000 units the previous bestselling book of the last 52 weeks,
David Walliams’ Awful Auntie (HarperCollins Children’s Books), has sold since
being published in September 2014. |
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