Writers consider legal action against Moscow publishing house after discovering series about president circulated in their names. The Moscow Times reports
A Russian publishing house has printed a series of books about Vladimir Putin under the names of prominent western analysts and journalists – without the knowledge or permission of the so-called authors.
The Guardian’s Luke Harding, The Economist’s Edward Lucas and US-based Russia expert Donald Jensen say that they did not know anything about Russian-language books attributed to them and produced by the Moscow publishers Algoritm in a series called Project Putin.
Harding says that his publisher, Guardian Books, will decide whether to take legal action against Algoritm once it has investigated. “The first I heard about it was a couple of weeks ago when a Russian friend said he’d spotted ‘my book’ in a Moscow bookstore,” said the former Moscow correspondent, adding: “Normally publishers buy rights, translate, then put out an edition.”
Nobody But Putin, the book under Harding’s name, is advertised on Algoritm’s website as “developing the idea” of his previous (and officially published) work Mafia State.
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The Guardian’s Luke Harding, The Economist’s Edward Lucas and US-based Russia expert Donald Jensen say that they did not know anything about Russian-language books attributed to them and produced by the Moscow publishers Algoritm in a series called Project Putin.
Harding says that his publisher, Guardian Books, will decide whether to take legal action against Algoritm once it has investigated. “The first I heard about it was a couple of weeks ago when a Russian friend said he’d spotted ‘my book’ in a Moscow bookstore,” said the former Moscow correspondent, adding: “Normally publishers buy rights, translate, then put out an edition.”
Nobody But Putin, the book under Harding’s name, is advertised on Algoritm’s website as “developing the idea” of his previous (and officially published) work Mafia State.
More
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