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  • 'Los Angeles Review of Books' To Launch New, Enhanced Web site

    To coincide with its one-year anniversary on April 18, the Los Angeles Review of Books is re-launching its website in a multimedia platform that will include video, drop-down menus, and new feature articles.

  • Edelweiss Ramps Up E-galley Service

    In the first few months after rolling out its Digital Review Copy Module—known to most industry members as e-galleys—at last year’s BookExpo America, Edelweiss had slow pickup in its new service. That began to change toward the end of 2011, and now John Rubin, president of Edelweiss’s parent company, Above the Treeline, believes the program is poised for more rapid growth.

  • Kump, Kampmann Settle Litigation

    Gail Kump and Eric Kampmann have settled their legal dispute with Midpoint repurchasing Kump’s stock ownership in the company.

  • Amazon Adds to Prime

    In a deal with Viacom, Amazon Prime members will be able to stream TV shows from MTV, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon, TV Land, Spike, VH1, BET, CMT and Logo.

  • Marmion Launches Marketing Firm

    Bridget Marmion, who has had long tenures in sales and marketing at FSG, Random House and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, has started her own firm, Your Expert Nation.

  • 'PW' March Features

    Here is our monthly look ahead to what we have slated for features, this time for our March issues. Our Calls for Information for different features will appear in PW Daily on a monthly basis, and will be updated periodically.

  • Turning Up the Volume on Author Podcasts

    The emergence of author podcasts as a viable and entertaining marketing tool is apparent in the success of three such efforts originating from literary Web sites on the West Coast: Brad Listi’s the Nervous Breakdown, Tom Lutz’s Los Angeles Review of Books, and Tyson Cornell’s company Rare Bird Lit. The three are using podcasts as a way to build readership and bring attention to their sites.

  • HUP Finds Logo for New Line Via Contest

    In September, Harvard University Press tried something a little different. That month the scholarly press announced it was holding an open search for the design of its forthcoming book series featuring English translations of works in various Indian languages. HUP has now found a logo and look for its Murty Classical Library of India—freelance designer Andrea Stranger took home $10,000 for her efforts—and the line remains set for a 2013 launch date.

  • 'PW' February Features

    Our Calls for Information for different features will appear in PW Daily on a monthly basis, and will be updated periodically. Individual calls will still also run in the print version of PW, and publicity departments are also to see our full 2012 editorial calendar.

  • SMP Looks to Capitalize On Ghonim's Revised Book Tour

    At least one publisher is looking to capitalize on some last-minute changes to Wael Ghonim's upcoming book tour to promote Revolution 2.0.

  • Happy Holidays

    Our December 23 newsletter was the final issue of PW Daily for 2011. We hope all of our subscribers enjoy the holiday break and come back ready for what promises to be another exciting and unpredictable 2012. Until our January 3 issue, we will be posting new stories to our Web site and continuing to tweet news of interest. Our thanks to all for following the news of the industry in the Daily.

  • Harper in Deal with IPS for Christian Bookstore Distribution

    Beginning January 1, HarperCollins will be using Ingram Publisher Services/Spring Arbor as its exclusive distributor to the Christian market.

  • Three Minneapolis Presses Unite for Little Free Library Promotion

    Three Twin Cities literary presses already renowned for collaborating in unconventional ways to promote books and authors are partnering with a Wisconsin literacy group and a Minneapolis museum to promote literacy, publicize the mission of each of the nonprofit organizations involved, and sell some books.

  • Whither the Sales Rep

    While publishers have been reorganizing their sales forces for years, the shifting marketplace—one without Borders and with a lot fewer print books—is forcing publishers to rethink more than ever how they sell. Hachette Book Group’s elimination of 11 sales rep positions earlier this fall sent chills through the independent bookselling community.

  • Pioneering Library-Publisher Relations

    Even in tense times, there is far more that unites publishers and libraries than divides them. And if one needs proof that librarians and publishers share common goals and can work together to mutual benefit, they need look no further than the career of Marcia Purcell, Random House’s v-p of library and academic marketing.

  • FSG Cozies Up to Wolverine Fans for Breakout Hit

    Stoking the excitement, or the anger, of sports fans can be highly effective. Just ask FSG, which has a sleeper hit on its hands after reaching out to Michigan Wolverine football fans for its book about former head coach, Rich Rodriguez.

  • New Midpoint Web Site Gives Clients Access to Data

    Midpoint Trade has rolled out a new upgraded Web site, called Midpoint Access, with a focus on providing more sales transparency to its distribution clients.

  • Random House of Canada Tests New Book Tour Model

    Random House of Canada is experimenting with a different kind of book tour this fall--one that guarantees book sales from every person attending a launch.

  • Elf Heads to TV for the Holidays

    It may be increasingly common for first-time authors who can’t place their book with a trade house to publish themselves. But it’s pretty rare for a self-published book to sell more than 1.5 million copies—or move to the small screen as an animated film.

  • Publishers Find More Uses for QR Codes

    Quick Response, or QR, codes, those black-and-white pixel squares that function as super charged consumer bar codes, are on advertisements, Web sites, and anything else at which you can point a QR reader. While publishers have been putting QR codes on jacket covers for several years, they have been slow to integrate them into the text, but that is starting to change.

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