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  • Fictional Band Rocks Promotion for 'Reunited'

    In debut novelist Hilary Weisman Graham's Reunited, three teenage girls embark on a road trip to attend a reunion concert of a band named Level3. In real life, Graham teamed up with Simon & Schuster and Curious City, a children’s book marketing firm, to send the fictional band on a promotional tour – sort of.

  • 'Annoying Orange,' 'My Little Pony,' and More Kids' Comics at Comic-Con 2012

    In just one of the many children's comics announcements coming out of this year’s San Diego Comic-Con International, Annoying Orange, the web video gone viral, is getting its own graphic novel—a 64-pager to be published by Papercutz, the home of the Ninjago, Geronimo Stilton, and Nancy Drew graphic novels.

  • Comic-Con: Yen Press to Publish Comics Adaptation of 'Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children'

    At a panel at the San Diego Comic-Con International, Hachette Book Group graphic novel imprint Yen Press announced plans to publish a graphic novel adaptation of Ransom Riggs's bestselling novel, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children in 2013.

  • Fans Control Cover Reveal for New Cassandra Clare Novel

    Theatrical cover reveals have become common procedure in YA publishing, but Simon & Schuster put a, well, novel spin on its unveiling of the cover of Cassandra Clare's Clockwork Princess, the final Infernal Devices book: the reveal was controlled by fans. Many thousands of them.

  • What's Selling at Cavalier House Books

    Good weather in Denham Springs, La., has helped boost customer traffic at Cavalier House Books this summer, and Michelle Cavalier, who owns the store with her husband John, sends word of several books that she’s especially pleased to be selling.

  • Book Retriever App Tracks Classroom and Home Libraries

    St. Louis-based Classroom Library Co., a six-month old educational distributor and publisher, is already finding a niche through its Book Retriever app launched last month.

  • Gaiman Signs Multi-Book Deal with HarperCollins

    Bestselling author Neil Gaiman has signed a multi-book deal with HarperCollins, agreeing to do three novels and two picture books. Kate Morgan Jackson, editor-in-chief of HC Children's Books, and Rosemary Brosnan, executive editor, negotiated the agreement with Gaiman's agent, Merrilee Heifetz at Writers House.

  • Univ. of Minnesota Press Moves into YA Fiction

    An author's error in sending a manuscript to the University of Minnesota Press has resulted in a first for a publisher best known for scholarly books and regional nonfiction.

  • Paperback Writer Gives Away Artwork to Booksellers

    Ed Briant pursues many interests – he's an author, most recently of the YA novel I Am (Not) the Walrus; an illustrator of several picture books, beginning with Paper Parade in 2004; a comics artist (of PW's Tales from the Slush Pile); and he's also a musician – specifically, a rhythm guitarist. He's combining several of his loves in a promotional giveaway for his new book: three booksellers, selected in a drawing, will receive Briant's original poster art for Walrus, plus a signed copy of his novel, and five guitar picks to give away to favorite teen patrons.

  • Finding Waldo on Main Street

    Starting this weekend, children across the country will be on a month-long scavenger hunt to look for the skinny, bespectacled children's book character in a red-and-white shirt at local businesses as part of a celebration of Where’s Waldo?, which turns 25 this year, and independent bookstores.

  • What's Selling at Next Chapter Bookshop

    Children's book buyer Hannah Johnson-Breimeier of Next Chapter Bookshop in Mequon, Wis., highlights a new middle grade novel that's doing well at her store.

  • 'Epic Reads' Site Showcases HarperTeen Titles and Authors

    HarperCollins has announced the launch of Epic Reads, an interactive platform that will connect readers with HarperTeen authors and books.

  • Children's Books at BEA: Canvassing the Indie Landscape

    Last week we looked at some of the big buzz books at BEA. But with so much to see at the show, it's easy for books to slip through the cracks, and there were many standout children's offerings from smaller houses on the floor this year. Here's a look at some intriguing projects on the horizon from a diverse sampling of publishers.

  • E-Books vs. Printed Books: Some New Findings

    A new study by the Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop examines the way young children relate to stories they encounter in print versus on an e-reader. Though the sample size was small – 32 families with children ages 3 to 6 participated – the findings suggest some interesting considerations for e-book manufacturers, educators, and families.

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