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Crown Realigns Trade Paperback Operations
Tina Pohlman, v-p and publisher of the Crown Publishing Group's Three Rivers Press and Broadway Paperbacks trade paperback imprints, has announced a rebranding effort aimed at tying the hardcover and trade paperback publishing programs more closely together. Under the realignment, Three Rivers and Broadway will only publish trade paperbacks from certain hardcover imprints. In addition, the Crown Business and Crown Forum hardcover titles will be released under those names in paperback format rather than being rebranded.
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Pub Date Set for New DFW
Little, Brown has set a pub date for The Pale King, the posthumous novel by David Foster Wallace, who committed suicide in 2008 before finishing the work. The novel, which is set in the 1980s and follows a crew of IRS tax-return processors, will be published on tax day, April 15, and feature cover art by Wallace's widow, the painter Karen Green.
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Ingram to Distribute Berlitz and Insight
Ingram Publisher Services has entered into an agreement with APA Publications, owners of language and travel brands Berlitz Publishing and Insight Guides. Ingram will provide distribution services for the North American market for a range of products for both Insight and Berlitz beginning September 19.
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News Briefs: Week of 9/13/10
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OUP Releases Ambitious English-Chinese Dictionary
Oxford University Press is about to release its Oxford English Chinese Dictionary, a 2,064-page tome that it claims is the most authoritative English-to-Chinese and Chinese-to-English reference source of its kind. The book, which goes on sale September 16, includes over 300,000 definitions and phrases, carries a $75 list price.
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Hazelden Releases Original Manuscript of 12-Step Book
On October 1, Hazelden, the national nonprofit addiction treatment center, will publish The Book That Started It All: The Original Working Manuscript of Alcoholics Anonymous. The book reveals never-before-seen handwritten edits and comments from the 1939 book on recovery from addiction.
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Raincoast Moving to Bigger Warehouse
In a move expressing confidence in the health of its market for print books, Vancouver, B.C.-based distributor Raincoast Books announced this week that it is moving its warehouse facility to a location that will hold 40% more books.
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AAP Brief Asks Court to Bar Importation of Unauthorized Works
The Association of American Publishers filed a friend of the court brief yesterday urging the Supreme Court to uphold a ruling by the Ninth Circuit which held that the "first sale doctrine" does not apply to the unauthorized importation into the U.S. of copyrighted works that are manufactured overseas and acquired abroad.
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Despite Dip, Scholastic Moves Forward on Paper Front
A decline in the total use of paper plus the loss of a Forest Stewardship Council supplier resulted in a decline in FSC-certified paper used by Scholastic in 2009, but the company said it remains committed to getting to the 30% FSC-certified level by 2012.
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The Rumpus Becomes a Book Publisher
The Rumpus, the omnivorous online magazine founded by author Stephen Elliot, is about to publish its first book, an anthology of personal essays by women called The Rumpus Women, Vol. 1, inaugurating the magazine's Paper Internets imprint. The book's publication is affiliated with the innovative Rumpus book club.
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The Two Sides of Orange Frazer
Orange Frazer Press was launched almost 25 years ago when its three cofounders produced a paperback, thinking at the time this would be their sole foray into book publishing. Since then, the Wilmington, Ohio, family-owned and operated company has been successful by specializing in two lucrative niches: regional nonfiction with a national reach and custom publishing for both companies and individuals.
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Touchstone Drops 'Fireside'
Founded in 1970 as the trade paperback division of Simon & Schuster but with two names, the imprint formerly known as Touchstone/Fireside will be known as simply Touchstone beginning this week.
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Random, Harper Ride the Publishing Carousel Up
There is no better example of the cyclical nature of book publishing than the six-month results of the nation's five largest trade publishers. Four of the five houses reported significant changes in their operating performance in the first half of 2010 compared to one year ago, with big books, or the lack thereof, playing a major role in the shifts.
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News Briefs: Week of 9/6/10
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HarperCollins Rebrands Eos Books HarperVoyager
At Aussiecon IV, the science fiction convention running in Melbourne, Australia from Sept. 2-6, HarperCollins announced that it was rebranding its U.S. science fiction/fantasy imprint Eos Books as HarperVoyager. The name change, which officially kicks in Jan. 1, will give the U.S. imprint the same name as Harper’s sci/fi imprints in the U.K. and Australia and New Zealand. The goal of the rebranding is to create a more unified sci/fi program that will allow HC to acquire English-language rights.
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'Mockingjay' Sells More Than 450,000 Copies in First Week
Mockingjay, the final book in The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins, sold more than 450,000 copies (hardcover and e-book) in its first week on sale in the U.S., its publisher, Scholastic, announced Thursday. The book debuted at number one on both the USA Today and New York Times bestseller lists. Scholastic has gone back to press for an additional 400,000 copies, bringing the total number of copies in print for Mockingjay in the U.S. to 1.6 million since its August 24 publication.
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North Atlantic Books Launches Evolver Editions
Nonprofit Berkeley, Calif., press North Atlantic Books has launched a new imprint, Evolver Editions. The imprint is a collaboration between North Atlantic, which publishes books on alternative health and other subjects, and Evolver LLC, which publishes the online magazine Reality Sandwich, a place for writings on "psychic evolution."
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California State University, College Publishers Announce 'Digital Marketplace' Deal
The California State University has announced an agreement with five major college publishers to participate in a pilot project to license digital course content through an initiatve called the Digital Marketplace. Starting in Fall, 2010, Bedford/Freeman/Worth, Cengage Learning, McGraw-Hill Education, Pearson, and John Wiley & Sons, will offer content through pilot courses at five CSU campuses: Dominguez Hills, Fullerton, Long Beach, San Bernardino and San Francisco State.
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Rowman & Littlefield Providing Publishing Services to Four University Presses
The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group has established a department to provide publishing services to four U.S. university presses: University of Delaware Press, Bucknell University Press, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, and Lehigh University Press.
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Lamb Aiming For a New Vantage Point
Back in its heyday, Vantage Press ruled the self-publishing (then known as vanity publishing) world, with a market share that hovered around 25% from the 1950s through the early 1990s.



