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  • Hornik Named President and Publisher of Dial and Dutton

    Lauri Hornik, president and publisher of Dial Books, has been appointed president and publisher of Dial Books and Dutton Children’s Books.

  • Emotional Content and Bio-Manga

    While working at a large magazine company in Japan, Eiji Han Shimizu had a vision to use Japanese comics, or manga, to change the world. The general concept was well received at his company, but his vision was not considered commercially viable. Despite this, Shimizu began culling a network of manga artists and creators, and formulating ideas for a new kind of informational/inspirational manga.

  • 92nd Street Y Celebrates 70 Years

    To fans of poetry and literary prose, mentioning New York City's 92nd Street Y evokes not merely a gym and community center, but also one of the premier venues in the country for literary readings and events, run under the auspices of the Y's Unterberg Poetry Center. This year, the Poetry Center is celebrating its 70th anniversary with a season of readings featuring such big names as T.

  • Disney Halloween Promotion 2010

  • Joshua Beckman and Matthew Zapruder

    Joshua Beckman, 36, and Matthew Zapruder, 40, met in 1998 when Beckman passed through Amherst, Mass., on a tour for his debut poetry collection, Things Are Happening. Zapruder was an M.F.A. student at the University of Amherst and went to see Beckman's reading: “I was blown away,” says Zapruder.

  • B&N Confronts Changing Market, Bad Environment

    The book business is “holding up” in an extremely difficult macro economic environment, but that doesn't mean the industry hasn't changed, Barnes & Noble CFO Joseph Lombardi told analysts in a presentation made at Goldman Sachs's global retailing conference last week. The 13.9% increase posted by Barnes & Noble.

  • Running Rain Taxi

    In the world of book reviews, Minneapolis-based Rain Taxi Review of Books is something of an anomaly. It comes out quarterly in print and in online editions with different content, and is one part of a nonprofit organization that also hosts the Twin Cities Book Festival; it also sponsors readings and publishes chapbooks of fiction and poetry.

  • Brent Cunningham

    Brent Cunningham didn't plan on becoming operations director of Small Press Distribution (SPD), the 40-year-old, San Francisco—based nonprofit distributor of more than 500 of America's best small, tiny and micro publishers. Like many people involved with small press publishing, Cunningham, who will turn 40 in a few months, found his way into the industry in a wayward fashion.

  • U.S. Drives Penguin in First Half of 2008

    An "exceptional" performance by Penguin Group USA helped to push up results at Penguin worldwide.

  • Tough Times to Get Ahead

    The slumbering national economy is reflected in both the salary gains and the attitudes of those in the publishing industry, PW's annual salary survey found. In 2007, the average raise was 4.2%, above the rate of inflation but still the smallest increase in more than five years (see. p. 26). Bonuses were also lower in 2007 than in 2006, with those in management feeling the belt-tightening most ...

  • Not Too Cute for Words

    Two sisters in Japan, working under the name Aranzi Aronzo, have taken the craft and DIY world by storm—a really cute storm. Now they're doing the same to five-year-old Vertical Inc., a New York City—based publisher of genre books translated from Japanese that range from J-horror like Koji Suzuki's Ring (the press's very first book) to its multiple Eisner and Harvey Award—winn...

  • Books, Comics, Films From Angel Gate

    Angel Gate CEO Debbie Bishop brings together a lot of skills in the service of her company. A screenwriter, producer, novelist and graphic designer, Bishop launched Angel Gate in 2003; since then the Los Angeles publishing house has released novels, graphic novels and cookbooks, as well as YA fiction and children's picture and chapter books.

  • Stephenie Meyer… in Concert?

    Little, Brown will promote the August 2 release of Breaking Dawn, fourth and final book in Stephenie Meyer’s bestselling Twilight Saga, with a four-city concert tour, featuring a musical performance by Justin Furstenfeld of the group Blue October.

  • Borders and Eisner Offer Book Tie-In Series on Borders.com

    Robin Cook’s Foreign Body: The Prequel will run as 50 two-minute episodes on the newly launched Borders.com.

  • TV Documentary Chronicles Indies' Challenges

    Paperback Dreams, a new documentary by San Francisco filmmaker Alex Beckstead, chronicles the history of Bay Area bookstores Cody's Books and Kepler's Books and Magazines, and in doing so, it offers a microcosm of the struggles faced by many independent booksellers over the past 50 years. The film, which will run on PBS stations starting in November, begins with the opening of Kepler's near St...

  • Savannah's Story

    When Laura Albert told the New York Post, as she did earlier this month, that someone is “really stepping on my feelings,” she was talking about Savannah Knoop, the young woman who, at the age of 19, was enlisted by Albert and her husband, Geoff Knoop, to participate in the now infamous literary hoax.

  • B&N.com Starts to Pick Up the Pace

    In the three years after Barnes & Noble took over sole ownership of Barnes & Noble.com in 2003, the site's sales performance was up and down. But in 2007, the online arm of the retailer posted a 10.1% sales increase, helped by a strong fourth quarter, and the solid results continued into the first period of 2008: B&N.

  • Murray to Stay the Course

    While Jane Friedman’s resignation from HarperCollins was a surprise, the appointment of Brian Murray to succeed her was not. Murray has been the heir apparent since his return from heading HC’s Australian operation; last year he was promoted to president of HC’s worldwide business. Murray, who has been heavily involved in HC’s international expansion and digital push, sa...

  • Animal House

    It's become an all too familiar story: author shops book idea, is told that it's “unmarketable” and publishes it successfully herself. In the case of Diane Leigh and Marilee Geyer's book on homeless animals, One at a Time: A Week in an American Animal Shelter, however, there was a twist. The authors didn't take their manuscript and photos to Lulu's or the local copy shop.

  • Random's Search For Growth

    If Peter Olson is indeed leaving Random House, his successor will still be faced with the task of finding ways to grow the world's largest trade book publisher in an industry confronted by sluggish growth. Since 2002, one way Random has looked to grow is through international expansion, a move that also lessened its dependence on the American market, where the company has been the dominant publ...

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