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  • The Legendary Stan Lee Talks Manga and Ultimo

    The legendary Stan Lee was on hand at Comic-con this year to promote Ultimo, a new manga series he is working on for Viz Media in collaboration with the noted manga-ka Hiroyuki Takei, creator of the bestselling manga series Shaman King. Originally conceived for the Japanese market, Ultimo the story of two mysterious and powerful mechanized figures—one good; the other evil—created by a mysterious scientist/shaman figure that looks suspiciously like Stan Lee himself.

  • Cooking the Books with Frank Bruni

    Now that Frank Bruni has officially resigned from his post as New York Times restaurant critic, his photo is out there for all the city’s restaurant staffers to ogle. Bruni also airs his life story in Born Round, and talks to PW about his lifelong struggles with food and weight.

  • Local Hit Morning Glory Farms Poised to Go National

    It’s impressive enough that a book about a farm on Martha’s Vineyard published by a small, local press already has more than 12,000 copies in print. But with the Obamas heading to the Vineyard later this month, the farm behind the book is poised for national visibility.

  • Review: Lidia Cooks from the Heart of Italy: A Feast of 175 Regional Recipes

    "No kitchen should be without" this "superb volume" from Lidia Bastianich. The acclaimed restaurateur, PBS star and author, and her daughter, Tanya Bastianich Manuali, offer a stellar array of regional Italian recipes in this tantalizing and lavishly photographed collection.

  • Short Order: August 3

    The latest round-up of cookbook news includes items on the Frankfurt Book Fair’s new cookbook section, Michael Jackson’s chef’s cookbook, a British wine critic suing Random U.K., chefs up in arms over Phaidon’s book about hot new chefs. Also: tell us about Julie & Julia.

  • Women's Lit: Chick Lit Gets an Update

    In the opening scene of Amy Sohn's Prospect Park West, Rebecca, a Park Slope mother, masturbates to a Roman Polanski film while her baby naps. When the batteries in her vibrator die, she has to make “a Sophie's choice,” her orgasm or her daughter's sleep. She replaces the batteries with the ones from her daughter's mobile—and the child promptly wakes up crying.

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: 8/3/2009

    This week: a heartening look at undocumented students from William Perez, all of Reagan's men, former mobster Kenny Gallo, a contrary look at the counterculture from Jenny Diski, and three worthy new science titles from Matt Young & Paul K. Strode, Brian Cox & Jeff Forshaw, and Paul Halpern. Plus: eulogizing love, one failed relationship at a time, with Kathleen Horan.

  • Children's Book Reviews: 8/3/2009

    This week, new picture books from Michael Rex and Jan Thomas, as well as YA fiction from David Levithan, Libba Bray and Maggie Stiefvater.

  • Selling Sex in a Recession: Erotica

    A certain series of books about a girl who desperately wants to become one with the leading vampire in her life is still all the rage. But as the Twilight phenomenon continues, with millions upon millions of copies in print around the world, teen vampire desire reflects just one facet of a readership hungry for a more supernatural slant to sexy stories.

  • San Diego Media-Con: One Big Size Fits All

    Originally founded as a kind of fan-fest and back-issues swap meet for comic book, science fiction fans and retailers, the just concluded San Diego Comic-Con has grown to become an international platform for popular culture, servicing the fans that love it as well as the artists and publishers that create and distribute it. But with the book industry openly questioning the usefulness of a strictly trade show like BEA, has the San Diego Comic-Con become a possible model for publishing/media conventions?

  • Fiction Reviews: 8/3/2009

    Reviewed this week, new novels from Jonathan Lethem, Anne Rice, Lou Manfredo, actor Richard Belzer and Jane Gardam. Also, Peter Ackroyd revisits Frankenstein, the always sublime Lydia Millet pairs off animals and celebrities, and Padgett Powell asks a lot of questions.

  • Why I Write: Zane

    Over the past 12 years, I have read many articles and heard many people speak about why I write my books. Funny, none of the people making the statements know me or how my mind truly works. Ironically, I never chose to write erotica; erotica chose me. I wrote a few stories, posted them on the Internet and realized that there was a niche market that was not being met in the African-American comm...

  • Panel Mania: Stitches

    In David Small's autobiography, Stitches, he depicts his childhood with his disfunctional family, as he struggles with a botched surgery that rendered him mute. In this 16 page preview, David escapes through his imagination and his art. Stitches will be released by W.W. Norton on September 8th.

  • New World Library Launches Eckhart Tolle,
    Mother Teresa iPhone Apps

    Works by Eckhart Tolle and Mother Teresa and other titles in the self-help category are being made into iPhone apps by developer Mobifusion and publisher New World Library. Among the first apps to release will be Eckhart Tolle’s A New Earth Cards, The Power of Now Inspiration Deck and The Power of Now Meditation Deck, and Shakti Gawain’s Creative Visualization: 50 Inspiration Cards.

  • S&S and LivingSocial Partner for E-Promotion

    Margaret K. McElderry Books is running a three-week online promotion, offering a free web-only version of Cassandra Clare’s City of Bones, the first book in the author’s Mortal Instruments trilogy, which has more than one million copies in print. Via a partnership with LivingSocial, Simon & Schuster is making a version of the book available for reading on a LivingSocial landing page, through August 5.

  • 'Ranger’s Apprentice' Hits the Road

    Having toured the U.S. last year, Australian author John Flanagan isn’t coming stateside for the release of The Siege of Macindaw (Philomel, Sept.), the sixth book in his Ranger’s Apprentice series. Soon readers in 27 U.S. cities will be able to see a theatrical performance entitled “Escape to Araluen,” based on the first Ranger’s Apprentice book, The Ruins of Gorlan, thanks to a national bus tour Penguin has put together.

  • Galley Talk: ‘Candor’ by Pam Bachorz

    Emily Fear, manager of children’s books, Joseph-Beth Booksellers in Pittsburgh, Pa., talks about a fall favorite, Candor by Pam Bachorz. Candor is a Stepford Wives-esque tale. But instead of a novel about the brainwashing of wives, this is about brainwashing an entire community, especially its teenagers. The founder of the town of Candor tries to shape what he believes should be model teens—down to what they should eat and how they should dress.

  • Bigger and Bigger Still—San Diego Comic-con Keeps Growing

    The annual San Diego Comic-Con International ended July 26, leaving 125,000 attendees—the unofficial attendance figure of the sold-out convention—alternately dazzled and exhausted by the four-and-a-half day marathon of comics, movies, panels, signings and parties. More than ever, the show has become the biggest marketing platform of the year for film and TV as well as for comics.

  • The Changing Face of Manga: Talking with Hideki Egami

    Hideki Egami, editor-in-chief of the Japanese magazine Ikki, which specializes in manga aimed at an older more sophisticated adult readership, sat down with PW Comics Week for a micro-interview during the San Diego Comic-con to commemorate the launch of Viz Media’s English-language counterpart, SigIkki, an online magazine offeringe a different kind of contemporary manga to the U.S. market.

  • Comics Briefly

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