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  • The Lonely Stand of Print Reference

    In 2008, Google made a startling announcement: in July of that year, Internet users had used the Web site to perform 235 million searches per day on average, a new record. With all of that information being sought online, it's only natural that the print reference category is feeling the pinch. Casper Grathwohl, publisher of Oxford University Press Reference, says, “The decline in print s...

  • Short Order: May 11

    This week's roundup of cookbook news includes James Beard Award winners, London's answer to Magnolia Bakery, the Julie & Julia trailer, an Italian grandmother's book deal, and party pictures.

  • Cooking the Books with Adam Schell

    Former chef Adam Schell spent nine years researching and writing his first novel, Tomato Rhapsody: A Fable of Lust, Love and Forbidden Fruit (Delcaorte). He picked grapes and olives in Tuscany, visited libraries in Florence to read ancient Italian cookbooks and menus, and studied with a master gardener and cultivated Italian heirloom tomatoes. He talked to PW about what he learned along the way, and also shared his recipe for tomato-baked eggs.

  • Robert Rose Cookbooks Are No-Frills with Big Sales

    How does a small house in Toronto sell 75,000 copies of cookbooks by no-name authors with little to no publicity or promotion? Consistency. Robert Rose books have a look: they’re usually paperback, with copious color photos; the type is large and the recipe steps are numbered, with text following a strict two-column format. Titles often feature numbers—300 Sensational Soups, 150 Best Diabetes Desserts—and recipes tend to be uncomplicated. It's a formula that works.

  • Cookbook Photography Takes an Aerial View

    It’s long been acknowledged that food stylists use tricky techniques—such as spraying food with corn syrup or other liquids to keep it looking fresh—to make food appear as attractive as possible in photos. But what about the photography itself? Do certain angles, backgrounds and effects make food look more attractive, tasty or approachable? A new line of cookbooks that features only aerial photography suggests a new trend in food styling.

  • Emily the Strange: From Fashion to Fiction

    On June 2, HarperCollins’ HarperTeen imprint will release Emily the Strange: The Lost Days, the first in a series of four novels starring Emily, a quirky, independent 13-year-old who got her start 15 years ago as a design on a line of t-shirts and skateboards.

  • IDW Hires Webber to Oversee E-publishing

    IDW, April's third largest comics publisher, according to Diamond figures, has hired Jeff Webber to the new position of director of e publishing. Webber was formerly vp of product development at uClick, following stints at Hallmark and Shockwave. At IDW he'll help explore the growing opportunities for comics to be sold via various electronic formats.

  • PEN World Fest Shows Off Comics Artists

    PEN American Center’s impressive international literary festival, PEN World Voices, held a panel discussion, "1,000 Words: The Power of Visual Storytelling," featuring a star studded panel of international comics artists.

  • Swedish Small Press Expo Spotlights Growing Scene

    Sweden’s Small Press Expo is a state-sponsored program which invited members from around the globe to participate.

  • Life in Comics: Free Comic Book Day in the Boutiki

    The author looks at the lessons of the this years Free Comic Book Day at SLG's Boutiki retail store.

  • The Legend of Sigurd & Gudrún: A Web-Exclusive Review

    The legacy of J.R.R. Tolkein lives on with Harcourt's latest release, a volume collecting two epic poems based in Norse mythology.

  • PW's Review of "The Last Olympian" by Rick Riordan

    Rick Riordan's Percy Jackson series comes to a close with the release of The Last Olympian, which goes on sale today and has a 1.2-million copy first printing. The PW review follows.

  • Panelmania: Noir

    Dark Horse's Fall release, the Noir anthology contains short stories in the crime and mystery genres, by a wide mix of comics luminaries.

  • Comics Briefly

  • Job Moves

    Former Scholastic editor Sheila Keenan has been hired by Harry Abrams as a senior editor working on the Abrams ComicsArts imprint.

  • May Comics Bestsellers

    Jeff Kinney's Last Straw holds steady at #1; followed by Naruto at #2-3; Fruits Basket at #5; more Naruto after that and Marvel's hardcover graphic adaptation of Stephen King's The Stand: Captain Trips is at #12.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 5/4/2009

    Among this week's reviews: the latest picture books from Vera B. Williams and Jane Yolen, debut novels from Hallie Durand and Jacqueline Kelley, and a round-up of titles commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing.

  • Fiction Book Reviews: Week of 5/04/2009

    Reviewed this week, new novels by Oscar Casares, Rebecca Wells, Vikas Swarup (he of Slumdog Millionaire fame), Nick Laird and Norman Lebrecht. Nicola Keegan makes a splash with her debut, Swimming, while Jonathan L. Howard goes dark for his first, Johannes Cabal: The Necromancer.

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 5/04/2009

    This week on the Web: copy editing with CMS Q&A guru Carol Fisher Saller, grilling with Emeril Lagasse, Ursula K. Le Guin tackles the importance of fantasty, Vera Ramone King chronicles life with Dee Dee, Mike Robbins champions authenticity, big-brained futurist Ray Kurzweil pens a self-help, and James Patterson's aviary heroine returns. Plus: Nancy Balbirer suffers the indignities of the acting life so you don't have to.

  • Children's Sales to Stay Soft

    Areport from Publishers Weekly and the Institute for Publishing Research projects soft sales for children's books through the end of 2012, with the lowest numbers in the five-year span expected for 2009. According to the new PW/IPR Book Sales Index, total children's trade sales totaled $3.16 billion in 2008; that number will dip to $3.

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