-
Short Order: December 7
It's been a quiet few weeks (maybe the food-fest of Thanksgiving had something to do with it?), but there's news from Andrews McMeel about a new crowd-sourced cookbook it will publish, compiling about 100 of the best recipes it receives from food bloggers over the next three months; as well as a New York Times piece on the self-publishing cooks behind Canal House Cooking.
-
Cooking the Books with Julie Powell
Julie & Julia author Julie Powell is back—but don’t think her new book, Cleaving, picks up where the Amy Adams movie left off. Cleaving tells of the troubles in Powell’s marriage, and how she found solace by working as a butcher, of all things. As Powell explains, readers who come to Cleaving from the Nora Ephron romantic comedy are going to experience “some psychic whiplash.”
-
Behind the Scenes of a Cookbook Trailer
With book publishers struggling to find ways to introduce unsung talents to the marketplace, Chronicle has invested in a five-minute video for one of its cookbook authors. The publisher let us in on the production of the trailer for Eileen Yin-Fei Lo’s new book, Mastering the Art of Chinese Cooking, which it is debuting today, and shared some tips on what makes a good trailer.
-
A Round-Up of the Round-Ups: Looking at the 'Best Cookbooks of 2009' Lists
We took a look at the "best cookbooks of 2009" lists from editors at Amazon, Eat Me Daily, the Denver Post, Epicurious, the New York Times, NPR, Serious Eats, and, of course, PW—and analyzed the results to see which books appear most frequently, which publishers have the most books on the lists, and a few titles you’ve probably never heard of—but should have.
-
‘Hunger Games 3’ to Pub Next August
Hunger Games fans have just eight more months to wait: the as yet untitled third and final book in Suzanne Collins's dystopian fantasy trilogy will be released in English worldwide on August 24, 2010. An audio version from Scholastic Audio will be released simultaneously. In other news, the trade paperback edition of the first book in the trilogy, The Hunger Games, will be released on July 6, 2010.
-
Sex, Lies and Religion: A New Edition of 'Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary'
Long considered a classic of the 1960s underground comics era, as well as a progenitor of a wave of imaginative autobiographical comics works to come in the 1980s, Justin Green’s Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary, is being reprinted in an oversized hardcover edition by McSweeney’s Books this month.
-
The Image-Makers Reunite
The founders of Image—Erik Larsen, Jim Lee, Rob Liefeld, Todd McFarlane, Whilce Portacio, Marc Silvestri and Jim Valentino—have reunited and teamed with writer Robert Kirkman for an all-star mini-series that brings the larger than life characters of Image's early days back to the page.
-
Ted Rall’s The Year of Loving Dangerously
Remember the 80’s? The legwarmers and the feathered hair and the cheesy guys named Chad? Remember Ronald Reagan and Bernie Goetz and the very first hints of the AIDS epidemic? Well, Ted Rall does and, along with artist Pablo Callejo, he’s wrapped it all up into a gorgeous whirlwind of a memoir.
-
Comics Briefly
-
Dutton and Riverhead Launch Redeemer Imprint
Dutton and Riverhead are launching a new imprint devoted to books from evangelical Christian preacher Timothy Keller and his Redeemer Presbyterian Church. Keller, who, according to a recent article in New York Magazine draws some 5,000 Manhattanites to hear his sermons every Sunday, has previously published bestsellers with Dutton and Riverhead.
-
Comics Reviews: 11/30/09
Jim Rugg's nostalgis satire, Afrodisiac, a new graphic novel by the artist of Air and comics adpatations of the works of Louisa May Alcoot are in this week's reviews.
-
Panel Mania: Shutter Island
Shutter Island, an adaptation of the novel by Dennis Lehane, follows two U.S. Marshals who are sent to the island in search of a mass murderer who has escaped from a hospital. First published in France, and illustrated by Christian De Metter, the book will be released by Tokyopop on January 5th, timed to tie-in with the upcoming movie adaptation directed by Martin Scorsese and staring Leonardo DiCaprio.
-
Yen Press Cites Adaptations; Plans Kids Comics and More
Back in 2007, when Yen Press, Hachette’s manga, manhwa and conventional graphic novel imprint, was first starting out, publishing director Kurt Hassler predicted that graphic novel adaptations were going to be the next big trend for manga publishing in the U.S. So far he's been right.
-
Davis’s ‘Secret Science Alliance’ Appeals to All Ages
Eleanor Davis’s The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook, a delightful mystery in which three science-loving kids band together to solve a crime, is attracting attention from readers of all ages.
-
Tezuka: Discovering a God of Manga
Few if any creators in the history of the comics medium have wielded the wide-ranging influence of Japan’s Osamu Tezuka, and to prove it Abrams Comicarts recently released a stunning coffee table book comprehensively covering his life and career for the Tezuka aficionado and the curious newcomer alike.
-
Comics Briefly
Joe Kubert Collected Work Up for Auction: Live Chat with Eisner Winner Nina Matsumoto ; Harlequin Romance Manga Now On Kindle; Dash Shaw, Josh Neufeld & David Heatly with Chip Kidd's Band; This Week @ Good Comics for Kids; and This Week @ The Beat
-
Panel Mania: Sublife Vol. 2
Sublife Vol. 2 is the continued collection of short stories and strips by John Pham. This nine page preview is taken from the short story "Deep Space," which was started in the first volume. Sublife Vol. 2 will be released by Fantagraphics in December.
-
Katie Workman Shares Thanksgiving Recipes from Cookstr
Last week’s PW featured a story on Cookstr, the online database of cookbook recipes that has just celebrated its one-year anniversary. The piece explained how Will Schwalbe and Katie Workman built a site that lets people access more than 4,000 recipes from 350 cookbooks—for free. Here, Workman shares recipes for more of her favorite Thanksgiving recipes from the site.
-
Cookbook Authors Address Reader Complaints
Cook from enough cookbooks, and you’ll have the experience of following a recipe and being disappointed in the results. If you’re a cookbook author, you don’t want to hear complaints from readers, but, as prolific author Rick Rodgers told PW, sometimes “bad recipes happen to good people.” How to handle reader complaints is up for debate, and one prominent cookbook author is taking a proactive approach to addressing criticism.
-
Cooking the Books with Alison Fryer
Alison Fryer is managing partner of Toronto’s Cookbook Store, the only shop of its kind in the city of 2.5 million. She co-founded the 800-square-foot store in the city's Yorkville district with her business partner, Josh Josephson, 26 years ago. Fryer talks to PW about business, which is surprisingly good this year; the changes she’s observed in food culture over nearly three decades; and what books she’s excited about this fall.



