Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Steve Rubin Named President and Publisher of Holt
Rubin, 67, had stepped down from the Random House Doubleday imprint which underwent restructuring last December. He had served for the past seven months as publisher-at-large of Random House, where he worked closely with authors including Dan Brown, John Grisham, Pat Conroy and Bill Moyers.
Dan Farley had been leading Holt since February 2008 when the previous president and publisher, John Sterling departed.
In a media statement, Rubin said he plans to publish books "that bridge the gap between commercial and literature. I believe that Holt is the perfect place to do this, given that its sister companies are the distinguished Farrar Straus and the powerhouse St. Martin's Press." Rubin also said he was eager to "develop a tight, powerful focused list."
While at Doubleday/Broadway, Rubin was called “the expansionist publisher.” He used the company’s riches amassed from The Da Vinci Code (and A Million Little Pieces) to keep the business growing in a downsizing era.
Rubin had spent his entire twenty-six year career at Random House and its predecessor companies and divisions. For fifteen years, until December 2008, he was President and Publisher of Doubleday and later the Doubleday Broadway Publishing Group. Prior to that, he was Executive Editor and Publisher and Editor-in-Chief at Bantam Books in the eighties, and the London-based former Chairman of the Transworld U.K. division.
Privately-owned Macmillan Publishers Ltd, with over 7000 staff operating in more than 80 countries, is held by Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck, based in Stuttgart, Germany. Macmillan is one of the largest and best known international publishing groups in the world, with divisions in the USA and UK.
The US group includes Farrar Straus and Giroux, Henry Holt & Company, W.H. Freeman and Worth Publishers, Palgrave Macmillan, Bedford/St. Martin’s, Picador, Roaring Brook Press, St. Martin’s Press, Tor Books, and Bedford Freeman & Worth Publishing Group.
Monday, October 19, 2009
B&N Announces Long-Awaited E-Reader at Frankfurt
The touch-screen reader is reportedly “the size of a trade paperback book and will feature full color,” and will be available by April 2010. Barnes & Noble is still tight-lipped about the cost of the reader, but some say it will range between $199 and $800.
A Fair spokesman for Barnes & Noble said the as-yet-unnamed B&N e-reader will “allow the user to comfortably read for hours,” unlike reading on an iPhone or other smart phone, which he said are suitable only for short periods of time.
The Barnes and Nobles e-reader project, according to the blog Gizmodo, has been under development for years, with several devices of varying size and capability in the pipeline. The B&N device will reportedly have two screens, one a monochrome e-ink screen like the Kindle—and a multi-touch display similar to an iPhone underneath the other.
B&N’s partner, Plastic Logic, is a spin-off company from Cambridge University's Cavendish Laboratory and specializes in polymer transistors and electronics. The principal product the company has developed is a flexible A4-size and robust plastic electronic display the thickness of a credit-card. It will be the core part of its own upcoming eReader. The headquarters of Plastic Logic is in Cambridge, United Kingdom. A factory for the mass-production of the display units was opened on September 17th 2008 in Dresden, Germany.
Plastic Logic plans to release its own QUE proReader in January 2010. It is intended as a replacement for paper, allowing electronic documents to be transported and read just like paper documents. It will have a thickness of less than 7 mm, a form factor of 8.5" x 11" and a weight of less than 16 oz (453 grams). It will be capable of displaying MS Office documents (Excel, PowerPoint, Word), PDF files and others.
The so-called “proReader” will have some stiff competition against a host of e-readers, including what may be the first Google Android-based e-reader.
Some say the e-reader could be on the market in time for the Christmas selling season. Barnes & Noble's entry into the e-reader fray adds another major player to the mix-- and one that has its own book distribution to compete with Amazon and the Kindle.
The as-yet-un-named Barnes & Noble device will supposedly be built on a Google Android operating system, and will feature all titles in Google’s huge book search program.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Grove Atlantic to Sell Shares in Atlantic Books
The Australian publisher will become a significant new shareholder in the publisher, and the additional funding will be used to develop its new fiction imprint, Corvus, which plans to increase its output to 48 titles in 2010.
Under the new structure, GAI will no longer be the parent company for Atlantic Books. Instead, GAI will take minority shareholder position in the UK unit.
Anthony Cheetham was named director of the Corvus imprint in September. Chairman and publisher Toby Mundy said both he and Cheetham "may invest in due course".
A raft of changes at Atlantic will also see independent Australian publisher Allen & Unwin becoming what Atlantic described as “a significant new shareholder" in the publisher, while Atlantic said it had also secured “substantial" additional new financing. Part of this will be used to develop its new fiction imprint Corvus, which will increase its publishing programme to 48 titles a year in 2010.
Mundy said: "Atlantic Books has prospered within the Independent Alliance and it remains an important part of our world; now the business is strengthened significantly by these new relationships with Allen & Unwin and Grove/Atlantic, the finest independent publishers in Australia and the United States.
"With my outstanding colleagues here, and partners around the world, I think we are well placed for the next phase of the company's growth."
Morgan Entrekin, the CEO of GAI, will continue to sit on the board of Atlantic Books. Ravi Mirchandani has joined the Atlantic board in his current role as editor-in-chief.
Grove/Atlantic, Inc., one of America’s oldest independent publishers, was formed by the 1983 merger of Grove Press and Atlantic Monthly Press. Grove/Atlantic's imprints (Grove Press, Atlantic Monthly Press, Canongate U.S., Black Cat, and Open City) publish literary fiction, nonfiction, poetry, drama, and translations.
The British subsidiary, Atlantic Books, was founded in 2000, and is a member of The Independent Alliance, a global alliance of ten UK publishers and their international partners.
Allen & Unwin is Australia's leading independent publisher and has been voted "Publisher of the Year" eight times including the inaugural award in 1992 and six times since 2000.
A&U publishes around 250 new titles each year including literary and commercial fiction, a broad range of general non-fiction, academic and professional titles and books for children and young adults. Imprints include Allen & Unwin, Arena, Crows Nest, Inspired Living (MBS) and Jacana (Natural History). The company is headquartered in Sydney.
Monday, October 12, 2009
German Book Prize Bypasses Nobel Winner
Mueller's latest novel, ''Atemschaukel,'' or ''Swinging Breath'' was short listed for this year's German Book Prize. But Kathrin Schmidt, age 51, was honored for her novel "You're Not Going to Die," the story of a woman who wakes up in a hospital after a coma unable to speak or move or remember her former life.
Mueller, a member of Romania's ethnic German minority, was honored with the Nobel for work that ''with the concentration of poetry and the frankness of prose, depicts the landscape of the dispossessed,'' the Swedish Academy said.
The decision fueled controversy surrounding the Swedish Academy's pattern of awarding the prize to European writers. Peter Englund, the permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy, told The Associated Press this week that the secretive Swedish Academy had been too ''eurocentric'' in picking winners.
His predecessor, Horace Engdahl, stirred up heated emotions across the Atlantic when he told the AP in 2008 that ''Europe still is the center of the literary world'' and the quality of U.S. writing was dragged down because authors were ''too sensitive to trends in their own mass culture.''
After Mueller was announced, he told the media that ''If you are European (it is) easier to relate to European literature. It's the result of psychological bias that we really try to be aware of. It's not the result of any program.''
The 56-year-old Mueller, published her first work in 1982 with a collection of short stories titled ''Niederungen,'' or ''Nadirs,'' depicting the harshness of life in a small, German-speaking village in Romania. The communist government quickly censored it.
In 1984 an uncensored version was smuggled to Germany, where it was published and devoured by readers. That work was followed by ''Oppressive Tango'' in Romania but she was eventually blocked from publishing inside her country for her criticism of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's rule and its feared secret police.
Much of Mueller's work is in German, but some works have been translated into English, French and Spanish, including ''The Passport,'' ''The Land of Green Plums,'' ''Traveling on One Leg'' and ''The Appointment.'' She is the 12th woman to win the Nobel Prize in literature.
The New York Times’s Art Beat quoted several bloggers’ mixed reactions to the Noble prize:
- “Another obscure author honored while far better writers remain unrecognized. It is time to abolish the Nobel Prize for Literature! — HS
- “Congratulations to the winner that many of us well-read Americans have never heard of. Let’s hope this spurs some of her work being translated into English so a wider audience can read her. Thanks to the hard work of translators we’ve enjoyed Haruki Murakami and Roberto Bolano. — Fjorder
- “Why is this award a great idea? Because Müller is a very good writer, of course, dealing with one of the most terrible of the 20th century political regimes (Ceausescu’s Romania). And awarding the prize to her is, at the same time, awarding it to all writers from eastern Europe who raised voice against communist dictatures. — O. Bondy
- “Wake up: the age of Americans winning the Nobel has long been over. It has nothing to do with quality of literature, but with geopolitics. — nme”
Among those on the short list for the 2009 German prize were:
- Rainer Merkel: “Light Years Away” (Lichtjahre Entfernt), S. Fischer Verlag
- Herta Müller: “Everything I Own I Carry With Me” (Atemschaukel), Suhrkamp Verlag
- Norbert Scheuer: “The Rushing of the Weir” (Überm Rauschen), C.H.Beck Verlag
- Katrin Schmidt: You’re Not Going to Die (Du Stirbst Nicht), Kiepenheuer & Witsch Verlag
- Clemens J. Setz: “Frequencies” (Die Frequenzen), Residenz Verlag
- Stephan Thome : “Border Walk” (Grenzgang), Suhrkamp Verlag
Who selects the Nobel Laureates? In his last will and testament, Alfred Nobel, scientist, inventor, entrepreneur, author and pacifist, specifically designated the institutions responsible for the prizes he wished to be established: The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for the Nobel Prize in Physics and Chemistry, Karolinska Institute for the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, the Swedish Academy for the Nobel Prize in Literature, and a Committee of five persons to be elected by the Norwegian Parliament (Storting) for the Nobel Peace Prize. In 1968, the Sveriges Riksbank established the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economics in Memory of Alfred Nobel. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences was given the task to select the Economics Prize Laureates starting in 1969.