NEW YORK, NY/AUTHORLINK NEWS/January 21, 2010--Barnes & Noble has confirmed a round of layoffs this week, saying the move was “designed to better align our resources with our business.” Unconfirmed reports estimate that about 45-50 jobs have been eliminated, mostly in the buying group. B&N wouldn’t confirm the number.
A B&N spokesperson told PW magaizne that the company is reallocating resources to areas that are expanding, such as its digital operations, but had no comment on how duties of the departed buyers and others would be divided up.
Publishers are repoertedly shaken at the news. The layoffs leave publisehrs questioning who wil be in charge of getting books into the stores.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Oxford Writing Summit Welcomes Applicants
LITTLE ROCK, Ark./AUTHORLINK NEWS/Jan. 20, 2011) – The first-ever Oxford American Summit for Ambitious Writers—a five-day, creatively intense workshop for writers seeking to enhance their literary skills—will take place June 21-26, 2011, atop picturesque Petit Jean Mountain in Arkansas. The application process for the Summit begins Jan. 15.
The Summit, a collaboration between The Oxford American magazine and Winthrop Rockefeller Institute, will offer participants the opportunity to improve their writing in a peaceful and stimulating environment.
“The inspiring mountaintop locale and substantive programming make the Summit ideal for writers who want to grow as artists, and is not simply for people who want to be published as is,” said Marc Smirnoff, editor of The Oxford American and one of the lead organizers of the Summit.
During the Oxford American Summit for Ambitious Writers, literary professionals will challenge participants to sharpen and deepen their writing skills through daily writing classes, lecture sessions, and manuscript critiques. Distinguished faculty and guest lecturers will teach a number of workshop sessions that focus equally on short fiction and creative nonfiction. Publishing experts will lead innovative programming designed to hone the skills that increase a writer’s chance of being noticed by editors.
The Oxford American also promises a fun and unique experience featuring great Southern food and music presented by talented chefs and performers. Participants can enjoy the spectacular setting, including nature trails and recreational facilities at Winthrop Rockefeller Institute and nearby Petit Jean State Park.
Confirmed faculty members include Wells Tower (recently named by the New Yorker as among the 20 best fiction writers under 40); Kevin Brockmeier (one of Granta magazine’s Best Young American Novelists and winner of the O. Henry Award); Pico Iyer (praised by Time as “among the finest travel writers of his generation”); as well as Tom Franklin, Cristina Henríquez, Scott Huler, and Jay Jennings. Detailed biographical information about each faculty member is available online at summit.oxfordamerican.org.
Applications for admission to the Oxford American Summit for Ambitious Writers will be accepted through May 1. The admissions committee will notify participants as they are selected, so it is possible that all available student slots will be filled before May 1. Those interested are encouraged to submit application materials as early as possible. Full application instructions and materials are available online at summit.oxfordamerican.org.
The tuition for the Summit is $1,000, and the room and board charges (including all meals) are $700 for single occupancy rooms and $550 for double occupancy rooms. Some partial and full scholarships are available, and every applicant will be considered for those scholarships.
About The Oxford American
The Oxford American is a national magazine dedicated to featuring the very best in Southern writing while documenting the complexity and vitality of the American South. Billed as “The Southern Magazine of Good Writing,” it has won two National Magazine Awards and other high honors since it began publication in 1992. The magazine has featured the original work of such literary powerhouses as Charles Portis, Roy Blount Jr., ZZ Packer, Donald Harington, Donna Tartt, Ernest J. Gaines, and many other distinguished authors, while also discovering and launching the most promising writers in the region.
The magazine has also published previously unseen work by such Southern masters as William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, Walker Percy, James Agee, Zora Neale Hurston, James Dickey, Carson McCullers, to name a few. The New York Times recently stated that The Oxford American “may be the liveliest literary magazine in America.” To learn more, visit the website at OxfordAmerican.org.
About Winthrop Rockefeller Institute
In 2005, the University of Arkansas System established Winthrop Rockefeller Institute with a grant from the Winthrop Rockefeller Charitable Trust. By integrating the resources and expertise of a statewide university system with the legacy and ideas of Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller, this educational institute and conference center creates an atmosphere where collaboration and change can thrive.
The Rockefeller Institute offers a variety of workshops, seminars, public lectures, conferences
and special events. Program areas include agriculture and environment, arts and humanities, economic development, and policy and public affairs. To learn more, visit the website at LiveTheLegacy.org.
The Summit, a collaboration between The Oxford American magazine and Winthrop Rockefeller Institute, will offer participants the opportunity to improve their writing in a peaceful and stimulating environment.
“The inspiring mountaintop locale and substantive programming make the Summit ideal for writers who want to grow as artists, and is not simply for people who want to be published as is,” said Marc Smirnoff, editor of The Oxford American and one of the lead organizers of the Summit.
During the Oxford American Summit for Ambitious Writers, literary professionals will challenge participants to sharpen and deepen their writing skills through daily writing classes, lecture sessions, and manuscript critiques. Distinguished faculty and guest lecturers will teach a number of workshop sessions that focus equally on short fiction and creative nonfiction. Publishing experts will lead innovative programming designed to hone the skills that increase a writer’s chance of being noticed by editors.
The Oxford American also promises a fun and unique experience featuring great Southern food and music presented by talented chefs and performers. Participants can enjoy the spectacular setting, including nature trails and recreational facilities at Winthrop Rockefeller Institute and nearby Petit Jean State Park.
Confirmed faculty members include Wells Tower (recently named by the New Yorker as among the 20 best fiction writers under 40); Kevin Brockmeier (one of Granta magazine’s Best Young American Novelists and winner of the O. Henry Award); Pico Iyer (praised by Time as “among the finest travel writers of his generation”); as well as Tom Franklin, Cristina Henríquez, Scott Huler, and Jay Jennings. Detailed biographical information about each faculty member is available online at summit.oxfordamerican.org.
Applications for admission to the Oxford American Summit for Ambitious Writers will be accepted through May 1. The admissions committee will notify participants as they are selected, so it is possible that all available student slots will be filled before May 1. Those interested are encouraged to submit application materials as early as possible. Full application instructions and materials are available online at summit.oxfordamerican.org.
The tuition for the Summit is $1,000, and the room and board charges (including all meals) are $700 for single occupancy rooms and $550 for double occupancy rooms. Some partial and full scholarships are available, and every applicant will be considered for those scholarships.
About The Oxford American
The Oxford American is a national magazine dedicated to featuring the very best in Southern writing while documenting the complexity and vitality of the American South. Billed as “The Southern Magazine of Good Writing,” it has won two National Magazine Awards and other high honors since it began publication in 1992. The magazine has featured the original work of such literary powerhouses as Charles Portis, Roy Blount Jr., ZZ Packer, Donald Harington, Donna Tartt, Ernest J. Gaines, and many other distinguished authors, while also discovering and launching the most promising writers in the region.
The magazine has also published previously unseen work by such Southern masters as William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, Walker Percy, James Agee, Zora Neale Hurston, James Dickey, Carson McCullers, to name a few. The New York Times recently stated that The Oxford American “may be the liveliest literary magazine in America.” To learn more, visit the website at OxfordAmerican.org.
About Winthrop Rockefeller Institute
In 2005, the University of Arkansas System established Winthrop Rockefeller Institute with a grant from the Winthrop Rockefeller Charitable Trust. By integrating the resources and expertise of a statewide university system with the legacy and ideas of Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller, this educational institute and conference center creates an atmosphere where collaboration and change can thrive.
The Rockefeller Institute offers a variety of workshops, seminars, public lectures, conferences
and special events. Program areas include agriculture and environment, arts and humanities, economic development, and policy and public affairs. To learn more, visit the website at LiveTheLegacy.org.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Garth Stein to Keynote Whidbey Conference
AUTHORLINK NEWS/January 18, 2010-- Garth Stein, author of The Art of Racing in the Rain, will be keynote speaker April 2, 2011 for the Whitbey Island Writers' Conference. He will speak to an audience of aspiring writers as part of a three-day event that features about thirty other writing professionals. Agents and editors will be available for writers to pitch their work.
Early Bird Registration for the Whidbey Island Writers Conference is underway. Set for April 1-3, 2011, in Coupeville, the Whidbey Island Writers Conference includes informative workshops, intimate Chat Houses, and the inside scoop on publishing your work. The Conference program, costs and registration details can be found at www.writeonwhidbey.org.
Friday, April 1, Puget Sound Energy is sponsoring 14 intensive, instructional, collaborative and intimate workshops. Friday night, conference goers can mingle with their peers to play word games, try some interactive poetry, attend a live performance or share their works at an open microphone event.
On Friday and/or Saturday, registered attendees can pitch an agent/editor or review their previously submitted manuscript with an author, agent or editor. Agents’ and editors’ preferred genres plus criteria for agent-editor consults and manuscript critiques can be found at www.writeonwhidbey.org.
In addition to Stein’s keynote address, Saturday, April 2, is filled with the Whidbey Island Writers Conference’s distinguishing event, its Fireside Chat Houses, where participants are invited into the living rooms of some of Coupeville’s most beautiful homes and quaint B&B’s for an opportunity to meet personally with the conference presenters. Saturday night, following a Book Signing Reception, participants may choose to attend the $50 per person Dinner with the Authors, Agents and Editors. Reservations are required and seating is limited to 100.
Sunday, April 3, from 9:00 a.m. to 10: 00 a.m., Amazon Publishing’s Jon Fine, Greg Spils and Jason Kuykendall, along with agent Jeff Kleinman, online marketing expert and author Tom Masters, and authors Terry Persun and Bob Mayer, will provide a broad look at current publishing opportunities and pitfalls. They will share their knowledge about the state of publishing today, from traditional forms to using the cloud. Following this panel, there will be several workshops to choose from dealing with marketing and publishing. The workshops, which run from 10:15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., will conclude the conference.
The Conference is priced by the day with costs averaging about $100 per day. Agent-editor consults ($15), manuscript critiques ($75) and Dinner with the Authors, Agents and Editors ($50) are extra. Participants can choose to attend only one day or all three. (Costs quoted here are based on Whidbey Island Writers Association member discounts.) To join the Whidbey Island Writers Association or to register for the Conference, visit www.writeonwhidbey.com. Call the Association office at 360.331.0307 to order a Gift Certificate. To advertise in the Official Conference Program contact Donna Hood at 360-341-1861 or donnahood@whidbey.com.
Early Bird Registration for the Whidbey Island Writers Conference is underway. Set for April 1-3, 2011, in Coupeville, the Whidbey Island Writers Conference includes informative workshops, intimate Chat Houses, and the inside scoop on publishing your work. The Conference program, costs and registration details can be found at www.writeonwhidbey.org.
Friday, April 1, Puget Sound Energy is sponsoring 14 intensive, instructional, collaborative and intimate workshops. Friday night, conference goers can mingle with their peers to play word games, try some interactive poetry, attend a live performance or share their works at an open microphone event.
On Friday and/or Saturday, registered attendees can pitch an agent/editor or review their previously submitted manuscript with an author, agent or editor. Agents’ and editors’ preferred genres plus criteria for agent-editor consults and manuscript critiques can be found at www.writeonwhidbey.org.
In addition to Stein’s keynote address, Saturday, April 2, is filled with the Whidbey Island Writers Conference’s distinguishing event, its Fireside Chat Houses, where participants are invited into the living rooms of some of Coupeville’s most beautiful homes and quaint B&B’s for an opportunity to meet personally with the conference presenters. Saturday night, following a Book Signing Reception, participants may choose to attend the $50 per person Dinner with the Authors, Agents and Editors. Reservations are required and seating is limited to 100.
Sunday, April 3, from 9:00 a.m. to 10: 00 a.m., Amazon Publishing’s Jon Fine, Greg Spils and Jason Kuykendall, along with agent Jeff Kleinman, online marketing expert and author Tom Masters, and authors Terry Persun and Bob Mayer, will provide a broad look at current publishing opportunities and pitfalls. They will share their knowledge about the state of publishing today, from traditional forms to using the cloud. Following this panel, there will be several workshops to choose from dealing with marketing and publishing. The workshops, which run from 10:15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., will conclude the conference.
The Conference is priced by the day with costs averaging about $100 per day. Agent-editor consults ($15), manuscript critiques ($75) and Dinner with the Authors, Agents and Editors ($50) are extra. Participants can choose to attend only one day or all three. (Costs quoted here are based on Whidbey Island Writers Association member discounts.) To join the Whidbey Island Writers Association or to register for the Conference, visit www.writeonwhidbey.com. Call the Association office at 360.331.0307 to order a Gift Certificate. To advertise in the Official Conference Program contact Donna Hood at 360-341-1861 or donnahood@whidbey.com.
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