Book View, February 2000

PEOPLE


A month into the naughts, let’s recap some recent moves: Greg Tobin leaves Ballantine after seven months as VP, Editor in Chief, to try his hand as a full time author. He has a two-book contract with St. Martin’s/Tor BooksTom Doherty. . . . Alun Davies, longtime head of BDD’s international division, moves to S&S in a consulting capacity as of February. He will report directly to Jack Romanos and, according to Romanos, will work “closely with the publishing, editorial, subsidiary rights and international sales staffs of all our units.”. . . . Two defections from Broadway: Tracy Behar to Pocket Books, where she is VP, Editorial Director of Adult Books. And Harriet Bell returns to HarperCollins (well, Morrow) as VP and Editorial Director of William Morrow cookbooks. (Susan Friedland continues to oversee the HC cookbook list.) Morrow cookbook editors Pam Honig and Justin Schwartz, meanwhile, have left the company. Lisa Rasmussen, VP Director of Sales for Avon, has resigned. Libby Jordan has been hired to do Morrow/Avon marketing. She was previously at Dell.

Joelle Delbourgo, who became an agent last summer after leaving HarperCollins, where she was SVP, Editor in Chief and Associate Publisher, and Wendy Sherman, also a recent addition to agenting (formerly VP, Executive Director and Associate Publisher of Henry Holt), have joined forces in a literary agency. Jessica Lichtenstein, formerly at HarperCollins and St. Martin’s, will join the group, working for the principals, and developing her own list. . . . Harriet Rubin has moved to iVillage, as VP of the Work Channel. She was formerly writing, including contributing a column for Fast Company, and before that, headed up Currency, the business imprint of Doubleday.

Bethany Harris has been named Director of Marketing for Penguin’s Consumer Products and Entertainment division, reporting to Lisa Marks. . . .

Time Life has let 50 people go in Alexandria, as the company moves toward a different business model of shorter continuity series. Among those terminated was Kate Hartzen, who had been at Random Value, among other publishers. Meanwhile, Edith Berelson, who was recently laid off from sister company BOMC, landed in Reader’s Digest’s New Business Development department, and another casualty, Cathy Lobel, has landed at Prentice Hall as Marketing Director.

Grace Freedson is leaving Barron’s after 16 years as Director of Acquisitions . . . . Harold Underdown has been named Editorial Director of Charlesbridge Publishing. . . . Jim King, formerly Director of Promotional Sales at Publications International, has been named VP of Sales and Service at BookScan, part of the Marketing Information group at VNU (see our related article on page 1). . . . Nick Webb, formerly MD of S&S UK, has been hired by Rightscenter.com to head up its UK operations. . . . Paul Gediman, most recently PW Forecasts’ Nonfiction Editor, has moved to Michigan and joined up with Borders.com as Senior Editor.

DEALS


Doubleday/Broadway
bought world rights to Until The Sea Shall Free Them by Robert Frump, about “Marine Electric,” a Merchant Marine coal carrier that went down in a storm in the 1980s. It’s being touted as “A Perfect Storm meets A Civil Action,” because the first mate, who survived the disaster, is taken to court and charged with responsibility for it. Word is Sterling Lord sold it to Shawn Coyne for $350K. . . . Nicole Aragi of the Watkins Loomis Agency just auctioned off a first novel by Indian author Manil Suril, who was born and raised in Bombay and has been living in the US for the past 20 years, where he is now a math teacher. Called The Death of Vishnu, the novel was sold to Norton for an estimated $350K+, with 10 publishers bidding . . . . And Random’s Scott Moyers bought an as yet untitled history of the NFL by Michael MacCambridge (ESPN Sports Century) for around $400,000 from ICM’s Sloan Harris.

Knopf’s Robin Desser and Sonny Mehta have bought Richard Price’s new novel “inspired by the murder of Jonathan Levin,” according to the Daily News. Lynn Nesbit sold the proposal for high six figs. . . . Howard Morhaim sold An Imperfect God: George Washington, His Slaves and the Creation of America, by Henry Wiencek (author of the NBCC nominee The Hairstons), to FSG’s Elisabeth Sifton for $500,000 in a pre-empt.

DULY NOTED


“We love books,” announces Reader’s Digest Editor in Chief Chris Willcon in this month’s issue as he launches into a plug for its “new” BookPicks area on the readersdigest.com site. Unfortunately, only a handful of books are reviewed there, and while there are some messages in the accompanying chat rooms (most are empty), it’s been three months since anyone has thought to add to them. Still, we like the sentiment.

In its February 7 issue, Business Week announced “The Business Week Best-Sellers of 1999,” commenting that “best-selling business books of 1999 mark[s] the maturation of a relatively new book genre, annals of the Digital Age.” Having said that, only two of the top five hardcovers are about the Web, and a paltry six of the top ten hardcovers and two of the top ten paperbacks are focused on e-biz. Three of the top twenty hardcovers and paperbacks are Motley Fool titles, two are by Suze Orman, and two are Dummies’ books —Investing for Dummies and Home Buying for Dummies.

In association with The Little Bookroom, Pen American Center has asked its members to fill out a questionnaire about New York, which will lead to the publication of New York City Secrets. This emulates the methods used to create Rome City Secrets, which was based on the tips and insights offered by Fellows of The American Academy in Rome, and promises to be (when it’s published in March) a quirky guidebook of little known routes, restaurants, overlooked art, and favorite activities. In exchange, PEN will be mentioned in the book, and gets a portion of the royalties. The Little Bookroom plans a series of City Secrets books.

Meanwhile, Rome City Secrets may be ordered off the citysecrets.com web site, which has a link to “NY BOOKs Checkout,” a cleverly designed online retailer that is part of the New York Review of Books/Granta site. Although theirs is an unadorned page, the steps involved in purchasing are clearly laid out in advance, so that knowing, for instance, how much shipping and handling will cost, how much a UK-published title will cost in the US (or vice versa), what’s involved in gift giving, etc., is anticipated before the user begins worrying about them.

PARTIES


The media were out in full force on January 21, to celebrate the publication of a first novel by one of their own. Stacey D’Erasmo, a former VLS Editor, former BookForum editor, and current journalist, was fêted by her publisher Algonquin at MaryLou’s on West 9th Street. In attendance at the party for D’Erasmo’s well-reviewed Tea were NYT Magazine’s Ariel Kaminer, Newsday’s Laurie Muchnick, Salon’s Laura Miller and Craig Offman, VLS Editor Joy Press, Out Magazine chief Tom Beer, and Harper’s Bazaar’s Barbara O’Dair. There were even a few novelists (Pulitzer Prize–winning Michael Cunningham and A.M. Homes) and agents (William MorrisPeter Franklin and Henry Dunow Agency’s Jennifer Carlson).

The Salon.com Book Awards (check out winners at their site) were as much a celebration of the thirty-something generation’s ascendance in the social ranks of book publishing as they were a party for yet another round of book awards. Seen in the crowded rooms of the Player’s Club were S&S’s Geoff Kloske, Little, Brown’s Sarah Burnes, and Random’s Scott Moyers. Agents included Elaine Markson agency’s Elizabeth Sheinkman, Ellen Levine’s Louise Quayle, and Donadio & Olson’s Ira Silverberg. Some young-thinking post-30s in attendance included Penguin’s Kathryn Court, The Nation’s Art Winslow, Vanity Fair’s Wayne Lawson, and everybody’s John Leonard.

International Fiction Bestsellers

Tasmanian Devils
Australia’s Panty Line, France’s Tranquil Madness, and the Sub-Continent’s Al Pacino

As droves of Australians sashay into the pantry this month with the bestselling Marie Claire cooking title Food Fast, the rest of the literate world down under has been taking a peek under the Visible Panty Line with the newest from Australia’s comic superwoman, Gretel Killeen. After belting out a number of hilarious books for children (including the off-beat My Life is a Toilet, which details young love and pimple angst in the life of the 15-year-old Fleur), Killeen besieges the adult world with her latest collection of ornery columns from Australia Magazine. The title essay suggests that we ought to bring back the panty line, because in Killeen’s view wearing a g-string qualifies as sexual harassment. The book has been tickling the nation’s bestseller lists since it was published last November, and foreign rights are still grabbable: see Cathy Gillam at Penguin Books Australia. Continuing the tradition of vivid social commentary in Australia, cartoonist Michael Leunig is back with the long-awaited new collection Goatperson and Other Tales. The book is a compilation of previously uncollected material, and ponders the fate of the “goatperson,” a sort of Australian stand-in for the “everyman.” Or, as Leunig succinctly puts it, “Why do we do it? And, more to the point, who the hell are we, where are we going and where’s it all going to end?” Well, don’t look to us for answers. See Peg McColl at Penguin Books Australia for rights.

Probing parallel questions in Italy this month is Andrea de Carlo’s zen-like novel Here and Now, which details the cosmic awakening of Luca, a fortysomething man who manages a horse-riding center in the countryside north of Rome. Following a nasty fall from a horse one day, he gets up and realizes that he is “perfectly unhappy.” The tale of the ensuing quest for enlightenment involves a crazed woman named Alberta and is considered de Carlo’s “strongest and most commercial book yet,” according to our sources, selling more than 120,000 copies, hitting the Italian list at #3 last month, and peaking at #1. Rights negotiations have been launched in Germany, France, and Spain, with other territories still available, according to the Vicki Satlow Literary Agency in Milan.

Also in Italy, playwright and theater gadfly Marco Paolini has been bringing down the house all over again with the publication of Vajont, a book about Paolini’s fascinating and politically charged play of the same title. The theatrical work chronicles a terrible 1963 catastrophe in the village of Longarone, in which a land mass above the largest double-arc dam ever designed gave way, killing some two thousand people. The new book follows up the smashing home video release on the same subject. See Roberto Gilodi at Giulio Einaudi for rights.

Finally in Italy, a bout of humor rocks the list, beginning with Mondadori’s Paperodissea. The title loosely translates as The Odyssey of Donald Duck, in which the Disney character’s epic yearnings are presumably revealed. Also laughing all the way to the bestseller list, Baldini & Castoldi brings two humor books to the list, both by popular Italian comedians. Friends Ahrarara is written by Fichi d’India, the professional name of two comedians who are whooping it up all over Italy, and the dynamic duo Gino & Michele crawl onto the list with Also Ants . . . Get Mad 2000. The last installment, Also Ants in Their Small World, appeared on the bestseller list in November.

Christian Oster has meanwhile made off with the Prix Medici in France for his eighth novel, My Big Apartment. Known for his light, ironic works that investigate the “tranquil madness” that often runs rampant in our lives, Oster now examines the travails of a somewhat discombobulated narrator who has lost the keys to his apartment — and with them his girlfriend, too. He bumps into the very pregnant Flore at the local pool, and ends up as the child’s adoptive father. Narrated with an imperturbable and parodic wit, this one is Oster’s first big hit, with sales topping 60,000 in France. See Minuit for rights.

Canada is mourning the recent passing of novelist Matt Cohen, whose Elizabeth and After appears on the list this month. Cohen was a reviewer for The Globe and Mail, and was known for his occasionally convoluted but always learned disquisitions. Elizabeth and After won the Governor-General’s Award for Fiction in Ottawa last November, and chronicles the protagonist’s return to his small-town Ontario home, only to dredge up memories of the alcohol and violence that ended his marriage there. Rights have been sold to France (Phebus) with a separate French language deal completed for Canada (Boreal), and Picador USA will publish in August 2000. We’re told other rights are still available from Anne McDermid.

A blast from the recent past has shaken up India, where Pakistani author Bapsi Sidhwa’s Ice Candy Man is back in the limelight due to the release of the film 1947 Earth, which is based on the book. Ice Candy Man was published in 1989 by South Asia Books, and was issued as a US paperback under the title Cracking India by Milkweed. It is an 8-year-old girl’s story of the 1947 partition of India, when British India was split into India and Pakistan. The new film is directed by Deepa Mehta and stars Aamir Khan, allegedly the “Al Pacino of the sub-continent.”

The young jurors of the Nestlé Smarties children’s book prize, awarded by the Youth Libraries Group to books published in the UK, have tapped Louise Rennison’s Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging, from the UK’s Piccadilly Press. The bronze-award-winning book is said to be a “delicious diary” based on the author’s childhood in Leeds. It features among other colorful characters the inimitable Angus, a “half-Scottish wildcat moggy who stalks next door’s poodle.” Rights have been sold to nine countries, among them France (Gallimard), Germany (Bertelsmann), and Italy (Mondadori). The book will be out in the US this spring from HarperCollins. See Piccadilly for rights.

A few final notes: The Surgeon of Crowthorne, which has been on the Australian list for eons, is actually The Professor and the Madman. And we observe that the new Harry Potter is due out July 8, 2000. Though as yet untitled (it’s referred to as Harry Potter 4), it will cost Amazon.co.uk’s buyers £10.99, and was recently #28 on the Amazon bestseller list — a full seven months before publication.

Book View, January 2000

PEOPLE


Other than arch rivals co-venturing (viz. BOMC and the Doubleday Clubs) and sales departments reorganizing (first Random, then Harper, then S&S. . . ), it’s been a quiet few weeks. Well, not exactly quiet: First, word came that B&N’s David Cully was going to Lechters as President and COO, and then S&S announced that Steve Geck was leaving B&N to become VP, Associate Publisher of S&S Children’s Publishing, replacing Stephanie Owens Lurie, who moved to Dutton Children’s in October. . . Michael di Capua has moved his imprint to Hyperion Books for Children, reporting to Lisa Holton, SVP, Disney Publishing Worldwide. The imprint had been at HarperCollins. . . Bob Asahina has left Broadway “by mutual agreement,” and Jerry Howard has taken over those duties, while retaining his Doubleday position. . . Tracy Brown has left Henry Holt. . . Paul Bresnick has left Morrow. . . Karen Mender leaves Bantam-Dell for Pocket Books, where she will be VP, Deputy Publisher. Henning Gutmann, who was most recently an associate publisher at Wiley, moved to Yale U Press as senior editor.

A few defections to the eworld: John Conti, previously VP Marketing at Ballantine, has moved to Steve Brill’s new online business, Contentville.com, where he will oversee the development of its book site. . . Workman’s Anne Kostick has left to become Director of Content Development for Vitaminshoppe.com. . . Kat Berman, previously at Penguin Putnam and then Brides.com, has gone to BlueBarn Interactive, a new media company that specializes in building virtual communities for clients like Martha Stewart Living and Yahoo! . . . Kate Tentler has been promoted to VP and Publisher of S&S Online. She succeeds Lisa Mandel, who wil remain on as a consultant.

As announced elsewhere, Ian Chapman has been named MD of S&S UK, replacing Nick Webb. . . Josalyn Moran has left North South Books and is reachable at (718) 858-5989. MaryChris Bradley has been hired as VP, Director of Sales, and Ellen Friedman, as VP, Art Director. . . Knopf announces that Deborah Garrison, currently at The New Yorker, will become Poetry Editor as well as Senior Editor at Pantheon. . . Perigee BooksJohn Duff announced the promotion of Sheila Curry to the position of Executive Editor
. . . Hillel Black was named Executive Ed at Sourcebooks working out of his NY apt. The company — #2 on PW’s list of fastest growing small publishers — is going more “mainstream” and he will be acquiring in all areas of nonfiction.

DEALS


A quiet month, what with sales conferences, holiday parties, and last minute shopping. But Crown’s Kristen Kiser found time to acquire North American rights to an autobiography by Britney Spears. Frank Weimann agented the deal, which involves an advance against shared profits. The book will be with Britney and her mother, Lynne Spears, and will come out to coincide with her new album in May and tour in June. She will do three book signings for Crown, along with national media appearances.

DULY NOTED


A report filed by the International Intellectual Property Alliance (IIPA) entitled “Copyright Industries in the U.S. Economy: The 1999 Report” reveals that US copyright industries make up 4.3% of the US GDP ($348.4 billion) and contribute more to the national economy and employ more workers than any single manufacturing sector.

PRIZES


It would seem that, even if authors don’t make the cut for Regis Philbin’s Who Wants to be a Millionaire (See the show! Buy Hyperion’s book!), they can still win a prize, as the number of book awards continues to rise. Amazon lists 58 awards-giving organizations. And though Don Imus seems to have taken his well-publicized prize away, others have jumped into the fray. The New Yorker is soliciting nominees for its new awards for “literary excellence,” to be given out on Feb. 14, the 75th anniversary of the magazine’s founding. The Bagehot Council has just announced the Henry Paolucci Awards, to be given out next October to books on domestic or foreign policy, law, and history.

Then of course, there are Microsoft’s Frankfurt ebook awards, which will be presented at next year’s Fair. With one prize worth $100,000, this is an award everyone will watch for, though the site, http://frankfurt-ebook-awards.org doesn’t look like it’s live yet. Only the press release from the Fair is available, though submissions are supposed to start coming in this month.

PARTIES


More anniversaries to celebrate, with Clarkson Potter toasting its 40th year at a party at Random East that attendees said was delightful. Mr. Clarkson Potter himself was present, though he had a hard time getting past the receptionist, who couldn’t grasp the eponymousness of it all. About 150 people showed up, including Chairman-elect of Bertelsmann’s worldwide publishing, Peter Olsen, Random House President Eric Engstrom, Martha Stewart, Nancy Novogrod, past publisher Carol Southern, and current Publisher Lauren Shakely.

Abrams 50th anniversary party was held at The University Club on December 9th, and was attended by 800 guests ranging from Evelyn and Leonard Lauder, Geoffrey Beene and Leroy Nieman to Richard Oldenburg, John Russell and Rosamond Bernier.

Two nights before, the Barefoot Books offices in London and Cotswold converged at their new downtown Manhattan digs for their 1st Annual Children’s Illustrator Exhibition and Millennium Party. Founder Tessa Strickland introduced the New York staff and articulated the mission of the company to highly interested parties.

The fine wine and Blackbird Julips flowed at the elegant soiree for Dan Halpern’s new book of poetry Something Shining (Knopf). In attendance: Jane Friedman, Lynn Nesbit, ICM’s Heather Schroeder, Robert Stone, Francine Prose, Ginger Barber, Academy of American Poets Executive Director Bill Wadsworth, Maria Campbell, and others.

Reader’s Digest held its annual party at Sea Grill, on Dec. 9. Holiday shoppers and crowds protesting Nike’s and Disney’s use of sweatshops didn’t deter shrimp-seeking publishers from descending on the restaurant in hordes. The view of the Rockefeller Center skating rink was magnificent.

IN MEMORIAM


A “celebration of the life of Faith Sale” will take place on Friday, Jan. 7 at 2 pm in The Great Hall at Cooper Union, 7 East 7th Street at Third Ave. A reception will follow.