Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know. What makes romance such a big hit with Gen Z? Could jewelry reinvigorate the art book form? How…Continue Reading
Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know. Are novels making us nicer? How do viral articles become books? What does it mean for readers if a series…Continue Reading
Every week, we recommend 5 publishing articles/blog posts that supplement the major news for the week. Whether data or industry commentary, we hope these 5 links will be a simple way to keep you in the know. Do big literary prizes like the Pulitzer really increase book sales? Does trust (or lack thereof) between author and editor…Continue Reading
They’re back! Year after year, the Columbia Publishing Course (formerly the Radcliffe Publishing Course) introduces a preternaturally cosmopolitan and accomplished cast of students to the world of book and magazine publishing. Just as dutifully, every year Publishing Trends collects the most surprising and impressive tidbits from the students’ biographies and constructs a single (slightly more)…Continue Reading
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Tagged Andrea Chambers, Cannes Film Festival, Columbia Publishing Course, Disney World, Harry Potter, NYU Summer Publishing Institute, Pulitzer Prize, Scrabble, Scribner, Stephanie Chan, zines
The Cultural Agency Gets Real on Books Chances are the National Endowment for the Arts ranks somewhere down there between, say, Sears and Pets.com on the candidate list for publishers’ future business partners. But the organization that helps fund National Poetry Month and gave Michael Cunningham a fellowship more than a decade ago has re-branded…Continue Reading
As PowerfulMedia’s Inside.com launches in the next week(s), look for Publishing Trends columns, which will run periodically during the month. PEOPLE Maureen Golden is leaving Workman Publishing at the end of May, after less than nine months in the company. Golden was previously at B&N. . . Also leaving in late May is Paula Duffy,…Continue Reading
Posted in Book View •
Tagged A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, A. M. Homes, Alice Walker, Amazon, Angus Killick, Audrey Cusson, Avon, B&N, Bantam Doubleday Dell, BBC, Becky Michaels, Ben Franklin in Paris, Better Than Broccoli Books, Bloomsbury, Blue Angel, Boomer, CardScan 500, Carl Gish, Carter Beats the Devil, Castaway 2000, Celia McGee, Chip Kyd, Christopher Sweet, Dave Smith, David Cully, David Hisbrook, Denise Cronin, Denise Shannon, DK Ink, Dorchester Publishing, Doreen Carvajal, Doubleday, DSMaxx, Ebury Press, Elle, Exley, Fannie Flagg, Frances Coady, Francine Prose, George Witte, Granddreams, HarperCollins, Holt, Honor Moore, Hyperion, Industry Standard, Inside.com, Jack Hoeft, Jeff Bezos, Jornada, Julia Phillips, Julian Alexander, Justin Schwartz, Knopf, Lechters, Leigh Haber, Libby Johnson McKee, Libby McGuire, Lisa Rasmussen, Little Brown, Louise Burke, Lucas Alexander Whitley, Lyn Blake, Mark McCrum, Marty Asher, Mary Engstrom Morouse, Matt Drudge, Maureen Golden, MedHelp.com, Michael Anderson, Michael Cader, Michael Fragnito, Modern Maturity, NAL, Netscape, Pat Tower, Patricia Bosworth, Paul Golob, Paul Sheinberg, Paula Duffy, Perksforyou.com, Picador UK, PocketPC, Publisherslunch.com, Pulitzer Prize, PW Daily, Random House, Robert Frederick, Robert Jones, Robert Polito, Robin Straus, S&S, Sandee Yuen, Sara Nelson, Sarah Bershtel, Sonschein, Stacy Schiff, Steve Zeitchik, Steven Sussman, Susan Golomb, The Daily News, The Drudge Report, The Free Press, The New York Times, The Rights Report, Themestream, Tony Chirico, Tormont, University of Chicago Press, Vanity Fair, Vera, Vindigo, Wayne Lawson, Wendy Weil, Xlibris