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 about writing remains exclusive to humans? Is the contraction of the traditional publishing industry inevitable? How are…Continue Reading
Posted in 5 Links •
Tagged aesthetics, AI, AI writing, artificial intelligence, banned books, book bans, book removal, book restrictions, BookTok, ChatGPT, content, empathy, publishing industry, Russia, traditional publishing, war, writing
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. Could an NFT startup meaningfully change the industry, or just reflect current trends? Would the problem of gatekeeping…Continue Reading
Posted in 5 Links •
Tagged crime, crime fiction, europe, Frankfurt Book Fair, gatekeeping, genre fiction, NFTs, peer review, Russia, scholarly publishing, scientific journals, scientific publishing, startups, Ukraine, war
Every month, Publishing Trends runs fiction international bestsellers lists from four territories–France, Germany, Italy, and Spain. This month, our four regular territories are joined by two more: Hungary and India. Those books that have been published in English are listed with their official English-language title. All others are translated as literally as possible from the…Continue Reading
Posted in International •
Tagged 1991, A Couple in Naples, A Summer in Niendorf, Ali Hazelwood, All Is Not Lost, All Those Things I'll Tell You Tomorrow, Among the Dead, Andrea Camilleri, Anna Karády, Annihilation, Bonnie Garmus, Borsa Brown, Camilla Läckberg, Chetan Bhagat, Colleen Hoover, Cristina Cassar Scalia, Delia Owens, Donna Leon, Elena Armas, Elisabet Benavent, Erin Doom, franck thilliez, Frank Herbert, Give Unto Others, Goodbye Little One, Guillaume Musso, Heinz Strunk, Henrik Fexeus, Heretics of Dune, Hervé Le Tellier, House of Sky and Breath, Ilaria Tuti, Ildiko von Kurthy, It Ends With Us, It's Not Summer Without You, Jenny Han, Joel Dicker, Judit Hidasi, Kira Shell, Kristin Hannah, Kristina Ohlsson, lesley pearse, Lessons in Chemistry, Let the Game Begin, Like Wind Sewn to the Earth, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Lucinda Riley, Manel Loureiro, Manufacturer of Tears, Marc Levy, Marco Onnembo, Marco Vichi, María Oruña, Maxim Huerta, Megan Maxwell, Michael Kobr, Michel Houellebecq, Michel Vinaver, Mikel Santiago, Miranda Cowley Heller, Montalbano's Conscience, My Days at the Morisaki Bookshop, NOA, One Arranged Murder, Overboard, Paulo Coelho, Pierre Lemaitre, Rome Is Me, santiago posteguillo, Sarah J. Maas, Satoshi Yagisawa, Skidamarink, Small Shop on the Promenade, Stay Away From Gretchen, Storm Signal, Sudha Murty, Susanne Abel, Sweltering Heat, Taylor Jenkins Reid, The Alaska Sanders Case, The Alchemist, The Anomaly, The Bone Thief, The Carriage of the Saint, The Füred Child, The Girl in Room 105, The Love Hypothesis, The Meter of Pain, The Murders at Fleat House, The Paper Palace, The Path of Fire, The Possibilities, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, The Spanish Love Deception, The Summer I Turned Pretty, The Uppercase Serpent, Three, Tomorrow Can Come, trapped, Ugly Love, Valérie Perrin, Verity, Virginie Grimaldi, Volker Klüpfel, war, What If We Try It…?, Where the Crawdads Sing, Which I Never Said, Winter Garden, Wise and Otherwise: A Salute to Life, You'll Never See Me Again
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 can publishers do to help move LGBTQ stories into the mainstream? How are students organizing against book…Continue Reading
Posted in 5 Links •
Tagged Android, banned books, book bans, ebooks, international publishing, Italy, Kindle, Kindle books, LGBTQ, print books, queer literature, Ukraine, war
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. Who is burning out in the publishing industry? Where is the rare book trade heading? How should an…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. Why read fiction in an era of crisis? How dangerous can library work actually be? What are suburban…Continue Reading
Posted in 5 Links •
Tagged banned books, book bans, book design, fiction, genre fiction, librarians, library work, parents, public libraries, romance, Ukraine, war
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. How will the Ukrainian publishing industry be affected by the Russian invasion? Is it still too soon for…Continue Reading
Posted in 5 Links •
Tagged accessibility, coronavirus, COVID-19, in-person work, independent bookstores, pandemic, print books, remote work, Russia, scholarly publishing, small businesses, Ukraine, war, women scholars, women writers
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. Can James Daunt‘s changes keep a post-lockdown Barnes & Noble afloat? What does America’s relationship with war literature say about…Continue Reading
Posted in 5 Links •
Tagged Barnes & Noble, big-box stores, book festivals, book sales, coronavirus, COVID-19, James Daunt, lockdown, pandemic, quarantine, social distancing, war, war literature