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  • Galley Talk: 'Under the Never Sky'

    At The Velveteen Rabbit Bookshop and Guest House in Fort Atkinson, Wis., bookseller Beth Champion was happy to discover that Veronica Rossi's Under the Never Sky, a January release from Harper, was anything but run-of-the-mill dystopian YA.

  • In Brief: November 10

    This week, P.C. and Kristin Cast celebrate their new House of Night novel; Jarrett J. Krosoczka creates a compilation of 10 years' worth of his sketches and designs; two California bookstores play host to two group author events; and DK gets in the holiday spirit.

  • Paolini's 'Inheritance' Sells Nearly 500K Out of the Gate

    Inheritance, the fourth and final book in Christopher Paolini's bestselling children's series, moved a hefty 489,500 copies in print, digital and audio combined in its first day on sale.

  • Elf Heads to TV for the Holidays

    It may be increasingly common for first-time authors who can’t place their book with a trade house to publish themselves. But it’s pretty rare for a self-published book to sell more than 1.5 million copies—or move to the small screen as an animated film.

  • In Brief: November 3

    This week, HarperCollins partners with Barnes & Noble to donate books to First Book; Monika Schröder visits the Twin Cities; Scholastic hosts a Dear America webcast; Patrick Ness runs the Dublin Marathon; a group of YA and middle-grade authors hold a joint event in Pennsylvania; and a musical launch for Tess Hilmo's new novel.

  • Behind a Bestseller: A Look Into the Inner Workings of the Inheritance Cycle

    When Christopher Paolini began writing the Inheritance Cycle series, he was just 15 years old. A lot has changed in the 13 years since. Next week Inheritance, the fourth and final book in the series, will be released to much fanfare. What does it actually take to get the last book in a huge bestselling series off the ground? Here we take a look.

  • HC Mines Spooky Time of Year to Promote New Carman Novel

    Seven teenagers with crippling secrets and phobias travel to an eerie, mysterious place in hopes of finding a cure in Dark Eden, a novel and multimedia app by Patrick Carman.

  • It's a Wrap, for Wimpy Kid 6

    You can't miss it. What looks like a 46-foot-long, 12-foot-high mural, on West 112th Street in New York City is actually a ginormous sticker announcing publication of the next Diary of a Wimpy Kid installment, Cabin Fever, due on November 15.

  • Houghton Book Spotlights Macy’s Parade Puppeteer

    Kids watching this year's Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, either from the streets of Manhattan or on television, will view the spectacle with a new eye if they've had the chance to read Melissa Sweet's Balloons over Broadway: The True Story of the Puppeteer of Macy’s Parade.

  • Akashic to Publish Real Kids' Book Based on 'Go the F*** to Sleep' Parody

    It may have been a “fluke hit,” but Akashic Books publisher Johnny Temple says Adam Mansbach and Ricardo Cortes’ bestselling kids' book parody, Go the F**k to Sleep, has spent six months on the bestseller lists and has more than 500,000 copies in print.

  • Day-Long Online Event Introduces HarperCollins Novel

    HarperCollins proclaimed Saturday, October 22 "Shatterday" in honor of Shatter Me, a dystopian romance that launches a trilogy by newcomer Tahereh Mafi.

  • In Brief: October 27

    This week, the Magic School Bus visits New York City; Hans Wilhelm receives a lifetime achievement award for literature from the city of Westport, Conn.; HarperCollins wraps up its third Dark Days tour; an auction raises $1,500 for an Adirondack library; and author events with Jeanne Walker Harvey, Gary Rubinstein, and Mark Pett.

  • Q & A with Barry Denenberg

    As he did in Lincoln Shot!, Barry Denenberg meshes fact and fiction to tell the story of the building of the Titanic and its doomed maiden voyage, in Titanic Sinks! (Viking).

  • 'Calvin Can't Fly' Takes Off with Educators

    Though she’s an advertising industry veteran, children’s author Jennifer Berne "prefers to be home writing" rather than touring to promote that writing. It was a surprise, then, to discover that her picture book Calvin Can’t Fly: The Story of a Bookworm Birdie made its way to a Texas county school superintendent, who read it out loud to 6,000 adults.

  • Steve Jobs Bio for Kids Due in February

    Macmillan’s Feiwel and Friends will issue what publisher Jean Feiwel describes as "truly an instant book" on February 14, when it releases Steve Jobs: The Man Who Thought Different by Karen Blumenthal.

  • The Case of 'The Graveyard Book'

    It is only exaggerating a little to say that many authors would kill to see the shiny gold Newbery medallion on the cover of one of their books. Which is why it is surprising that the latest edition of Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book not only forgoes the medal, but the claim as well: his 2009 Newbery win isn't mentioned on the jacket – back or front at all.

  • Spokes-Pumpkin Spookley Speaks Up Against Bullying

    Spookley, the star of The Legend of Spookley the Square Pumpkin by Joe Troiano, illustrated by Susan Banta, is the new official spokes-pumpkin for National Bullying Prevention Month.

  • In Brief: October 20

    This week, Al Roker picks War Horse for his book club; John Green reveals the cover of The Fault in Our Stars and announces a fan contest; and author events with Becca Fitzpatrick, Markus Zusak, Matthew Van Fleet, and Sophie Flack.

  • Rick Riordan Wraps Up Whirlwind 'Olympian Week Tour'

    October has been a busy month for Rick Riordan. After greeting fans at two well-attended outdoor pre-publication events — one in New York City and one in Los Angeles — the author celebrated the release of The Son of Neptune, the second installment of his Heroes of Olympus series, with a seven-day tour to seven cities.

  • Chronicle Biography Offers New Take on Dan Eldon's Life

    Artist, photographer, and humanitarian activist Dan Eldon was a photojournalist covering the civil war and famine in Somalia in 1993 when he was killed by a mob of protesters—at the age of 22. In 1997, Chronicle published The Journey Is the Destination: The Journals of Dan Eldon, a book resonated deeply with Jennifer New, whose Dan Eldon: Safari as a Way of Life for teens is due from Chronicle this month.

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