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  • 'Mockingjay' Sells More Than 450,000 Copies in First Week

    Mockingjay, the final book in The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins, sold more than 450,000 copies (hardcover and e-book) in its first week on sale in the U.S., its publisher, Scholastic, announced Thursday. The book debuted at number one on both the USA Today and New York Times bestseller lists. Scholastic has gone back to press for an additional 400,000 copies, bringing the total number of copies in print for Mockingjay in the U.S. to 1.6 million since its August 24 publication.

  • First Second Graphic Novel with Banned Book Theme Appears First on Web, Later in Stores

    A book-loving boy from the small Oklahoma town of Americus grapples with the travails of high school and takes a stand when it looks as though his favorite fantasy series, starring a young sorceress who hunts monsters and tyrants, might be banned from the local library. That's the storyline of Americus, written by MK Reed and illustrated by Jonathan Hill, due from Roaring Brook's First Second Books in fall 2011. This graphic novel is making an earlier, serialized appearance on the Web, where new installments have been posted three times a week since early June.

  • Digging for Dino Bones: An Author's Summer Research

    Earlier this summer, author Michele Torrey got down and dirty (literally) in preparation for her new book, The Case of the Terrible T. Rex, joining the paleontologists of the PaleoWorld Foundation in the Hell Creek Basin of the Montana Badlands for a week-long dinosaur dig.

  • In Brief: September 2

    In brief this week: schools reading books by Suzanne Selfors and Suzanne Morgan Williams; a celebration of John Claude Bemis's new book; and a tour for Kelly Pulley's new picture book.

  • It's a Wonderful (Sales) Life: The Staying Power of 'The Book Thief'

    The Book Thief, a novel by Australian author Markus Zusak set in Germany during WWII, was published by Knopf Books for Young Readers to much critical acclaim in March 2006. By early 2007 it had appeared on many Best Books lists and won a Printz Honor. But what has been truly unusual about The Book Thief is that its sales—to adults as well as young readers—have risen steadily since publication. The book is a regular fixture on bestseller lists more than four years later, and it has sold more than 1.5 million copies across print, audio, and e-book formats in North America.

    It's a success story that not even Zusak imagined. "I honestly thought it would be my least successful book," he recently told the Palm Beach Post. "I thought, 'A book set in Nazi Germany, narrated by Death, and it's 580 pages long. Who wants to read that?' "

  • Cooking the Books with Lidia Bastianich

    Lidia Bastianch may be known for her Italian cookbooks and restaurants, but she has another role that she deems just as (if not even more) important: grandmother. Bastianich's five grandchildren will get a pretty cool gift this Christmas, when Running Press Kids publishes Nonna Tell Me a Story: Lidia's Christmas Kitchen.

  • 'Mockingjay' Lands in Bookstores

    From a five-ft. mockingjay and a 17-ft. cornucopia with a four-ft. opening filled with books at Powell’s Books in Portland to seven mockingjays painted on the exterior of The King's English in Salt Lake City, booksellers found unique ways to celebrate Monday's midnight release of the final book in Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games trilogy, Mockingjay.

  • A 'Pretty Little Liars' Contest in Maine

    Earlier this month, Kenny Brechner was typing titles of the Pretty Little Liars series into the computer at his store, DDG Booksellers in Farmington, Maine. He found himself using those PLL titles conversationally, to answer questions from his staff: "Yes, call Jim Bubier about his book, it would be wicked not to notify him of the delay." Then he had an idea, and the Pretty Little Liars Word Game Contest was born.

  • In Brief: August 26

    In brief this week: 'The Contemps' launches to promote realistic fiction, Daisy Whitney's pre-pub tour, and author Janet Fox in Yellowstone National Park.

  • Countdown to Mockingjay

    From a five-ft. mockingjay and a 17-ft. cornucopia that will be filled with crates, survival gear, and books at Powell’s Books in Portland to seven mockingjays painted on the exterior of The King’s English in Salt Lake City, booksellers have been looking for unique ways to celebrate tonight’s midnight release of the final book in Suzanne Collins’s The Hunger Games trilogy, Mockingjay (Scholastic has a 1.2 million copy first printing).

  • 'Kandide and the Secret of the Mists': From Self-Published Novel to Scholastic Book Fairs

    Perhaps the magic that Diana Zimmerman has performed on stage for decades had a subtle influence on her self-published fantasy novel, Kandide and the Secret of the Mists. It has sold 12,000 copies since its publication in 2008, and has recently been signed by Scholastic for a 40,000-copy print run as a featured selection in September with Scholastic Book Club and Book Fairs.

  • Two Hopeful Perspectives on Haiti

    On January 12, news of Haiti's disastrous earthquake shocked the world. International media and aid workers rushed to the country, as people across the globe witnessed the devastation through television screens and newspapers. Now, several months later, the crisis is being portrayed through a new medium -- children's books.

  • In Brief: August 19

    In brief this week: 'I Am Number Four' becomes a bestseller; a children's book in outer space; and Hallie Durand's new 'Dessert' book.

  • 'Brown Bear' and 'Polar Bear' Released in New Format

    First released in 1966 by the school division of Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Bill Martin Jr.'s Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?, illustrated by Eric Carle, was written and published as a beginning reader. After receiving many letters from teachers requesting a trade edition of the book, the publisher released a picture-book version several years later. Sales of that edition soared, and subsequent picture books in the series followed. Now Holt is taking the original book back to its roots, and last month released a My First Reader edition of that title and of Polar Bear.

  • Eoin Colfer, in Artemis Rocks!

    Irish author Eoin Colfer is headed stateside next month for a high-octane Artemis Rocks! tour in support of Artemis Fowl 7: The Atlantis Complex, the penultimate book in his bestselling fantasy series about the titular boy criminal genius. At each stop, Colfer will take the stage for a talk show-style appearance, during which he’ll perform a monologue and interview none other than Artemis Fowl himself.

  • Lerner Lands Unconventional Book from Three YA Authors

    YA readers will have an opportunity to learn how authors conceptualize and write fiction, from start to finish, when Lerner Publishing Group releases (in spring 2012) a collection of YA stories written by Maggie Stiefvater (Shiver and Linger), together with her colleagues Brenna Yovanoff (The Replacement, Razorbill, fall 2010) and Tessa Gratton (Blood Magic, Random House, summer 2011).

  • In Brief: August 12

    In brief this week: the Scholastic Store shows its allegiance to Captain Underpants, Olivia goes to tea, cocktails for the Flappers, Romero Britto at Kidzapalooza, and the fifth season of Curious George on PBS Kids.

  • RH Children's Does First Enhanced E-book

    Knopf Books for Young Readers is publishing its first enhanced e-book, a tie-in edition of Flipped by Wendelin Van Draanen. The publication marks the first foray any Random House imprint has made in publishing an enhanced e-book for the children's market. The e-book went on sale August 10 for $14.99, leading up to the August 27 release of the film, which is directed by Rob Reiner.

  • Wimpy Kid Truck Tour Offers a Sweet Deal

    Having just announced a five-million-copy first printing for The Ugly Truth, the fifth book in Jeff Kinney’s bestselling Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, Amulet Books is preparing to take the Wimpy Kid show on the road with its second annual ice cream truck tour. Last year, one ice cream truck visited 40 U.S. libraries while promoting the fourth book, Dog Days. This time, two identical trucks will travel different routes, visiting bookstores across the country and in Canada.

  • Galley Talk: What Happened on Fox Street

    Marika McCoola, children’s department manager at the Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley, Mass., spotlights a middle-grade novel she looks forward to selling.

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