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BEA 2014: Good News, Bad News at Town Hall
What American Booksellers Association CEO Oren Teicher called Amazon's "bullying assault of a major publisher" was a key concern among indie booksellers at both Thursday afternoon's ABA Town Hall and Annual Meeting.
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BEA 2014: Shh! The Library's Buzzing
Representatives from seven publishers were greeted by a room packed with librarians eager to hear the big books of 2014. The session was the first of two installments of AAP's "Annual Librarian Book Buzz" session.
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BEA 2014: The Library as Retailer
Six library e-book vendors, one stage, 50 minutes: as you might expect, not exactly the forum to forge a new understanding between libraries and publishers
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BEA 2014: Walter Isaacson on Innovation
In his new book, The Innovators: How a Group of Inventors, Hacker, Geniuses and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution (S&S, Oct. 7), Walter Isaacson credits not one historical figure but teams of collaborative people that, over time, "made Steve Jobs possible."
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BEA 2014: Show Daily At BookCon
Read the entire PW Show Daliy @ BookCon, BEA's consumer show, here.
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BEA 2014: Dick Cavett Reveals His Brief Encounters
An Emmy Award winner and talk show host pioneer, Dick Cavett is back with his fourth book, Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic Moments, and Assorted Hijinks (Random House, Nov.).
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BEA 2014: Michael Pitre: In His Own Words
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BEA 2014: Philip Gulley: New Series, New Publisher
Philip Gulley writes about what he knows: a smalltown Quaker pastor who serves and loves imperfectly, but who always points others to God.
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BEA 2014: Amanda Palmer: No Shame in Asking
It was a circuitous and unexpected road that led Amanda Palmer to become an author. Best known as one-half of the punk duo the Dresden Dolls, Palmer had already expanded her creative world to include songwriter, playwright, and blogger.
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BEA 2014: Bruce Degen: Lessons on Friendship
For more than 35 years, Bruce Degen has successfully explored an impressive range of children’s book turf.
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BEA 2014: Scott Blackwood: Inspired by a Multiple Murder
Scott Blackwood’s evocative novel See How Small (Little, Brown, Dec.), in which three teenage girls are murdered in a small Texas town, achieves such a multilayered narrative effect that even its author has a tough time pigeonholing the book’s genre.
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BEA 2014: The Kids Take Over Uptown Stage
For the second year in a row, children’s authors will grab the spotlight for an entire day at BEA.
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BEA 2014: Acclaim to Pannell Winners
At today’s Children’s Book and Author Breakfast, two booksellers will be on hand to accept this year’s WNBA Pannell Award, given annually since 1983 by the Woman’s National Book Association to two bookstores—one general and one children’s specialty store—that enhance their communities by bringing exceptional creativity to foster a love of reading in their young patrons.
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BEA 2014: Tapping the YA Market Digitally
One of the basic tenets of marketing is to go to where your customers are.
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BEA 2014: Browsing the Children’s Booths, Chapter 2
For those navigating the booths of children’s publishers today, here’s a preview of new books on display, author signings, and giveaways to pick up.
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BEA 2014: A Breakfast of Champions
Humor is very likely on the menu at today’s Children’s Book and Author Breakfast, which is highlighted by three lively veteran children’s book authors and one debut author whose specialty is comedy.
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BEA 2014: Malcolm Brooks: Renaissance Cowboy
How does a Montana horseman and carpenter by trade write a first novel that is getting the kind of advance press garnered by Cold Mountain?
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BEA 2014: Greer Macallister: Truth or Illusion?
While most people watching a magician sawing a woman in half during a performance typically wonder how it’s done, Greer Macallister’s curiosity extended far beyond such a prosaic concern: instead, she wondered why she had never seen or even read of a female magician sawing a man in half.
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BEA 2014: Morgan Rielly: Teenager on a History Mission
Morgan Rielly was only 14 years old when he interviewed his first WWII veteran.
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Andrea Davis Pinkney: Shedding Light on a Dark Subject
The gift of a simple red pencil gives a girl in war-ravaged Sudan the opportunity to express her feelings and overcome her grief.