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  • BEA 2012: Neil Young and Patti Smith Perform for Booksellers

    If the Javits Center felt more like a rock concert venue than a convention center Wednesday morning, it was for good reason: musicians Neil Young and Patti Smith were in the building.

  • PW BEA Show Daily June 6, 2012

    Keep up with all the goings-on at BookExpo America with the complete text of the PW BEA Show Daily for June 6, 2012.

  • BEA 2012: Diversity Rules at YA Editors’ Buzz Panel

    When a speaker at Tuesday morning’s YA Editors’ Buzz Panel rhetorically posed the question "Does the world need another YA dystopia trilogy?" the answer seemed clear: Yes, as long as it's a good story.

  • BEA 2012: Tina Fey's 'Bossypants' Wins Big at 17th Annual Audie Awards

    Tina Fey's Bossypants was named Audiobook of the Year and Allan Wolf's The Watch that Ends the Night: Voices from the Titanic won the award for Distinguished Achievement in Production last night at the 17th annual Audies Gala in New York City.

  • BEA 2012: More Self-Publishing

    The number of traditionally published print books rose 6% in 2011, to 347,178, according to preliminary figures released Tuesday morning by Bowker.

  • BEA 2012: One Archive of the Life of Solzhenitsyn

    “Some of the unpublished manuscripts here had been labeled by Alexandr Solzhenitsyn as ‘unfit to publish—ever,’ ” said Natalia Solzhenitsyn, widow of the great Russian writer known for The Gulag Archipel­ago, The First Circle, and One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.

  • BEA 2012: On Disease, the Israeli Army, and Supernatural Wolves at the Buzz Panel

    In a packed room at the Javits Center Monday afternoon during Book Expo America, booksellers, editors, publicists, and journalists got together for what BEA show director Steve Rosato rightly called one of the fair’s “marquee events.” It’s the annual Editor’s Buzz Panel, which invites a handful of editors to sing the praises of promising books.  

  • BEA 2012: First Day Mood: Strong Traffic, Vexing Questions

    An overwhelmingly positive mood, with repeated refrains of strong traffic, was mixed with questions about the forthcoming Consumer Day, during the Tuesday kickoff of BookExpo America.

  • BEA 2012: Polish Presence At BEA

    Publishers from all over the world come to BEA, and this year the Polish Cultural Institute New York and the Polish Book Institute are here to market books in English by Polish authors, promote the trans-lation of Polish works, and facilitate trade in international rights between Polish and U.S. publishers.

  • BEA 2012: Hachette Nashville Launches Jericho

    Publisher Wendy Grisham says her new imprint, Jericho Books (booth 3628), which officially launches today, will be reaching out to the “disassociated, disestablished, and disgruntled” within the Christian community. She explains: “The disassociated are the ones that walked away from their religion. They may have lost their faith, might be taking a break, or just fed up with the establishment. The disestablished are secular. They have an opinion but don’t have a dog in the fight on religious issues. They might call themselves spiritual but not religious. The disgruntled are those who have stayed in the church but want to push the boundaries. This group also includes many who were disassociated but have returned.”

  • BEA 2012: Rich Dad Hits the Airwaves

    Robert Kiyosaki might not be the easiest name to remember, but the author does not seem to mind, because ever since his first book, Rich Dad Poor Dad, hit the bestseller lists, he simply goes by Rich Dad. And in May, Kiyosaki joined SiriusXM satellite radio channel 168 for a weekly Saturday afternoon talk show, where he shares his often contrarian views on money management.

  • BEA 2012: No Sweets for the Sweet

    An unusual family trait led Kelly Cooper, author of Cookies for Grown-Ups (Red Rock Press, Nov.), to develop recipes for savory cookies in the 1990s, when her sons disliked sweets as they were growing up.

  • BEA 2012: A Dumped, Determined Duo

    When it comes to getting over a breakup and becoming authors, Maryjane Fahey and Caryn Beth Rosenthal don’t take half measures. Their story of how Dumped: A Grown-Up Guide to Gettin’ Off Your Ass and Over Your Ex in Record Time (Sellers Publishing, Sept.) came to be published is almost as lively as the book itself.

  • BEA 2012: Tasty Pops

    Angie Dudley, aka Bakerella, whose book Cake Pops: Tips, Tricks, and Recipes for More Than 40 Irresistible Mini Treats (Chronicle Books) spent multiple weeks on the New York Times bestseller list in 2010 and sold nearly one million copies, will be promoting her follow-up book, Cake Pops Holidays (Nov.) today with an appearance at the Chronicle booth (4022), 10 a.m.–noon; she will also be signing copies of her first book.

  • BEA 2012: Quirk Takes On New Challenges

    Quirk Books founder Dave Borgenicht, who is also the creator and coauthor of The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook and father of that volume’s many lively offspring, says his company’s mission hasn’t changed in the 10 years it’s been publishing. If anything, the mission has become more finely articulated over time. “We want to do cool entertainment to amuse and inform the world as much as we can,” Borgenicht says. “We want to succeed not just as a publisher but as a publishing and entertainment company.”

  • BEA 2012: Official BEA On-Site Addendum

  • BEA 2012: To the Rescue

    Shortly after writer Kim Kavin rescued an adorable puppy named Blue, his quirky behavior and the puzzling scabs on his body inspired her to check out his background. The New Jersey resident learned he had been days, perhaps hours away from being put down in a county animal shelter in North Carolina where 90% of the dogs are killed in a gas chamber. Kavin was flabbergasted. “There was something going on behind the beautiful pictures of these wonderful dogs on the Petfinder.com Web site. What I learned eventually became my book proposal.”

  • BEA 2012: Murder and Mayhem At Prometheus

    The creation of Seventh Street Books, the new mystery/thriller imprint from Prometheus Books (booth 2934), was announced last fall, but things are just now getting rolling, with the lead titles chosen and the first catalogue scheduled to appear soon after BEA. The imprint’s logo, a raven, is a reference to Edgar Allan Poe’s chilling poem.

  • BEA 2012: Make Way for Karen Kingsbury

    With Karen Kingsbury’s new book, The Bridge (Oct. 23), Howard Books hopes the Christian superstar will make advances in the ABA market.

  • BEA 2012: America Reads Spanish

    Earlier this year, America Reads Spanish, a program spearheaded by the Spanish Institute for Foreign Trade and the Spanish Association of Publishers Guilds, launched its first panel for translation rights in the U.S., showcasing the latest titles coming from Spain with rights available for translation. For this first edition of the program, 195 titles of all genres were submitted by approximately 95 publishers. The list has since been narrowed to 12 titles picked by the translation panel’s group of experts. The selections were made based on each panel member’s knowledge of the market as well as by specially commissioned reader’s reports.

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