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  • BEA 2012: Little, Brown—175 Years Young

    The publisher of Louisa May Alcott, Benjamin Franklin, J.D. Salinger, and David Foster Wallace, to name just a few, is going all out, especially this month, the official anniversary month, to celebrate its 175th. Look up and you’ll see an anniversary banner marking the Hachette Book Group booth (3627), of which it is a division. Inside there are 175th anniversary tote bags, tattoos, and booklets on Little, Brown’s history, dating back to when it was incorporated by Charles Little and James Brown in Boston in June 1837. The logo has been quietly added to the spines of all Little, Brown 2012 releases since January. And it will appear on the fall list—including Tom Wolfe’s first novel with the press, Back to Blood; Scott Spencer’s pseudonymous horror novel, Breed; Michael Koryta’s thriller The Prophet; and the final volume of William Manchester’s Winston Churchill biography, The Last Lion, completed by Paul Reid.

  • BEA 2012: Research, Recipes at RD

    Two editors-in-chief from the Reader’s Digest family are stepping up with new books featuring the latest in diet research and best-loved recipes from America’s home cooks.

  • BEA 2012: A Successful Hybrid for Books

    Since its founding by veteran Pantheon editor André Schiffrin in 1992, the New Press has followed a hybrid model as an independent trade publisher and a not-for-profit company that leverages books for social change. Among its bestsellers are Lisa Delpit’s collection of essays, Other People’s Children: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom (1995), and James W. Loewen’s Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong (2008). Other mainstays of the company include books by Studs Turkel and Henning Mankell.

  • BEA 2012: In Celebration of Bookstores

    “Baptized in ink and swaddled in a dust jacket, I’m one of those cats for whom a good bookshop serves as a temple, a cathedral, a holy shrine, a sacred grove, a gypsy caravan, a Tijuana nightclub, an amusement park, a mental health spa, a safari camp, a space station, and an indoor field of dreams.”

  • BEA 2012: A Monster Success

    Tireless self-promoter Larry Correia has turned his eclectic career path as financial defense contractor, arms dealer, firearms instructor, and freelance writer for gun magazines into a successful turn as the creator of the Monster Hunter series of urban fantasy books.

  • BEA 2012: Official BEA On-Site Addendum

  • BEA 2012: Pretty Crafty

    BEA attendees can’t miss the oversize shocking-pink Sock Monster at the C&T Publishing booth (3758), thanks to the handiwork of Stash Books author Brenna Maloney, who will be signing copies of Sock It to Me: 16 Projects Sewn from Socks—Creepy, Crazy & Strangely Appealing (Aug.), the third release in her Socks series (Socks Appeal and Sockology), on Wednesday, 2–3 p.m. An oversize grasshopper—also completely made of socks—accompanies Sock Monster, “for people that want a more insect feel to their horror,” laughingly explains Amy Marson, publisher for C&T. Sock Monster is here all three days of Book Expo, “unless he decides to go crazy and run off,” adds Marson.

  • BEA 2012: NYRB to Launch E-book Line

    The venerable magazine New York Review of Books (booth 4044), which already has two book imprints, NYRB Classics and NYRB Children’s Collection, will announce at BEA the launch of NYRB Lit, a new, select e-book series to be edited by Sue Halpern, a longtime contributor the New York Review.

  • BEA 2012: More Books for Amazon

    Amazon Publishing has significantly increased the size of its publishing program, acquiring publication rights from Avalon Books to more than 3,000 backlist titles. Founded in 1950 by Thomas Bouregy, Avalon Books has specialized in producing books in such major genres as mystery, romance, and westerns. The titles, none of which has been released in digital formats, will be published by Amazon in e-book and print editions under its Amazon Publishing, Montlake Romance, and Thomas & Mercer imprints.

  • BEA 2012: The Russians Are Coming

    Russia, the guest of honor at BEA this year, opened with a panel on its book and publishing market, introduced by Vladimir Grigoriev, the deputy director of the Russian Federal Agency of Press and Mass Communication. Grigoriev was joined by colleagues Oleg Novikov, CEO and founder of EKSMO, Russia’s largest trade publishing house, and Yuri Deikalo, CEO of AST/Astrel, one of the largest publishing groups in Russia.

  • BEA 2012: IDPF 2012: Experimenting Is Key

    The imperative to develop a connection to readers and communities of “passion,” the institutionalization of self-publishing, and the transformation of book publishing from a “product lottery” to an industry delivering “services” that create new revenue were just a few of the themes bouncing around the morning session of IDPF’s Digital Book 2012, held at the Javits Center in conjunction with BookExpo America.

  • BEA 2012: Russo Takes On Amazon At ‘Why Indies Matter’

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author Richard Russo defended independent bookstores at BookExpo America, saying "the Amazon threat is real."

  • BEA 2012: Audio All Day

    With the growth of online sales and digital formats, the way consumers discover and create buzz about new audiobooks is changing, said Goodreads CEO Otis Chandler in his keynote address that kicked off a busy Audio Publishers Association Conference at the Javits Center on Monday.

  • BEA 2012: Disease, the Israeli Army and Supernatural Wolves at Editor's Buzz Panel

    In a packed room at the Javits Center Monday afternoon, booksellers, editors, publicists and journalists got together for what BookExpo America show director Steve Rosato rightly called the one of the fair's "marquee events."

  • PW BEA Show Daily June 5, 2012

    Read the complete June 5, 2012 BEA Show Daily in this Scribd reader to keep up with all the goings-on at Book Expo America!

  • BEA 2012: Russo Makes the Case for Indies

    The American Booksellers Association couldn’t have chosen a better spokesperson to launch its new campaign on Why Indies Matter—or to get more than 250 booksellers to the Javits Center before lunch—than Pulitzer Prize–winning author Richard Russo.

  • BEA 2012: Stackpole Spotlights Three Authors

    With more than 80 years of publishing books about outdoor sports, nature, crafts, and military history, Stackpole Books could feature any number of its authors at BEA, so as publisher Judith Schnell says, they easily chose three of their bestselling authors—Ralph Peters, Lefty Kreh, and Pete Dunne—to spotlight. To celebrate them, Stackpole will be raffling off signed copies of their forthcoming books daily in booth 3452.

  • BEA 2012: A Secret Society for Booksellers

    Robin Sloan, media inventor (more about that later) and author of Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Oct.), has established a secret society of booksellers—the Unbroken Spine—and will be recruiting new members throughout BEA. Smartphone users can join up by going to www.robinsloan.com/bea, where, after answering a series of questions, you’ll be rewarded with a password. Stop by the Macmillan booth (3358), give them your password, and you’ll receive an official Unbroken Spine badge and be entered in the grand-prize drawing for a $200 dinner-for-two gift certificate. And three lucky booksellers will win a free social media consultation for their bookstores from Sloan. Left home without a smartphone? Simply come by the Macmillan booth, and they’ll set you up.

  • BEA 2012: ‘SNAP’ It Up at Qbend

    Customizing course books and course packs is getting easier, cheaper, and more secure, to the delight of course creators and publishers both. Now you can pick several chapters, or individual sections from various chapters, assemble them quickly into various formats, including print, and voila!—course-specific custom textbooks made easy and painless. And thanks to Dubuque, Iowa–based Qbend’s new drag-and-drop interface, appropriately named SNAP (Search, Navigate, Assemble, Publish), creators can chose from a list of text and cover designs to lend the customized book a consistent feel. With secure access, built-in templates, and dashboard to monitor the customization, SNAP enables publishers to move to a digital-first workflow as well as to repurpose existing content for multichannel delivery.

  • BEA 2012: MPS Ltd.’s Unlimited Services

    Visitors to MPS Limited’s (booth DZ2412) are going to see something familiar yet totally new this year. For chairman Nishith Arora, integrating many of the company’s tools and products that were built in the past and expanding them to create a digital-first workflow makes perfect sense. “This publishing solution can be used to paginate, publish, and distribute books for on-demand printing, online retailing, the Web, and mobile devices. As cost and time-to-market become ever more critical, we expect to see a part of the publishing world migrating to this platform soon,” says Arora, whose team is leveraging on MPS’s established experience in book production, digital services, and publishing to develop the end-to-end digital-first workflow for content production and distribution. He counts Cengage Learning, Elsevier, Wiley, McGraw-Hill and Wolters Kluwer among his major clients.

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