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  • Hot Fall Graphic Novels For Libraries at BEA 2011

    The BEA panel, "Hot Fall Graphic Novels for Libraries," discussed titles that give educators options for all kinds of students, from toddlers to advanced college and even graduate students, yet these titles can also stand on their own literary and artistic merit.

  • A Better Vibe at BEA 2011

    With the effect of the recession steadily, if slowly, fading, and the industry getting a better grasp on the role e-books will play in its future, the 2011 edition of BookExpo America was the most vibrant since the economy collapsed in late 2007. BEA event director Steve Rosato noted that with the book business and the economy improving, there were less than 10 cancellations for booth space compared to more than 20 last year. "It was nothing at all like the past few years, particularly 2008 when it seemed like one booth in, one booth out," Rosato said.

  • BEA 2011: A BEA First: A Middle-Grade Buzz Panel

    There’s a kind of inferiority complex at work in the middle-grade market, which is sometimes perceived as receiving less attention and respect than its YA older sibling (which, in turn, has its own self-esteem issues when compared to the adult publishing world). But while the first-ever Middle-Grade Editors Buzz Panel at BEA wasn’t an SRO affair as were the YA and adult panels, it was still quite full.

  • BEA 2011: YA Buzz Panel Rocks Javits

    As five editors talked up their favorite YA fall releases to a packed room of about 200 people during the YA Editor's Buzz panel at BEA, a few things became clear: these books are what happens when editors want titles that reflect elements of Twilight, The Hunger Games, and Harry Potter.

  • The Rock Bottom Children's Remainders?

    Twenty years ago, a group of musically inclined authorsplayed their first benefit concert at an ABA conference in Anaheim. This year, on Bob Dylan’s 70th birthday, two of the Remainders – Barry and his writing partner Ridley Pearson – collaborated with Rick Riordan, Eoin Colfer, and Mo Willems to write and “perform” a protest song for guests at Disney’s BEA dinner.

  • BEA 2011: A Bountiful Fall for Children's Books

    There's no shortage of big-name children’s authors on the floor this year, and plenty of children’s book news. The book with the biggest “wow” factor may be The Chronicles of Harris Burdick, a collection of short stories based on Chris Van Allburg’s illustrations for his 1984 picture book, The Mysteries of Harris Burdick.

  • BEA 2011: Award-Winning Breakfast

    Monday may have marked the beginning of Becky Anderson’s term as president of the American Booksellers Association, but Thursday’s BookExpo America breakfast gave her the twin honor of receiving the award as the 19th annual winner of the Publishers Weekly Bookstore of the Year. “We’ve always said that books are better on drugs,” said Anderson, referring to the fact that the six-generation Anderson’s Book Shop in Naperville, Ill., grew out of the family’s pharmacy. “Our store is really about family. . . . As family, I know we all will survive and thrive.” PW Rep of the Year John Eklund, a long-time bookseller turned sales rep for Harvard, MIT, and Yale University Presses, showed his appreciation to booksellers for his award. “On behalf of all the nerdy, different kids, thank you for being there and staying there,” he said.

  • BEA 2011: The End

    Though some (who would prefer to remain nameless) described themselves as “exhausted,” “scrambled,” and/or “zapped,” the mood on the final day of BEA was overwhelmingly chipper. Though crowds were noticeably thinner, a 9:00 a.m. presentation by Google drew a healthy crowd of about 80, and the Insight Stages were well-attended for sessions on Russian authors, and middle-grade fantasy books. If you were among the audience for celebrity authors Jane Lynch and Jane Fonda, you wouldn’t have guessed the crowd was diminished: both were jam-packed, SRO affairs with spectators lined up two and three deep around the rim of the stage area.

  • BEA 2011: Print Not Dead Yet

    Despite the way e-books dominate the publishing conversation, it was obvious from the packed BEA show floor that the printed book is still at the center of the publishing industry. Taking a line from Mark Twain, Powell’s Books head buyer Gerry Donaghy led a panel discussion on the notion that the printed book is dead.

  • BEA 2011: 'Hardcover Fiction Is Back'

    If there's one person you want to ask about books, it's Paul Yamazaki, head buyer at City Lights bookstore in San Francisco. He’s talking about Jeff Eugenides's new novel, The Marriage Plot, but he is also touting what he called “a sleeper” on FSG’s list, The Barbarian Nurseries by L.A. Times columnist Hector Tobar. Yamazaki, always the champion of good books, brimmed with enthusiasm about the revived state of the book business. "There’s just so much good stuff out there!" he says. "Hardcover fiction is back."

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: There's an App for That

    If you're wondering why the air seems thicker than usual, the windows in Javits's lobby area are all fogged up, and booksellers walking out of the 2700 aisle are out of breath, it might be because of what's been going on at Medallion Press's booth (2738). The press, best known for its romance fiction list, is demonstrating on an iPad set up in the booth its hot, newly launched interactive e-book app. And the editors have chosen a doozy of a read for their first interactive e-book app: Passion's Blood by Cherif Fortin and Lynn Sanders, originally released in 1998 in an illustrated print format by Genesis Press. An updated print version, with sexy new plot elements and new illustrations, was released by Medallion in 2008 as part of its Illustrated Masterpiece series. Even though the title was well-received in print format, Medallion has long considered that Passion's Blood is a tale that can't be simply read, but must be felt and savored.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: The Greening of Inner Traditions

    The Vermont-based Inner Traditions, Bear & Company, which has published bestselling books in the mind/body/spirit categories for 35 years, is highlighting its latest green initiatives at BEA. Founder and owner Ehud Sperling invites everyone to come on down to Costa Rica to see how the publisher is helping to reforest by planting trees there—or just drop by booth 4328 to hear about it.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: Anne Enright Man Booker's Impact

    Irish author Anne Enright's work had been earning quiet accolades for years, but the clamor grew far louder when her novel The Gathering nabbed the 2007 Man Booker Prize. Now she returns to BEA as a speaker at today's Author Breakfast in advance of this fall's release of her latest novel, The Forgotten Waltz (Norton, Oct.).

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: Dan Gutman In a Series Whirlwind

    What are your plans for summer vacation? Chances are they can't compare to the breathless (and yes, humorous) adventures of twin brother and sister Coke and Pepsi McDonald, the stars of The Genius Files: Mission Unstoppable. Released in January by HarperCollins, the novel launches a new series by Dan Gutman. On a cross-country trip with their parents, Coke and Pepsi uncover a secret government plot and must elude some nefarious pursuers, all while taking in offbeat roadside attractions.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: Life Over Movies Roger Ebert

    Legendary movie critic Roger Ebert hardly needs an introduction: for almost 45 years, he has been writing reviews for the Chicago Sun-Times, picking up a Pulitzer Prize for criticism (the first movie critic to do so), hosting television shows like At the Movies with Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, and, just this year, producing a new series called Ebert Presents at the Movies. Movies form the focus of his 13-volume bibliography (with a 1993 stab at serial fiction, Behind the Phantom's Mask, and a travelogue in 1986 called The Perfect London Walk), but this September will see the launch of Ebert's first autobiographical work, Life Itself: A Memoir. The famously prolific critic, who lost the ability to speak from complications of thyroid cancer, spoke to Show Daily over e-mail about Life Itself (Grand Central) and his first visit to BEA. Ebert will be at the Author Breakfast today at 8 a.m.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: Jim Lehrer Political Balancing Act

    Only when PBS NewsHour executive editor and anchor Jim Lehrer thought there was no chance he'd be moderating another presidential or vice presidential debate did he decide to delve into the importance of the debates from the 1960s through the current administration. The result is Tension City: Inside the Presidential Debates from Kennedy-Nixon to Obama-McCain, coming from Random House this September.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: A Chat with Ellen DeGeneres

    Emmy award–winner Ellen DeGeneres has two bestselling books to her credit and is putting the final touches on her newest title, Seriously... I'm Kidding, due this October from Grand Central Publishing. A consummate entertainer, she places her unique signature on everything she does, whether it's providing the voice for Dory, everyone's favorite fish in Finding Nemo, and hosting her television show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, to a recent stint as an American Idol judge. She tells Show Daily that Seriously... I'm Kidding will give readers plenty of new material to enjoy.
    DeGeneres will be making a special appearance, via video, at today's Book & Author Breakfast.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: Ellen Hopkins Probing the Pursuit of Perfection

    Four teens who are pressured to achieve perfection are spotlighted in Perfect, Ellen Hopkins's September YA novel from Simon & Schuster's Margaret K. McElderry imprint. Cara, one of the protagonists, is the twin sister of Conner, who was driven to suicide by parental pressure in Hopkins's 2007 novel, Impulse.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: Christopher Franceschelli Publishing Vet Debuts as Author

    A longtime publisher, editor, and creator of children's books, Brooklyn-based Christopher Franceschelli dons a new cap at this year's BEA: that of picture book author. Currently a partner of packager SmartInk Books and founder of Handprint Books, which since 2008 has been an imprint of Chronicle Books, Franceschelli has written Oliver, a novelty board book published in April by Lemniscaat USA. Featuring a spare text and minimal art, this book about an egg has a surprise ending that was inspired by a magic show the author attended at the age of seven.

  • BEA Show Daily 2011: Jane Lynch Doing What She's Best At

    It's hard to believe her when actress Jane Lynch confesses she's "a little nervous" that audiences will laugh at her, not with her, as they read her memoir, Happy Accidents (Hyperion Voice, Sept.). After all, Lynch's fictional alter ego, Sue Sylvester, the deliciously wicked cheerleading coach on the hit television musical series, Glee, is famous for hurling outrageous insults at anyone who crosses her.

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