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  • Fall 2011 Announcements: Literary Fiction: Zombies, Flowers, and Fangs

    This fall the dead will walk (down Broadway, no less), a family of flash mobbers will incite unease, convicts will change color, and flowers will talk.

  • Fall 2011 Announcements: Literary Essays & Criticism: Literature Still Matters

    Two simple phrases are all you need to evoke the absurdity of war and of life: "catch-22" and "So it goes." The two 1960s works that gave us these now-indispensable phrases, Joseph Heller's Catch-22 and Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five, changed our idea of what a war novel could be: irreverent, caustic, comic, yet brutally realistic. Four years after Vonnegut's death, we have bestselling author (Mockingbird) Charles J. Shields's And So It Goes: Kurt Vonnegut: A Life; the 50th anniversary of Catch-22's publication brings Just One Catch: A Biography of Joseph Heller by Donald Barthelme's biographer, Tracy Daugherty.

  • Fall 2011 Announcements: Cookbooks: Chefs at Home and at Work

    What's on for fall once you get past the predictably fun books by celebrity chefs; the guides for making cupcakes, whoopie pies, handheld pies, and other cute little baked goods; and the still-going-strong barrage of titles about eating less meat? Books about eating more meat, of course—provided that meat is grass-fed, organic, local, and singing "If You're Happy and You Know It" on its way to the slaughterhouse. Beneath all that? Take a look: here come the chefs.

  • Fall 2011 Announcements: Comics & Graphic Novels: Classics New and Old

    The past five years have been a fertile time for reprints of classics from both the comic strip and comic book worlds. This fall, three of the last great uncollected cartoonists get their moment, and two more recent gems get definitive editions. Also looming: what's expected to be a future classic in Craig Thompson's long-awaited Habibi.

  • Fall 2011 Announcements: Business & Economics: Digging Out, Moving Forward

    With the American economy simultaneously struggling to recover from the worst recession since the Depression while also grappling with the increased presence of technology in all phases of American life, business books set for the fall reflect the debate on how the country can best move forward.

  • Fall 2011 Announcements: Lifestyle: Hipster Diets to Crocheting for Mr. Darcy

    Maybe after 2012 you won't have to worry if you're overweight or otherwise unhealthy, since we'll all be enlightened with the coming of a new era of consciousness. But until then, you can knit, try a new diet, or simply read all about the evolution of human awareness.

  • Fall 2011 Announcements: History: What Is It About the 15th Century?

    Individuals make history through their choices and actions, but together those individual actions add up to forces that change our world. This fall presents a range of stories from the personal to the epic that make history so endlessly fascinating—and one century looks pivotal.

  • Fall 2011 Announcements: Art & Architecture: The Prisms of Art

    Much of the human world, both inner and outer, is explored through art. Werner Herzog's recent documentary about cave art in France made the case beautifully. And any preview of a season's art book offerings—either books of art or about artists—does as well. This particular season is full of big books on big artists, as well as probing titles about artists who themselves probed the interiors of themselves or others.

  • Appealing to Romance's Passionate Fans

    The newest romance imprint on the scene is Montlake Romance, a division of Amazon Publishing that's causing quite a bit of buzz. Amazon Publishing v-p Jeff Belle gave us a sneak peek into Amazon's first venture into the world of genre fiction.

  • Romance Pros, Romance Cons: Focus on Romance 2011

    Professional gatherings like the annual Romance Writers of America conference have always been a great way for authors to network with editors, publishers, and other writers. Now publishers are using these events to market titles, find out what fans really want, and build brand recognition.

  • Give 'em the Business: Business Books 2011

    Though the economy is still fragile, its recovery has been greeted with relief across the publishing world—a spot of indisputable good news for an industry where the consequences of even bright spots like the growth in e-book sales are endlessly debated. Nowhere is the economy's return to health more directly relevant than in the business management category.

  • 'D' Is for Digital: Reference Books 2011

    As Houghton Mifflin Harcourt prepared to publish the fifth edition of its American Heritage Dictionary last November, a question arose: should the work go digital, or should the dictionary continue to be made available in print? The publisher enlisted a market research firm to survey 1,200 people about their dictionary usage.

  • Art Still for Art's Sake? Photography Books 2011

    For the most part, art and photography books exist in a sphere separate from much of publishing. Many of the stores specializing in these categories are affiliated with cultural institutions, and the books they sell are generally pricey. PW asked buyers at seven bookstores specializing in art what's going on in the category.

  • I Spy

    On June 12, 1987, Ronald Reagan, standing near the Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin, pointed a finger at the looming structure behind him and in a booming voice challenged his Russian counterpart with these stirring words, "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this plot device!"

  • PW Fall 2011 Announcements

    Welcome to the PW Fall 2011 Title/announcement issue page. We are now collecting listings from publishers in a new way, assisted by our partnership with Above the Treeline and their Edelweiss catalogue tool.

  • On the Front Lines: LGBT Publishing 2011

    In examining today's LGBT publishing scene from a variety of perspectives, we've asked four industry players—publisher, editor, agent, and advocate—to give us their outlook on this ever-evolving landscape. In the wake of a noted LGBT bookstore's recent closing, we've surveyed retailers whose LGBT stores are going strong; and we take a look at the LGBT publishing scene's 25-year-old awards program.

  • Throne of Gains

    On April 17, HBO will premiere the first of 10 episodes of Game of Thrones, based on George R.R. Martin's Song of Ice and Fire series, and everyone who publishes epic fantasy is looking for a ride on the series' cinematic coattails.

  • Science Fiction Reports For Active Duty

    The military and genre fiction have a close and complex relationship. Science fiction "is the #1 choice for young men," says Connie Lefever, whose Coronado, Calif., Bay Books store is popular among service members at nearby bases, and young men don't change their reading habits when they join the military. The same is true of military women, Lefever notes, who share their civilian counterparts' fondness for urban fantasy and paranormal romance.

  • Large as Life: Large Print Publishing in 2011

    The words "large-print publishing" may never conjure visions of high-profile auctions with houses battling over million-dollar deals that set the heart pounding and the eyes gleaming, but most publishers in the category say that's just fine. In fact, the relative stability of the large-print format has traditionally been a major selling point in a tumultuous industry.

  • A Classic Leads the Field

    Where do our great sports books come from and what are they about? Vivid recreations of great contests? Lives of great figures? Dissections of famous acts, singular feats, or dramatic blunders? That might be the formula for our great military books, political biographies, and works of social science, but the most enduring sports books tap into another level where sport is connected to something else—about human spirit, national character, and belief.

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