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Thursday August 31
- KEEP
YOUR MOUTH SHUT: The Chinese government has cracked down
on Taiwanese book publishers at a mainland book exhibition; in
addition to warning one publisher not to speak to the mass media
about lack of Beijing's lack of freedom of speech, they have also
stuck labels saying "Don't violate the one China policy"
on Taiwanese books. China Times
(Taiwan) 08/31/00
- UNFAVORABLE
REVIEWS NOT WELCOMED: Surprise, surprise - the Chinese government
also banned one of Hong Kong's leading political commentators,
whose books criticize communism and advocate Taiwanese independence.
China Times (Taiwan) 08/31/00
- NEW
INTEREST IN BLACK WRITERS? African-American writers have long
complained that big publishers have ignored them. But "in
the past year, Time Warner, HarperCollins and Kensington Publishing
are among those who started or acquired imprints specifically
to release books by African-Americans." Chicago
Tribune 08/31/00
Tuesday August 29
- E-CONSOLIDATION:
Big players in the e-publishing business are beginning to align
to compete with one another and pirates. "The publishing
industry must establish an honest market for electronic content
before pirates find alternative markets."
Wired
08/29/00
Monday August 28
- NAME
BESTSELLER: It's been a difficult summer for the New York
Times Bestseller List. "Once the gold standard of commercial
success in the book world, the list has been discarded by America's
biggest bookstores, all of which now use their own lists as determinants
of discounting policy and in-store real estate. And in separate
incidents last week, the long-unchallenged authority of the Times
list was called into question."
Variety 08/28/00
- HONG
KONG'S NEW REALITY: The Chinese government seized a shipment
of books heading to the US after being bound in Hong Kong. The
book is by a former White House official, and "the publisher
and printer said the book, 'The Clinton Years,' was seized because
among its 227 black-and-white photographs was a picture of President
Clinton clasping hands and chatting at the White House with the
Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism." New
York Times 08/27/00 (one-time
registration required for entry)
Saturday August
26
- ATWOOD
ON PARADE: Margaret Atwood is 60 and has just released a new
book. The publicity machine is buzzing at a higher pitch than
ever before. "Being as famous as Atwood must be like carrying
a bundle around on your back. People recognize you on the street.
Even if they don't speak to you, they give you knowing looks,
or else they avert their gaze as though you have a bizarre virus
that is transmitted by eye contact. People want stuff from you
- autographs, donations, appearances, opinions, money, patronage."
The Globe
and Mail (Toronto) 08/26/00
- WRITING
BEHIND BARS: "For almost as long as there have been prisons,
prisoners have turned author for diversion, creative expression,
solace, penance, vindication, vengeance and release (physically
and metaphysically). But their works have rarely been examined
as a genre, and for what they reveal about the literary impulse
behind bars."
New York Times 08/26/00
(one-time registration required for entry)
Friday August 25
- WHAT
MAKES A GOOD MOVIE? Vladimir Nabokov was an evocative writer.
Yet attempts to turn his books into films have been failures.
"Many film-makers have tried to mine the wily Russian, and
this new attempt revives the question: can Nabokov ever be filmed
successfully?"
The Guardian (London) 08/25/00
Wednesday August
23
- CARROLL
LETTERS DISCOVERED: Five letters
by Lewis Carroll have been discovered in an English castle. “We
think it is quite exciting because the final letter was written
so close to his death and was actually signed Lewis Carroll as
opposed to his real name Charles Dodgson." The
Age (AFP) 08/23/00
- ABOARD
THE E-BOOK TRAIN: A few years
ago most publishers were skeptical about e-publishing. Now? "Give
the industry five or 10 years and you'll see all bestsellers published
simultaneously in electronic and traditional form. And in 25 years?
Who knows . . . but the electronic format will probably be well
ahead." The Age 08/23/00
- WRITERLY
RETIREMENT: Dancers, athletes and musicians retire. But what
about writers? "Computer keyboards are not retired. Career
best-seller records do not lead to teary stadium send-offs. The
creative force that drives writing may still burn, but the energy
to promote a book fades like the pitching arm of a middle-aged
hurler. In some ways, mulling a writerly finale seems a bit morbid.
New York Times 08/23/00
(one-time
registration required for entry)
Tuesday August 22
-
THE
UPSIDE OF PIRACY: As the recording industry continues to
mount legal challenges to Napster’s file-sharing technology,
the publishing industry is assessing its own content - both
its vulnerability, and its marketability. “It appears audio
book publishers are poised to deliver the first insights. The
MP3 format provides for a real variety of content - abridged,
unabridged, something that's 20 minutes long, something that's
six hours long.” Publisher’s
Weekly 08/21/00
-
ANOTHER
WAY: Dave Eggers' McSweeney's Books intends to cut out the
middlemen between writer and reader. It's traditional hardback
publishing, not e-books, although the writer doesn't get an
advance, he gets "whatever remains after printing costs
and incidentals, not to mention foreign sales, film sales, etc.
Eggers isn't taking a dime."
Inside.com 08/21/00
-
DOWNLOADERS
COVER FREELOADERS:
Frightened about being cut off from Stephen King’s latest online
novel (that requires a $1 download fee), devoted fans have been
sending extra cash to cover all the delinquent readers. King
himself is surprised by the acts of generosity: “Publicly, I
have always expressed a great deal of confidence in human nature,
but in private I have wondered if anybody would ever pay for
anything on the Net.”
Salon
(AP) 08/21/00
Monday August 21
- NOT
THE WRITE POLICY: The government of Scotland announced its
long-awaited cultural strategy. "Aimed at providing a blueprint
for the future of Scotland’s culture, key promises included an
additional £7 million for the arts over the next three years,
a feasibility study for a national theatre, support for a film
studio and an audit of the nation’s museums and galleries."
But why no mention of Scottish writers?
The Scotsman 08/21/00
- JUDGING
WORK: "Readers and writers of the past - not just the
geniuses, either; the intelligent, alert ones who kept current
as we all like to think we do - remind us how culture and taste
change. And why. What aesthetic, social and intellectual needs
do beliefs serve in their time? Which ones serve us now, and why?"
New York
Times 08/21/00 (one-time
registration required for entry)
Sunday August 20
- HELPED
BY HARRY: Phenomenal sales of the Harry Potter books have
made JK Rowling Britain's highest paid woman last year, earning
her £:20.5 million. The
Age (Melbourne) 08/21/00
Thursday August
17
- HARLEQUIN'S
HEROINE: Pierced, intellectual, and independent, Harlequin
Romance's editor-in-chief Isabel Swift may not seem like your
stereotypical romance novel editor. But she may be just the woman
to envision a new future for the world's largest publisher
of romance fiction. "She wants to drag Harlequin into the
20th Century, if not the 21st, and she has a plan for getting
there. If she succeeds, the Harlequin brand could return to its
old, formidable self - like a wilted heroine flowering in the
arms of her baron." New
York Magazine 08/21/00
- HOLY
COMIC-BOOK LOVERS, BATMAN! "Only seven years ago,
the comic-book industry was a $1 billion business; today, it's
half that, with numbers decreasing each year." But that doesn't
seem to matter to the 45,000 people who attended the world's largest
comic-book convention in San Diego last week - the numbers may
not look good, but those on the inside say comic-books are just
getting better and more creative all the time. The
Dallas Observer 08/16/00
Wednesday August
16
- POETIC
INJUSTICE:
Chinese poet Bei Ling, a U.S. resident since 1988 and editor of
the literary magazine “Tendency,” has been arrested by the Chinese
government in Hong Kong. The Communist Party has recently stepped
up its effort to crack down on dissident publications, and Lei
is likely to be charged with “subverting state power,” which carries
a severe sentence. China
Times (AFP) 08/16/00
Tuesday August 15
- OPEN
BOOKS: In response to criticism that no one is actually buying
e-books, electronic publishers released sales figures - modest,
yet encouraging. “Given that printed books have been around for
600 years, and e-books have barely registered on the consumer
radar yet, I think we're doing OK."
Wired
08/14/00
- A
NOVEL IDEA: How worried does the audio-book business (a $2
billion-a-year industry) need to be about the recent proliferation
of downloadable audio books on Napster-like sites? “The question
really is whether there is a demand for audio books in the MP3
format. If there is, publishing would be well advised to figure
out a legal - and money-making - way to make audio books available
online. Readers might be willing to pay for the convenience of
easy downloading if such a site were made available to them.”
Inside.com
08/14/00
Monday August 14
- KING
OF THE (WRITING) WORLD: Does anyone write more than Stephen
King? He cranks out projects like a man possessed. "Writing
is just this great big conduit, this outflow pipe that keeps the
pressure nice and even. It just pours all this [expletive] out.
All the insecurities come out, all the fears - and also, it's
a great way to pass the time."
New
York Times Magazine 08/13/00
(one-time registration required
for
Sunday August 13
- SUBJECT
TO PREY: The relationship between biographer and subject can
be adversarial. Sometimes subjects retaliate. "It's war,
and a number of contemporary writers have tried to gain the upper
hand by putting biographers in their novels and short stories."
National
Post (Canada) 08/12/00
Friday August 11
- FROM
MAILER TO OPRAH: Salon Magazine's “Reader’s Guide” to the
best and worst contemporary fiction of the last 40 years. “The
world of established literary giants, each one solemnly tapping
out his version of the Great American Novel on a manual typewriter,
has since dissolved into a fluid, unpredictable marketplace where
the next critically acclaimed hit first novel might be written
by a 57-year-old horse breeder from North Carolina or by a 36-year-old
former aerobics instructor from India.”
Salon
08/11/00
Thursday August
10
- A SAD CHAPTER FOR ISRAEL'S
LIBRARIES: In Israel, as in many other parts of the world,
libraries are in terrible decline. Government funding has decreased,
leaving Israel's libraries without money for renovations
or new books - "of the 1,233 public libraries in Israel today,
only 133 provide Internet services and only 10 lend out computer
compact discs." Ha'aretz
08/10/00
Wednesday August
9
- PROTECTING
POTTER: Within a few hours of hitting the shelves last month,
the latest Harry Potter book was available in pirated e-form over
the web. Tuesday the Association of American Book Publishers and
Microsoft announced plans to fight e-piracy.
Washington Post 08/09/00
Tuesday August 8
- POET
ADVOCATE GENERAL: "Is there something churlish about
Canadians that we balk at the idea of an official poet laureate?
Are we too modest, too embarrassed? We certainly need an advocate
for poetry. Poetry is the least honoured and the most respected
of our art forms. A poet laureate would bring poetry to the people,
giving us, as John Newlove said, 'the pride, the grand poem /
of our land, of the earth itself'."
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) 08/08/00
- WHAT
A DREADFUL IDEA: "Poets are already considered to
be on the very bottom of the arts ladder, frantically vying
with the likes of documentary filmmakers, performance artists
and other degenerates. And Canadian poetry, in the main, is
horrible, consisting primarily of nuanced references to woodchippers,
and surprisingly vulgar accounts of childbirth. To crown a
laureate then would be something like appointing a pantomime
artist to remember the dead for us each November - a poignantly
awful idea." The
Globe and Mail (Toronto) 08/08/00
- CHARACTER
BUILDING EXPERIENCES: Thomas Keneally, author of "Schindler's
List," seems to be fascinated with suffering
and adversity; he has written about the Holocaust, the famine
in 19th-century Ireland and British convicts being deported to
Australia. His most recent subject of focus has been the struggling
African county Eritrea. "'Novelists,' he says, 'write about
fraternity and love across borders, race and culture and about
characters who have everything against them "because the
best stories are there.'" Sydney
Morning Herald 08/08/00
Monday August 7
- THE
TRUTH ABOUT STORIES: Why do literary critics seem to be tripping
over distinctions between fiction and non-fiction? "The trendy
new genre 'creative nonfiction' is just a clever marketing tool
— a way to sell the old tall tale, part fact, part fiction, by
assuring us that what we are reading is 'real.' And that sense
of clarity is not just reassuring, it also demands less of the
reader — who does not have to suspend disbelief — and of the writer,
who does not have to work as hard at rendering a story believable."
San Francisco Examiner 08/07/00
- DOING
THE MATH:
Xlibris, the book self-publisher
believes it will make money in increments. "I'd say it's
around two bucks for each copy of each title. Let's say I make
$600 per title and I have 250,000 titles. Okay, well my calculator
just broke, so it's a big enough number that my calculator's not
happy. I think it's about $150 million. So, you see, the whole
industry only makes sense if you believe that in, say, six to
seven years, there will be close to half a million books published
every year. We're doing 500 titles a month by ourselves, and our
growth rate is around 20 percent a month. So, you do the math."
Inside.com
08/07/00
- OVER
TO OVITZ: Thriller-writer Tom Clancy shocked the publishing
world Friday by leaving his long-time agent for super-agent Mike
Ovitz.
The Telegraph (London) 08/05/00
Sunday August 6
- IN
THE LAND OF THE PHILISTINES: There are, of course, all the
standard reasons for a publisher to turn down a book. "But
what, I wonder, are 'all the standard arguments'? The notion that
fortune - in the shape of a huge advance and a lot of hype for
an unwritten first novel - favours the young? That the winner,
so long as he or she has no literary record, takes all? That what
sells a book is a pretty face on the jacket? No publisher would
dare reject a book because the author was the wrong colour or
the wrong gender, but to be the wrong age is unforgivable."
The Observer
(London) 08/06/00
Friday August 4
- HARRY
HELD HOSTAGE: The Canadian distributor of "Harry Potter"
refused last month to ship more copies of the book to the Chapters
book superstore chain until Chapters paid some of its large outstanding
debt, says the distributor.
National Post 08/04/00
- WEB
PAY: National Writers Union makes deal with Stephen Brill's
Contentville to pay freelance writers a fee every time their work
is downloaded from the site. Variety
08/04/00
Thursday August
3
- INDEPENDENT
BOOKS: The American Booksellers Association rolled out its
new site to sell books from independent bookstores. "The
ABA's 'save the indies' plan (nearly half of such stores have
disappeared since 1994 due to the rise of chain stores and online
booksellers, the organization estimates) has found some adherents
while others remain skeptical."
Inside.com
08/03/00
- THE
WRITE STUFF: Some writers insist if you want to be a
writer, you must write everyday. Nice theory, says playwright
Zinnie Morris, but it's not the way it always works: writing is
a creative force with a will of its own. "My own experience
of writing plays has taught me that it will come in its own time,
but unfortunately also on its own terms. No amount of pencil-sharpening,
toe-tapping, or switching the computer on and off will quicken
the process." The Guardian
08/03/00
- ZAI
JIAN TO ONLINE CHINESE BOOKSTORE: Chinese Books Cyberstore
(CBC), which may have been the largest Chinese-language online
bookstore, has declared it will go into voluntary liquidation.
The site, which offered over 200,000 titles, video disks, Chinese
comic books, and arts and crafts, failed to secure additional
funding from shareholders, who are still reeling from the international
tech-stock slump. The South
China Morning Post 08/02/00
Wednesday August
2
- BOOK
CHAIN SUES NEWSPAPER: Canadian bookstore giant Chapters sues
National Post after stories alleging the chain was behind in payments
to a large publisher. "CEO of Chapters says that the articles
painted a distorted picture of his company."
CBC
08/02/00
- WILLIAM
MAXWELL DIED at age 91 on Monday. Accomplished novelist and
revered editor at the “New Yorker” for 40 years, Maxwell honed
the prose of some of this century’s finest American writers, J.D.
Salinger, John Cheever, and Harold Brodkey among them.
CNN 08/01/00
- INFOBERG:
Writers are upset about Contentville, which went online July 5.
The site offers "books, articles, TV transcripts and old
speeches, for sale starting at $2.95 each," but "some
publishers are shocked at Contentville's chutzpa. The Village
Voice says it licensed EBSCO to use content for educational and
research purposes. 'It's outrageously unethical. Nobody ever dreamed
of this. It's just gross.' "
Feed 08/01/00
- AN
INTERVIEW WITH STANLEY KUNITZ, the new U.S. poet laureate.
First published more than 70 years ago, Kunitz, now 95, has won
almost every poetry award (including the Nobel in 1959 to the
National Book Award in 1995), although he’s only published a handful
of books. “I write poems only when I cannot escape them, when
it is so urgent I will sacrifice everything else to do it.” A
new Kunitz collection is due out next year.
NPR
8/01/00 [Real
audio file]
Tuesday August 1
- THE
"CAT" GOES LATIN: Two years ago a husband/wife team
published a version of "How the Grinch Stole Christmas"
in Latin. It was an unexpected hit. Now they're back with "The
Cat in the Hat." "Of course, unless you're fluent in
the language of Cicero and Nero, it's hard to judge the playfulness
of such lines as: 'At tunc quies est erepta!/ Tota domus est correpta/
Tum tumultu, tum fragore!' In the original English version, those
same lines, about the first appearance of the Cat, go this way:
'And then something went bump!/ How that bump made us jump!/ We
looked!' " Chicago
Tribune 08/01/00
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