AboutThoughts on books and the bookish life from an ardent bibliophile and former bookseller. The author, Lisa Guidarini, is the adult program coordinator for the Algonquin Area Public Library and reviews books for a variety of publishing house and periodicals. Lisa is a member of the National Book Critics Circle. Recent Posts:Library Thing
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The Book’s The ThingFebruary 15, 2010 Up and coming authors.From Telegraph.co.uk: Top new novelists for 2010We all have our favourite authors, but how do you spot a rising star, that new voice in literature that will really make an impression? Lucinda Everett makes it a little easier as we go into 2010, and has picked out some names that won’t be familiar… yet. Here are the debut novels that, we hope, will give all of us something to talk about in the months to come .posted by Lisa at 2:55 pm | Comments (0) Pessimism on the state of the printed bookFrom Huffington Post: ” Anyone who believes this new technology is going away is dreaming. Anyone who believes the print publishing industry has a chance to survive in its present form is dreaming. It’s now possible for any small publisher to have free and almost immediate access to the largest bookstore in the world — Amazon. In a few days, a small publisher can have its entire backlist in Kindle format available at Amazon to readers. Salesmen are bypassed, distributors are bypassed, bookstore buyers are bypassed. What will not change much is marketing and promotion — new books will still need to be brought to the attention of the public. But the new books will be Kindle or Kindle-like digital books. ” posted by Lisa at 2:33 pm | Comments (0) February 1, 2010 A Booker Prize 40 Years in the Making.From the You Must Be Kidding Me file:Lost Man Booker Prize longlist to award best omitted novel of 1970Any of 22 authors, including Iris Murdoch and Joe Orton, could be awarded the coveted Lost Man Booker prize for novels that missed out due to rule changes in 1971 by Sam Jones, from The Guardian.co.uk ” The few seconds between the reading of the shortlist and the tearing open of the prizewinner’s envelope can last a nerve-mangling eternity for even the most garlanded writer. Imagine, then, what it must be like to wait 40 years to discover whether your manuscript has won one of the most prestigious awards in literature. That is the predicament in which 22 authors – some living, many not – find themselves today as the longlist for the Lost Man Booker prize is announced. ” Once you’ve finished rolling your eyes, read the rest… That must be one HUGE envelope if it’s taken 40 years to open. Perhaps they should enlist the services of another stationer. I hope they also have a good psychic on hand just in case a deceased author wins. Terribly inconvenient if they don’t. posted by Lisa at 1:23 pm | Comments (0) Amazon and MacMillan on the school playgroundGet out of my sandbox! No, YOU get out of MY sandbox! Read more in the seemingly endless struggle between Amazon and big publishers (in this case MacMillan) from The New York Times: ” After a weekend of brinksmanship, Amazon.com on Sunday surrendered to a publisher and agreed to raise prices on some electronic books. But in a statement Sunday afternoon, Amazon said it would accept Macmillan’s decision. ” posted by Lisa at 1:11 pm | Comments (0)
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