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Keyword: publishing

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  • Press-Hating Sarah Palin Invades Media’s House of Worship

    08/05/2009 2:19:00 PM PDT · by euram · 36 replies · 1,570+ views
    nymag.com ^ | 08-05-09 | Chris Rovzar
    According to a Facebook status update on behalf of the restaurant, former Alaska governor Sarah Palin is here in New York and dined at Michael's last night. She's in town to visit with her publisher, HarperCollins, and has been doing "fun kids things" during her stay here with her family. It all sounds innocent enough, except for the Michael's part. Michael's is not only a Northeastern elite power-lunching spot, it is the very epicenter of the liberal media — the very men, women, and reporters who are out to get her.
  • Amazon Erases Orwell Books From Kindle

    07/21/2009 11:54:55 AM PDT · by nickcarraway · 97 replies · 4,187+ views
    New York Times ^ | July 18, 2009 | BRAD STONE
    In George Orwell’s “1984,” government censors erase all traces of news articles embarrassing to Big Brother by sending them down an incineration chute called the “memory hole.” On Friday, it was “1984” and another Orwell book, “Animal Farm,” that were dropped down the memory hole — by Amazon.com. In a move that angered customers and generated waves of online pique, Amazon remotely deleted some digital editions of the books from the Kindle devices of readers who had bought them. An Amazon spokesman, Drew Herdener, said in an e-mail message that the books were added to the Kindle store by a...
  • Does the Book Industry Want To Get Napstered?

    07/16/2009 6:07:04 PM PDT · by re_tail20 · 32 replies · 1,394+ views
    Slate ^ | July 15, 2009 | Jack Shafer
    If the publishers force Amazon to raise prices on e-books, that's what will happen. The book publishers are in the process of picking a fight with Amazon and other sellers over the pricing of e-books. If the publishers are lucky, they'll lose. Here's why. Publishers generally sell e-books to Amazon and its competitors for the same price they sell paper books to retailers—about half the list price of the paper version. Amazon and the others insist on selling most e-books for about $9.99, which pleases the publishers when the e-book retail price is close to that of the paper edition:...
  • Publishers rewrite book (Dinosaur Media DeathWatch™)

    05/26/2009 6:04:25 AM PDT · by abb · 35 replies · 1,672+ views
    Crain's New York Business ^ | May 24, 2009 | Matthew Flamm
    <p>Last week, an auction for a book by Capt. Richard Phillips, the merchant-ship hero who saved his crew from pirates, drew top bids of around $500,000—half the seven-figure advance it had been expected to fetch.</p> <p>At least that book had bidders. In February, the William Morris Agency failed to find any takers for a Britney Spears memoir.</p>
  • Embattled Author James Frey Claims He Has Secret Oprah Tapes

    05/05/2009 3:56:20 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 18 replies · 2,463+ views
    Fox News ^ | 5/5/09
    Does James Frey have embarrassing audiotapes of Oprah Winfrey? The upcoming paperback version of his best-selling novel, "Bright Shiny Morning," includes two passages omitted from the hard cover, which came out last year. The first passage is a triple X-rated story of an affair between a lawyer for the ACLU and the wife of a Republican senator who meet in a bar and proceed to have raunchy sex in bathrooms, alleys, seedy motels and the backseats of the cars. The sex scenes — deemed too racy for some readers — are included in the paperback. The second passage is more...
  • Duke to publish dissertation by Obama's mother

    05/04/2009 7:56:32 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 15 replies · 792+ views
    DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A dissertation written by President Barack Obama's late mother is being published. Duke University Press said Monday that an edited version of Ann Dunham's anthropological study about rural craftsmen in Indonesia is scheduled to reach stores this fall. Dunham completed the study three years before she died in 1995. Duke marketing manager Emily Young said the foreword was written by the president's half-sister and Dunham's daughter, Maya Soetoro-Ng (so-TOR'-oh ING). The book is based on Ann Dunham's 14 years of research among village workers on the Indonesian island of Java.
  • How to Get in Shape Jihadi Style (Pro Al-Qaeda Magazine for Offering Fitness Tips to Jihadists)

    04/22/2009 1:53:02 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 9 replies · 442+ views
    ABC News ^ | 4/21/09 | Emily With
    A New Pro Al-Qaeda Magazine for Extremists is Offering Fitness Tips to JihadistsA new pro al-Qaeda magazine for extremists is offering fitness tips to jihadists planning attacks against Americans in countries such as Afghanistan. The first edition out this month offers workout tips to get buff with the aim "to train as hard as possible in order to damage the enemies of Allah as much as possible." The English language e-zine, Jihad Recollections, is about 70 pages long and is thought to be produced by an American living in North Carolina. It claims to have articles written by Osama bin...
  • Hitler's 'Mein Kampf' a Brief Kindle Best Seller

    03/24/2009 3:09:47 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 5 replies · 586+ views
    CNET ^ | March 19, 2009 | David Carnoy
    Yes, Sony and Google have teamed up to offer 500,000 free e-books on the Sony Reader. Free is nice, and half a million is an impressive number, but lots of free and cheap e-books can wreak havoc on your database and best-seller lists--just ask Amazon.com, which found itself with Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" briefly sitting atop its best-seller list for legal thrillers in the Kindle Store, experienced earlier Thursday. The Kindle Edition of "Mein Kampf" isn't free on Amazon. What's interesting is that there are actually two versions: one costs $1.58, and the other costs $1.60. Both are fairly popular,...
  • Gay Magazine Genre Temporarily Stops Publication

    03/23/2009 5:04:21 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 27 replies · 915+ views
    AHN ^ | March 23, 2009
    Gay magazine Genre will be suspended due to the ongoing recession, it has been announced. The monthly lifestyle magazine is taking a respite, according to CEO David Unger. Unger said in a statement posted on their official website, "We thank all of our readers, advertisers and editorial staff for their support throughout our 16-year history and hope that we can re-establish our relationship when times are better." He also clears that the suspension of Genre magazine, a is part of the Window Media publication, does not affect the other magazines held by the gay press publisher, including the Washington Blade,...
  • Author, Author!

    03/23/2009 9:20:16 AM PDT · by PBRCat · 27 replies · 1,239+ views
    The Chicago Daily Observer ^ | March 23, 2009 | Daniel J. Kelley
    What makes “Dreams From My Father” unique is that so few of those praising the book for its supposed merits seem to have actually bothered to read it. Numerous copies have been sold to Obama’s liberal camp followers, but, unlike Chairman Mao’s “Little Red Book,” no one was actually expected to memorize it cover to cover or to become familiar with its contents. Lord knows, I tried, but, time and time again, I had to put it aside. Based upon those chapters that I managed to slog through, I was reminded of Oscar Wilde’s comment upon reading about the death...
  • Publishers Crank Out Children's Books on Obama (Creepy)

    03/04/2009 8:27:13 AM PST · by MNDude · 39 replies · 724+ views
    President Obama, the merchandising phenomenon, has been a boon to sidewalk T-shirt vendors everywhere, the Washington Times reports. Less conspicuous, perhaps, is the equally robust success of the children's book industry in marketing Obama's hopeful aura and personal history to parents of young children. Are children's book publishers seeking to indoctrinate impressionable young readers -- or are they simply obeying the laws of supply and demand? When the country elects a new president, publishers characteristically issue a biography or two geared toward young readers. But in the case of Obama, publishers are tapping into unusual levels of excitement and curiosity....
  • Exclusive: Holocaust Faker Speaks Out ("It wasn't a lie," "It was my imagination")

    02/18/2009 5:09:52 PM PST · by nickcarraway · 23 replies · 814+ views
    ABC News ^ | Feb. 18, 2009 | DAN HARRIS, BRIAN O'KEEFE and LEE FERRAN
    Oprah Winfrey called it the "greatest love story" she'd ever had on her show. The love story was so touching, that Hollywood is even making a movie about it. Herman Rosenblat received international attention for his tale about being a hungry little boy in a Nazi concentration camp who was thrown apples every day by a little girl named Roma, on the other side of the fence. Years later, according to the story, Rosenblat met that same girl on a blind date in New York City and proposed to her on the spot. The only problem was, Rosenblat's story, which...
  • The Conyers bill is back [restricting access to research we paid for]

    02/14/2009 6:44:09 AM PST · by antiRepublicrat · 18 replies · 874+ views
    Open Access News ^ | February 04, 2009 | Staff
    Yesterday Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) re-introduced the Fair Copyright in Research Works Act.  This year it's H.R. 801 (last year it was H.R. 6845), and co-sponsored by Steve Cohen (D-TN), Trent Franks (R-AZ), Darrell Issa (R-CA), and Robert Wexler (D-FL).  The language has not changed.  The Fair Copyright Act is to fair copyright what the Patriot Act was to patriotism.  It would repeal the OA policy at the NIH and prevent similar OA policies at any federal agency.  The bill has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where Conyers is Chairman, and where he has consolidated his power...
  • End Times

    01/07/2009 8:49:34 AM PST · by docbnj · 17 replies · 749+ views
    Atlantic, The ^ | 7 Jan 2009 | Michael Hirschorn
    Earnings reports released by the New York Times Company in October indicate that drastic measures will have to be taken over the next five months or the paper will default on some $400 million in debt. With more than $1billion in debt already on the books, only $46 million in cash reserves as of October, and no clear way to tap into the capital markets (the company’s debt was recently reduced to junk status), the paper’s future doesn’t look good.
  • William Tyndale A hero for the information age

    12/28/2008 6:56:33 PM PST · by GSP.FAN · 10 replies · 449+ views
    The Economist. ^ | Dec 18 2008 | The Economist.
    AN EMERGING nation looks increasingly confident as a player on the world stage... China in the 21st century, contemplating the pros and cons of the internet? No, Tudor England, at the time when a gifted, impulsive young man called William Tyndale arrived in London..
  • The Holocaust Memoir that Wasn't

    12/28/2008 8:52:53 PM PST · by Enchante · 11 replies · 760+ views
    History News Network ^ | 12-29-08 | Kenneth Waltzer
    Dr. Waltzer is the Director, Jewish Studies, at Michigan State University. It was as a result of his research that the Penguin Group decided last week not to publish the now-discredited Holocaust memoir by Herman Rosenblat. Waltzer began raising questions about the book in November. In response the producer of the movie that was to be based on the memoir complained to Waltzer's dean. After Rosenblat admitted he had lied the producer said: "It’s unfortunate he told a lie .... The man is tragically flawed, but his story had value." Waltzer was joined in his doubts about the book by...
  • Bargain books have an unexpected cost

    12/28/2008 1:17:30 PM PST · by decimon · 197 replies · 3,906+ views
    IHT ^ | Dec. 28, 2008 | David Streitfeld
    U.S. book publishers and booksellers are full of foreboding - even more than usual for an industry that has been anticipating its demise since the advent of television. The holiday season that just ended is likely to have been one of the worst in decades. Publishers have been cutting back and laying off. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt announced that it would not acquire any new manuscripts, a move akin to a butcher shop proclaiming it had stopped ordering fresh meat. American bookstores, both new and secondhand, are faltering as well.
  • Publish in Wikipedia or perish - Journal to require authors to post in the free online...

    12/18/2008 10:28:14 PM PST · by neverdem · 7 replies · 1,241+ views
    Nature News ^ | 16 December 2008 | Declan Butler
    Journal to require authors to post in the free online encyclopaedia.Wikipedia, meet RNA. Anyone submitting to a section of the journal RNA Biology will, in the future, be required to also submit a Wikipedia page that summarizes the work. The journal will then peer review the page before publishing it in Wikipedia. The initiative is a collaboration between the journal and the RNA family database (Rfam) consortium led by the UK Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Hinxton. "The novelty is that for the first time it creates a link between Wikipedia and traditional journal publishing, with its peer-review element," says...
  • Layoffs at Random House, Simon & Schuster

    12/03/2008 5:51:49 PM PST · by COUNTrecount · 11 replies · 399+ views
    Breitbart ^ | Dec. 3, 2008 | HILLEL ITALIE
    The economy has crashed down on an industry once believed immune from the worst—book publishing—with consolidation at Random House Inc., and layoffs at Simon & Schuster and Thomas Nelson Publishers. "Yes, Virginia, book publishing is NOT recession proof," said Patricia Schroeder, president and chief executive officer of the Association of American Publishers. "It's sad day." At Random House, the country's largest general trade publisher, the man who helped give the world "The Da Vinci Code" is in talks for a new position, while the publisher of Danielle Steel and other brand-name authors is leaving altogether. Stephen Rubin, who released Dan...
  • Publishers bet big on 'Obama as hero'

    11/30/2008 12:54:44 AM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 44 replies · 776+ views
    Yahoo! News / The Politico ^ | November 29, 2008 | David Paul Kuhn
    The publishing industry is betting on Barack Obama like no president in decades. Since Election Day alone, more than half a dozen book deals have been signed to exploit Obamania. Two dozen books in the works range from the serious to the silly. There are retrospective ticktocks on how Obama won office and prospective looks at his first year in the White House. There is a biography on Obama’s father, a compilation of essays on Obama and race, and others tilting toward the celebratory with photographic montages. There are children’s books, of course, and a style guide on Michelle Obama,...