Publishing

Political Celebrity and Publishing Tastes

David Colbert | Posted 10.06.2009 | Books


David Colbert

Angry books sell on emotion. That's why they'll always sell better than cooler, thoughtful books. It's also why they're soon forgotten.

Attention Fellow Book Lovers: HuffPost's New Books Section Is Here

Arianna Huffington | Posted 10.05.2009 | Books


Arianna Huffington

My love affair with books is a long one. As a little girl growing up in Athens, I remember sending my friends home early from my fifth birthday party because all that celebrating was keeping me away from my books. Who needed friends and cake? I had my books! Since I was 21, there hasn't been a time when I wasn't researching or writing a book. Until now. So, instead of my signing another book contract, we are launching a Books section, in partnership with the New York Review of Books, where you'll find the latest book-related news and blog posts, book reviews, all sorts of special features, and, of course, articles from the New York Review of Books. So if you love books, reading, and good writing, please check out HuffPost Books.

The Future of Publishing Isn't Rocket Science (It's Sustainability)

Makenna Goodman | Posted 10.06.2009 | Books


Makenna Goodman

Publishing is not a dying business; it's a changing business. It's a business going through literary puberty, fiscal adolescence, and management hell. It's a business that needs to grow up, in other words.

Why the Digital Revolution is Missing the Big Picture

Jason Pinter | Posted 10.05.2009 | Books


Jason Pinter

By marketing the Kindle to me -- i.e. 'adults' who already read regularly -- publishing is merely doubling down on the biggest problem facing the industry: not enough people read books.

Books: The Watering Hole

Amy Hertz | Posted 10.05.2009 | Books


Amy Hertz

When Arianna asked me to think about a Books section for The Huffington Post, I thought, why a new books section, why Huffington Post, why now?

Sarah Palin Memoir: The Power Of Political Books

The Big Money | Marion Maneker | Posted 10.05.2009 | Books


Dan Gross, my colleague at Newsweek and Slate, pinged me the other morning after he had read the reports that Sarah Palin's new book--suddenly announc...

Irene Vilar, Abortion Addict Speaks

The Huffington Post | Irene Vilar | Posted 10.05.2009 | Books


At what point when trying to get a book published and failing at it does one say let's shelve the damned thing? The evening I got a status report summ...

Children's Books Reissued: Classics Get An Update

The Wall Street Journal | KATHERINE ROSMAN | Posted 12.02.2009 | Books


When the children's travelogue This Is Australia was first published in 1970, an illustration showing a desolate street and small stretch of stores wa...

The End Of Simon & Schuster's Teen Imprint

Crain's New York Business | Matthew Flamm | Posted 12.01.2009 | Books


When Simon Spotlight Entertainment launched in the fall of 2004, it was hailed as an innovative attempt to target readers in their teens and early 20s...

Writers Should Think Like Bono

Tom Matlack | Posted 11.30.2009 | Entertainment


Tom Matlack

The books of the 21st century will no longer be sold by an agent to a publishing house who tries to sell them to bookstores. The most successful books of the future will look more like a U2 concert.

Sarah Palin's E-Book Delayed; Publisher Stressing Hardcover Sales Of "Going Rogue"

Wall Street Journal | JEFFREY A. TRACHTENBERG | Posted 11.29.2009 | Media


For the second time this month, a publisher has decided to delay the electronic-book release of a major new title in hopes of maximizing hardcover sal...

Co-Creating a Monster

Victoria Rosner | Posted 11.29.2009 | Entertainment


Victoria Rosner

Random House recently published a new edition of Frankenstein with a surprising change: The cover now reads "Mary Shelley (with Percy Shelley)." Why is Percy now getting marquee billing?

21st Century Book Publishing

Tom Matlack | Posted 11.28.2009 | Media


Tom Matlack

The way we write and think about writing books has to change for them to remain relevant in the 21st century. The head in the sand, I am an artist don't bother me with marketing attitude won't work.

What Is a Book?

Hugh McGuire | Posted 11.25.2009 | Technology


Hugh McGuire

What matters is how we -- readers, publishers, technologists -- achieve what we want. Paper books aren't the only game in town anymore, and maybe in certain cases they aren't the best game.

The Secret Lives of Women and their Book Groups

Joanne Rendell | Posted 11.17.2009 | Living


Joanne Rendell

A book group offers so much more than just reading -- especially to women. They offer an escape from families, demanding kids, the laundry, and the drone of a ball game.

Dan Brown's Lost Symbol: NYTimes Breaks Embargo

Huffington Post | Amy Hertz | Posted 11.14.2009 | Books


The Times did it again, they published a review of a book that was embargoed before publication date. Or did the publisher encourage it by imposing an...

Why We Are Subjected to Beatlemania, Again

Tamara Conniff | Posted 11.13.2009 | Entertainment


Tamara Conniff

I love the Beatles, don't get me wrong. Paul McCartney in concert is a religious experience. But I'm over Beatlemania. I want it to stop. Why now? A little thing called copyright.

Notes on Book Publishing in a Socially Networked World

Stephen Elliott | Posted 11.11.2009 | Media


Stephen Elliott

A lot of authors (and book publicists) have asked about the Lending Library, wondering if it's a good or bad thing to let anyone who wants to read an advance copy of your book for free.

God and Man and Mohammed at Yale

Joan Z. Shore | Posted 11.10.2009 | Politics


Joan Z. Shore

This is worse than censorship: this is self-censorship. This is knowing what is right and appropriate and deliberately overriding it, and then trying to rationalize the decision.

Rod Blagojevich Adds Author to His Resume

The New York Times | MONICA DAVEY | Posted 10.22.2009 | Media


Normally, people charged with crimes wait until their cases are resolved to write memoirs -- saving themselves and their lawyers legal headaches. But ...

The Shelf Talker: Lorrie Moore, Rebecca Solnit and Silly Putty

Kevin Smokler | Posted 10.19.2009 | Media


Kevin Smokler

Does the name Lorrie Moore mean anything to you? To us, she's only like the best short story writer ever.

Hello Britain, Meet Chicago: Granta Takes a Toddlin' Town Tour

Victoria Lautman | Posted 10.18.2009 | Chicago


Victoria Lautman

It's Chicago's turn to inspire an issue of Granta, the esteemed British literary journal that seems to instantly confer upon the subscriber a mantle of elevated intellect, or at least the appearance of it. I talked about the issue with editor John Freeman.

David Swanson's Daybreak Is Chart-Topping Inspiration

Linda Milazzo | Posted 10.16.2009 | Entertainment


Linda Milazzo

A journey through Daybreak is an educational awakening, and an alert to the misdeeds of those we've elected. It's a clarification of why these deeds are wrong, why they must be challenged, and how they can be changed.

Nixonland: Murder in the Cathedral

Peter Schwartz | Posted 09.19.2009 | Books


Peter Schwartz

Nixonland reads like nothing more than an undergraduate thesis. It is sprawling, poorly written, and ham-handed analytically.

The Reinvention of Legal Research: The Future Is Now

Peter Schwartz | Posted 09.12.2009 | Media


Peter Schwartz

Legal research, once the province of desks, books, and binders, is now online, data-driven, and real-time. This poses serious challenge to old publishing stalwarts like Westlaw and LexisNexis.