Long time publisher and publishing technologist Nick Weir-Williams blogs on publishing past, present and future...
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
IMPRINTS: Skyhorse Takes Arcade for $548,000
Skyhorse Takes Arcade for $548,000
Thursday, July 8, 2010
TECH TRENDS:How Publishers Can Use Foursquare
How Publishers Can Use Foursquare
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Books They Don't Want You To Read - Famous Brit Authors
Amis sics the Jackal on small UK publisher to kill biography
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
TECH TRENDS: WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND
Nick W-W
Friday, June 18, 2010
Penguin pulps Lolita after axing fictional foreword | theBookseller.com
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Books They Don't Want You To Read - Anti-Putin book seized
Russian police seized 100,000 copies of a book critical of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin that activists planned to hand out at the Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/7833181/Police-seize-100000-anti-Vladimir-Putin-books.html
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Books They Don't Want You To Read: Egyptian Publisher Detained
Egyptian security forces arrest publisher
- Jack Shenker in Cairo
- guardian.co.uk, Sunday 4 April 2010 20.54 BST
- Article history
The arrest and disappearance of Ahmed Mahanna has fuelled fears among opposition activists that the government is stepping up its crackdown on dissenters as ElBaradei's campaign for political reform gathers momentum.
"We're fearful for the safety of all the young supporters who are campaigning for genuine democracy," said Alaa al-Aswany, the bestselling author of The Yacoubian Building who has backed ElBaradei's call for change. "Those that are famous are in a position to defend themselves against the regime, but ordinary people are open to being victimised by the government."
ElBaradei, a Nobel Peace prize winner who has emerged as an unlikely challenger to the 28-year rule of President Hosni Mubarak, has spent the last few days ramping up his public appearances after an interview with the Guardian last week in which he called on the west to end its support for Egypt's "sham" democracy and other oppressive Arab regimes.
The 67-year-old used his online Twitter feed to condemn Mahanna's incarceration, claiming "the detention of a publisher of a book about me and my ideas of reform shows a repressive regime afraid of its own shadow." Mahanna, who runs the Dawan publishing house and also works as a blogger, published a book last month by Egyptian journalist Kamal Gebrayal entitled ElBaradei and the Dream of the Green Revolution.
According to the Arabic Network of Human Rights Information (ANHRI), Mahanna's house was raided by security forces at dawn on Saturday. The publisher has not been traced, but an Egyptian official confirmed to local media that he had been placed under arrest and that copies of the book were being confiscated. "The housebreaking and arrest of a publisher for a book about ElBaradei ... clearly shows the intention of the government to gag all dissenting voices," said ANHRI in a statement on Saturday.
ElBaradei has whipped up a media storm since his return to Cairo in February thanks to his highly public criticisms of the ruling NDP party and repeated demands for a "constitutional revolution" in one of the region's most stagnant political landscapes.
On Friday hundreds of supporters flocked onto the streets in the Nile Delta town of Mansoura, where ElBaradei launched the first stage of a national tour designed to spread his message of change.
"What I saw today doesn't need words and it reveals an overwhelming and burning desire for change among the Egyptian people," he announced to cheering crowds. "We are all partners in change, which won't take place until each one of you feels that he is responsible for change."
Meanwhile, it has come to light that Mahanna may have been released. The disclosure came from a police source speaking to the Associated Press news agency on condition of anonymity.
Great Book Lovers of Our Time
It’s only books ’n’ shelves but I like it - Times Online
Thursday, March 25, 2010
PUBLISHERS PAST: PHARMA PRODUCT PLACEMENT SHOCK!
So today we feature John Newbery. Sure, that name is familiar - it's this John Newbery
The Newbery Medal has been presented since 1922 by the ALA to "the most distinguished American children's book published the previous year". And why? because John Newbery is credited with being the first ever publisher of illustrated books for children. Newbery started his publishing operation in Reading, Berkshire around 1740 and soon moved to premises in St.Paul's Churchyard, which had always been a center for bookselling and publishing. He published - and perhaps wrote the first Mother Goose, the History of Goody Two Shoes and other books intended not just to instruct but to entertain children.
But like so many publishers over the ages, it wasn't so easy to make a living from that alone. He had a side business as a wholesale and retail druggist, and it was in this capacity that he met Robert James. James was a physician and inventor, author of A Medicinal Dictionary, with a History of Drugs, which featured contributions from Dr Johnson, no less, and in 1746 he hired Newbery as sales agent for his new invention that made his fortune, James' fever powder which was of course supposed to cure almost everything...The powder was infamous enough to be throughly investigated by the Royal Society in 1791.
.

One of his most successful childrens books was The History of Little Goody Two Shoes., the inspiring story of an orphan girl who only has one shoe until she meets the man of her dreams who gives her a pair...Project Gutenberg has a facsimile of Newbery's third edition of the book - there were to be many more.
Chapter One of course sees the poor girl orphaned, with the woodcut above...and the very first sentence reads:
Care and Discontent shortened the Days of Little Margery's Father.--He was forced from his Family, and seized with a violent Fever in a Place where Dr. James's Powder was not to be had, and where he died miserably.I defy my readers to come up with a more blatant pharma product placement than that - and indeed not only James, but Newbery himself, made his fortune from the powder, not the book. Nothing is new...
Nick W-W
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
TECH TRENDS - NOTES ON E-BOOKS 2
There is an assumption, which in my experience of helping publishers take their content online through the Publishing Technology online platforms pub2web and IngentaConnect, is entirely unjustified, is that it is a really simple business getting content online. And that ipso facto, authors - and e-retailers - should get much more of the cake than they were for. Things may change, but as this post nicely demonstrates, there is an enormous amount for publishers to deal with, even if they have had the foresight to StartwithXML. There are multiple different formats, a huge range of TLA's to come to terms with (try this one), and an enormous amount to be done to extract the metadata that is so critical to success online.

Some of this may become easier in time, but with formats and identifiers inevitably lagging behind technology (the industry still cannot work out whether we should use a unique ISBN for each format(, I cannot see this changing anytime soon. As many commentators have noted, most e-books right now are not very attractive renditions of print books being read on not especially attractive readers of one sort or another. There will be much more to come on this issue but I leave for now with a great cartoon from the excellent Bookslut blog from yesterday
reBlog from Joseph Esposito under: The Scholarly Kitchen
TECH TRENDS: NOTES ON E-BOOKS 1
I found this fascinating quote today:
While we continue to debate “p” vs. “e,” we should note a bigger shift in the publishing landscape: from indirect or “channel” marketing to direct sales (from the publisher directly to the consumer). Historically, “p” has been connected to indirect channel sales, but it’s increasingly clear that “e” is likely to be direct-marketed.Joseph Esposito under, The Scholarly Kitchen, Mar 2010
Well worth reading - short and to the point. The issue is not really about p v e, since both formats will continue in most cases and find their markets, but about fundamental changes in publishers business models that inevitably follow from these changes
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Imprimatur Re(du)x: Coronet
I expect we will see something a little better for Stephen Gately
Nick W-W
(Imprimatur Rex will be a regular feature of the blog, in the belief that imprints have a life above and beyond the owners at any given time... Re(du)x is a poor attempt at a Latin pun.)
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Books They Don't Want You To Read: The Texas School Board
We are now landing in Brisbane. Please turn your watches back one centuryWe had a quandary though - with only five states who could possibly endorse and purchase a school book and a very competitive environment, it was almost impossible to turn your back on 20% of the market before you even went to press. Which brings us to Texas. A lot more states here in the US of course, but only a couple of them have major state textbook purchasing programs and probably none of them have the influence and power of Texas. There is a whole sub-industry, as one of my predecessors in another position discovered to our cost, of brokers who will encourage you to produce books specifically for Texas state adoption that then remain unsold in the Texas School Book Depository (well not this one..) and which if I recall correctly we were actually charged property taxes on since our unsold books were taking up state land.
We have here something very close to what we claim to despise in others, notably the controversy over textbooks in Japan that many claim deliberately distort elements of Japanese 20th century history. In Japan elected officials from the Ministry of Education appear to work very closely with private publishers to ensure a 'more appropriate' gloss on certain events. And in Texas we see a mandate that 'capitalism' be replaced throughout by 'free-enterprise system' and 'balance' put into discussions on civil rights, and Thomas Jefferson removed from lists of writers who inspired revolution. As with so much of what used to be called the 'Culture Wars' much of this leaves the average reader unaware of specific Conservative red-button issues and key words somewhat at a loss...but it is glosses and emphasis that really shape our view of History, not just the repetition of facts. There are certain points of view and people that this group just don't want the children of Texas to be exposed to, and that is a very dangerous thing.
So where will publishers stand on this? Interestingly, modern technology may make this less of an issue than it would have ten years ago. The ability to customize textbooks even down to classroom level may mean that American schoolchildren outside of Texas may still learn about Jefferson while back in the 80s the children of Sydney and Melbourne never did see our witch book. I will keep an eye on any statements by the major publishers on this issue and share them. I wonder though if Google will take a stand similar to that on China
Censorship is censorship...!!
Nick W-W
Monday, March 15, 2010
By way of introduction
Nick W-W