The AP looks at the rising popularity of the holiday picture book ELF ON THE SHELF, which has sold 2.5 million copies since its 2005 publication by CCA & B Publishers, the Marietta, GA-based publishing houses founded by ELF creators Carol Aebersold and her daughters Chanda Bell and Christa Pitts after a round of publisher rejections. CCA&B recorded $10 million in revenue in 2010 and now employs 25 people. “We used to have to stop people in the aisles at retail shows and explain what this was,” Pitts explained but now, “people are coming in and they already know. It’s […]
eBook Sales Dip Further in October
The AAP announced their tabulation of sales for October from reporting publishers. In the closely-watched ebook sales category–where the AAP’s monthly number is the only standing statistic we have to go on, the now 20 reporting publishers recorded sales of $72.8 million, down from $80.3 million in August. (Rizzoli is now among those contributing data.) It’s the lowest monthly ebook total recorded since April, and lower as an absolute comparison since the matching results that month came from just 14 publishers. Seasonably sizable shipments of print books and flat month-to-month ebook sales trends left digital books in fourth place, trailing […]
Macmillan Changes College Division Name to Macmillan Higher Education
As of January 1, Macmillan’s college education division, formerly known as the Bedford, Worth & Freeman Publishing Group, will be rebranded as Macmillan Higher Education. The group includes Bedford/St. Martin’s, W.H. Freeman, Worth Publishers, Hayden McNeil, and i>clicker. The K-12 Division will still operate under the Bedford, Worth & Freeman name. “This name change is indicative of our growing position as a global media company,” said ceo John Sargent in a statement. “Moving to Macmillan not only signifies our collective strength and the breadth of our offerings, but also allows us to more fully leverage our investments in print and […]
Favorite Books of 2011, From the News Editor
This year I made a conscious effort to read fewer books while also reading more widely, succeeding in both instances (bearing in mind that my definition of “fewer” is at least three standard deviations higher than normal. For what it’s worth, I’ve read about 320 books with ten more days to go in 2011.) The list of ten books – six fiction, four non-fiction – appear below, in alphabetical order, mostly because it was hard to pick a flat-out favorite book. (For brevity’s sake, my favorite crime novels appear elsewhere.) Fiction Alan Hollinghurst, THE STRANGER’S CHILD (Knopf) — not for […]
Authors: WIMPY KID’s Kinney Sues For Trademark Infringement; BN Ships Green’s FAULT OF OUR STARS Early
Author of the DIARY OF A WIMPY KID series Jeff Kinney filed a lawsuit Tuesday in a Boston federal court alleging that DIARY OF A ZOMBIE KID, published by Antarctic Press, “blatantly infringed [Kinney’s] intellectual property and diluted its trademarks.” (Kinney and his company trademarked the “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” title and the name and look of the books’ main character with the US Patent & Trademark Office under “publications, namely a series of children’s books” in Class 16 and, “Board games; card games; plush toys; toy action figures; puzzles” in Class 28, respectively.) In addition to the “confusingly […]
People: Napack to Depart Macmillan for “New Business Opportunities”
President of Macmillan Brian Napack will be departing the company “in the weeks to come” after five years in order to “pursue new opportunities”. (Napack told us those plans will be made public at a later date.) According to a staff memo circulated earlier this week, Napack will stay with Macmillan through the end of the year full-time and “work as needed beyond that to ensure a smooth transition,” which he and ceo John Sargent are in the process of preparing. “This will be a big adjustment for all of us and a particularly sad one for me,” Sargent said […]