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News

July 15, 2008By Michael Cader

F+W: "Publications" Out; "Media" In

July 15, 2008By Michael Cader

F+W Publications has officially announced a name change to F+W Media, which “better reflects the company’s mission to deliver to passionate consumers the content, community, and data they desire–regardless of platform.” In other words, they are shifting “from a print focus to a web-enabled digital business.” To that end, F+W is building websites based around communities of enthusiasts and categories of interest that no longer focus on a single magazine or book title, having already launched MyCraftivity.com. And they aspire to make Everything.com, based on the Everything Series of books, a reference site they hope will rival such sites as […]

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July 15, 2008By Michael Cader

Legal Fight Over Chicken Soup Split

July 15, 2008By Michael Cader

The Chicken Soup for the Soul series has sparked a legal battle between the new owners and the former publisher, according to an article in the Miami Herald. As previously announced, Simon & Schuster was recently named the distributor for new titles in the line, following the purchase of publishing rights by a Connecticut investment group run by William Rouhana and Robert Jacobs from creators Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen. A suit filed in Federal District Court in California “accuses Health Communications with interfering with the sale of the publishing and distribution rights and with trademark violations.” A separate […]

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July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

Profiling PW's Reviewers

July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

Now that PW has started listing their previously anonymous book reviewers as contributors on the masthead, the Observer looked at the first list of “80-something names” and Googled a number of the names. “Who are these individuals? Enthusiasts, mainly. Schoolteachers, professors, stay-at-home moms, authors. It takes all kinds. We looked a handful of them up on Google, corresponded with a couple, and came up with some crude bios. Here’s an assortment.”Observer

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July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

'Lassie' heirs regain rights – Entertainment News, Film News, Media – Variety

July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

The daughter of Eric Knight, author of Lassie Come Home, prevailed over Classic Media in a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling handed down on Friday that reversed a 2006 District Court decision and affirms Winifred Knight Mewborn’s 1996 letter terminating Classic Media’s rights. Variety says “the court’s opinion addressed a complicated issue of copyright law involving whether the law’s termination of transfer right is eradicated by a post-1978 assignment of the rights. In a victory for authors and their heirs, the court held that their rights are not terminated.”Click here for the PDF of the court’s rulingVariety article

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July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

UK Agents Compete for Estates

July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

Savvy agents have long known the advantages of representing well-established literary estates and now following the diminution of PFD, the gloves are off in London. The Times says: ” No point wasting one’s time with new authors. They’re unpredictable, demanding. They require lunch. No, what any literary agent worth his salt needs in 2008 is a classic author with form: famous, prolific and deceased within the past 70 years. In recent months, the literary estate – the body of work belonging to a dead author – has suddenly and unexpectedly become big business.” As previously reported, Andrew Wylie took over […]

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July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

New Owner on DGNA

July 14, 2008By Michael Cader

CEO of the Najafi Companies Jahm Najafi spoke briefly to the WSJ about his deal to purchase Direct Groug North America (DGNA) from Bertelsmann: “We’re very excited about this because we see great brands and excellent marketers. We have extensive experience in the online world and think we can change the nature of this business and grow it dramatically. We also think we can extend the club model to other products and services. We have never shied away from difficult businesses.”As the Journal notes, DGNA had sales last year of 900 million euros ($1.42 billion), with approximately 13 million members. […]

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