BEA from All Over USA Today picks expected hits from Mitch Albom, Charles Frazier and John Grisham as the most remarkable BEA books, adding reports of anticipation for novels The Interpretation of Murder by Jed Rubenfeld, The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield (which BN’s Bob Wietrak says will “be as big as The Historian and The Rule of Four”), After This by Alice McDermot, and One Good Turn by Kate Atkinson. The Washington Post’s long convention overview frames the convention as a “clash between what you might call the technorati and the literati. The technorati are thrilled at the way […]
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Lunch for Sunday, May 21
So Long and Thanks for All the Books That could easily be the silent refrain of many convention attendees leaving Washington’s big Giveaway Festival today. The essence of BEA is that people come to see other people, and they come to get stuff. Some didn’t even carry their loot beyond the halls, while others surely pruned strategically in their hotel rooms. And as we know — underscored by a store owner tale of on a encounter last year with a “bookseller” in the women’s room with a stack of galleys, a laptop, and the free wireless connection — at least […]
Lunch for Friday, May 19
Today at BEA: So Little Happened, So Much to Stay It’s very Washingtonian that, like the city itself, the new convention center is laid out with layered precision, and yet nothing about it is linear or simple to navigate. If you’re here you know what I mean, and if you’re not it’s hard to explain. Like an upside-down cake with no middle layer, there’s a small hall on the second floor at the culmination of a block-long entrance hall and an endless set of stairs, while the long skinny main hall is two flights down in the basement and has […]
Lunch for Thursday, May 18
Soft First Quarter for Barnes & Noble First quarter same-stores sales fell slightly at Barnes & Noble’s superstores, down 0.3 percent, and the company expects a bigger comparable drop of 4.3 percent for the second quarter given comparisons to last year’s release of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. (Potter had powered a gain of 4.3 percent a year ago.) Overall, Barnes & Noble stores had sales of $980 million, as BN.com sales were flat at $91 million, and B. Dalton continued its decline to $23 million (down 1.8 percent on a same-store basis). Net earnings of $10 million for […]
Lunch for Wednesday, May 17
New Head for New Press; Veterans to Inkwell; and More Personnel News Following the resignation of Colin Robinson last December, the New Press has now named a new publisher: deputy director since 2003 Ellen Mastromonaco Adler has been promoted to fill the post. Marc Favreau has been promoted to editorial director, from senior editor, and Ina Howard has been hired as director of communications. She was previously publicity director at Nation Books and senior publicist at Avalon. Elsewhere, Ali Bothwell Mancini to has been promoted from associate editor to editor at Penguin and Plume. She started at the house in […]
Lunch for Tuesday, May 16
Schedule Note I’m traveling to DC in the morning and speaking at the Writers Conference at BEA, so Lunch won’t be served until after mealtime tomorrow. From Thursday through Saturday, we will publish at least once a day though the timing is never clear — last thing or first thing are your two best bets. As before, we’ll post regularly to the PublishersMarketplace.com home page and our related special BEA pages there as frequently as we can during the show. Personnel News Former Dorling Kindersley publisher Christopher Davis is joining Weldon Owen as publisher-at-large, charged with helping to “grow its […]