Slate brings back their juicy bits column, pulling “a breezy executive summary” from Barton Gellman’s ANGLER “for those of you who are too lazy or too incurious to read [the] lengthy expose.”Slate
Libel Suit Against Grisham Dismissed
A libel suit brought by a former Oklahoma district attorney against author John Grisham and Doubleday for the book THE INNOCENT MAN (as well as Barry Scheck, an attorney, and two other authors who wrote books about the same murder case in which two men were wrongfully convicted) was dismissed by Judge Ronald White. The AP says “the judge wrote that it was important to be able to analyze and criticize the judicial system ‘so that past mistakes do not become future ones. The wrongful convictions of Ron Williamson and Dennis Fritz must be discussed openly and with great vigor.”AP
BN Square with California Over Tax Dispute
The Sacramento Bee says that as of last week, all actions and claims between the State of California and Barnes & Noble have been resolved. BN noted in their last quarterly report that they had paid the state $9 million in a settlement of claims against the bookseller’s online unit for sales tax of $17 million (plus interest and penalties) that should have been collected prior to November 2005. The settlement has been approved, and a countersuit by BN against the state’s board of equalization was dismissed.SacBee
Harper to Launch "Book Army"
Into the crowded field of social networking around books, HarperCollins will launch BookArmy.com next week, which “will list every book with an ISBN and aims to drive sales and build a community of readers” according to New Media Age. A recommendation engine “will constantly feed users suggestions based on what books they like, what their friends like and what those with similar tastes enjoy. Authors will be encouraged to create and manage their own pages, while readers will be able to compile virtual bookshelves and write reviews to share with others.Those browsing books will be able to access a synopsis, […]
Business Book Award Shortlist
The nominees for the FT/Goldman Sachs business book of the year award. The winner will be named October 14: A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World William J. Bernstein (Atlantic Monthly Press) Cold Steel: The Multi-billion-dollar Battle for a Global IndustryTim Bouquet & Byron Ousey (Little Brown Book Group UK) When Markets Collide: Investment Strategies for the Age of Global Economic ChangeMohamed El-Erian (McGraw-Hill) McMafia: A Journey Through the Global Criminal UnderworldMisha Glenny (Knopf) Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid EconomyLawrence Lessig (The Penguin Press) The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of LifeAlice Schroeder (Bantam)
Lively Classics Lines
The LAT runs an appreciation of reprint lines published by the New York Review of Books, Europa Editions, Hard Case Crime, and Persephone Books. There are no actual facts here, but the conclusions are grand: “The publishers specializing in reprints have become increasingly important to the people who haunt bookstores searching for the next great read. For some, these reintroduced books are as eagerly awaited as any mainstream house’s seasonal list.” True to journalistic formula, it remains impossible to admire the small without indicting everyone else, as specious conclusions abound: “Whether the increasing number of reprints is because of reader […]