NBAs As you probably know, the National Book Awards were presented last night, to: Fiction Lily Tuck, THE NEWS FROM PARAGUAY (Harper) Nonfiction Kevin Boyle, ARC OF JUSTICE: A Saga of Race, Civil Rights, and Murder in the Jazz Age (Holt) Young People’s Literature Pete Hautman, GODLESS (Simon & Schuster) Poetry Jean Valentine, DOOR IN THE MOUNTAIN: New and Collected Poems, 1965-2003 (Wesleyan University Press) Having read way too many articles about the same, not particularly news-filled event, our preferred version is in the Washington Post. The Washington-focused lead observes, “A history professor from Ohio beat the collective efforts of […]
Lunch for Wednesday, November 17
Sales Down at Borders, Though BAM Move Past Stormy Days Rather as expected, Borders turned in a bad third quarter. Comparable superstore sales were down 1.6 percent from a year ago, registering $564 million. Same-store Walden sales fell 4.1 percent, at $151 million overall, and the international segment continues to post rapid growth, now up to $119 million in sales for the quarter. Overall, the company had a net loss of $1.5 million for the quarter, versus a profit of $0.5 million a year ago. CEO Greg Josefowicz blames the poor results on “sluggish store traffic and a slowdown in […]
Lunch for Tuesday, November 16
Random Gets A New Client Random House Distribution Services will take over back-office functions for Candlewick Press starting April 1, 2005, moving over from Penguin Group. Candlewick has been with Penguin since their start in 1992. Candlewick will continue to be responsible for sales, and they are staying with Penguin Canada as their Canadian distributor. BN.com Ups Ante on Free Shipping With sales sliding at BN.com, the company has taken a page from their competitor’s playbook with today’s announcement of “fast & free delivery.” The program promises receipt of orders within three business days after shipping, with no shipping charge […]
Lunch for Monday, November 15
Barnes & Noble’s Q3 Report Sends Bad Tidings to Publishers Same-store sales inched up 0.9 percent in the third quarter at Barnes & Noble’s superstores, for a total of $895 million, as B. Dalton continues to fade away, down to $35.9 million for the quarter (with comparable store sales sliding 3.3 percent). And at BN.com, pro-forma sales dropped 8 percent, to $91.8 million. The headline on most third-party accounts, however, is that profits dropped to $7.6 million, down from $10.2 million a year ago. At the BN superstores alone, operating profit fell to $12 million, from $15 million a year […]
Lunch for Friday, November 12
Penguin UK Postpones Date for Full Warehouse Operations; “Reps are Acknowledging that Christmas will be Terrible” Publishing News is starting to add some teeth to their coverage of the ongoing Penguin UK warehouse story. One “senior figure” says “Reps are acknowledging that Christmas will be terrible, but they are fearful of admitting it.” Another remarks: “They’ll have the new Jamie Oliver on the van, but not core fiction.” Penguin itself is now officially admitting that the new fully automated warehouse will not be, um, fully automated, until next March “at the earliest” (i.e. later than that). Out of one side […]
Lunch for Thursday, November 11
Latest Earnings: Houghton Houghton Mifflin’s trade and reference division reported net sales of $41.1 million for their third quarter, up 8.2 percent from last year. “The increase was due primarily to the higher sales of adult, children’s and cookbook titles, offset by the decline in sales of Tolkien titles.” Educational sales at the company were up slightly, though operating income declined for the quarter. Following Pearson’s news from yesterday, some analysts are grumpy that the company did not provide a specific range of forecast earnings. Numis Securities told The Scotsman they are reducing their own forecast by $9.2 million to […]