• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Login
  • Register
Publishers Lunch logo Publishers Lunch logo
  • Publishers Marketplace
  • Site Guide
  • Help
Login Sign Up
  • Personnel
  • AI
  • Compensation
  • Unions
  • Book Bans
  • New Releases
  • Earnings
  • The Trial
  • Archives
Publishers Lunch logo
  • Publishers Marketplace
  • Site Guide
  • Help
  • Publishers Marketplace
  • Site Guide
  • Help

July 29, 2005By Michael Cader

Lunch for Friday, July 29

July 29, 2005By Michael Cader

More on CIA BookBreaker In court documents filed earlier this week by former CIA officer Gary Berntsen against the agency, he asserts that: “This case presents a threat to the vitality of First Amendment rights among former and current employees of the government arising from Defendant’s effective imposition of a prior restraint on publication.… Having absolutely no lawful authority to take these actions, the CIA endeavors to cloak its behavior as legitimate by hiding behind an unconstitutional interpretation of the secrecy agreement executed by Plaintiff, who is a former employee with the Agency. However, the ability of the government to […]

Login to read full story

July 28, 2005By Michael Cader

Lunch for Thursday, July 28

July 28, 2005By Michael Cader

Anonymous former CIA Author Reveals Himself, As He Sues Agency Former CIA officer Gary Berntsen filed suit papers yesterday in Federal court (just after the court closed for the day) against the agency, claiming they are over-classifying material covered in his book manuscript about battles that Bernsten led in Afghanistan prior to Osama Bin Laden’s escape from Tora Bora. The 48-year-old Berntsen retired from the CIA in June and his book JAWBREAKER was due to be published in October. Up until now, Bernsten had only been identified as the pseudonymous Eric L. Bernsten’s attorney says they are suing under the […]

Login to read full story

July 27, 2005By Michael Cader

Lunch for Wednesday, July 27

July 27, 2005By Michael Cader

It’s All About the Expectations Sales were up 26 percent at Amazon for their second quarter, to $1.75 billion, but net income dropped to $52 million from $76 million a year ago. But the fall in profits was better than Wall Street expected and was due mostly to income tax changes, so shares were bid up again. Gross profit, one of Amazon’s many favored measures of performance, was up 32% to $450 million, which company CFO Tom Szkutak said was driven by third-party sales through the site — which now comprise 28 percent of all unit sales. They still don’t […]

Login to read full story

July 26, 2005By Michael Cader

Lunch for Tuesday, July 26

July 26, 2005By Michael Cader

The Rise of FSU’s Writing Program The Palm Beach Post looks at how Florida State University’s creative writing program “has become during the past five years what some believe to be the best in the country.” They add: “It did it with the help of patent money from the cancer drug Taxol, developed by an FSU scientist; the energy from pontifical mobster writer Mark Winegardner; and support of an established and respected English department.” Winegardner, who stepped down recently as director, says: “I defy you to find a faculty that is better in terms of quality and quantity of awards […]

Login to read full story

July 25, 2005By Michael Cader

Lunch for Monday, July 25

July 25, 2005By Michael Cader

Improvement at Penguin and Pearson Pearson’s earnings report for the first six months of their fiscal year is filled with palpable signs of relief. The big Pearson Education division has started to deliver the strong results that were expected (and promised) for this year, with sales up 14 percent overall, driven by an even larger increase at their big K-12 School unit. Meanwhile, Penguin “has made a solid start to… a transitional year, in line with expectations.” Which means the publisher is past its UK warehouse problems and layoffs from earlier this year and a weak holiday stretch in the […]

Login to read full story

July 21, 2005By Michael Cader

Lunch for Thursday, July 21

July 21, 2005By Michael Cader

Norton Announces 9/11 Gifts One year after publishing the authorized, royalty-free editions of the 9/11 Commission Report — following long-promised intentions to donate “any extraordinary profits” to charity (and a declaration in late-January that an announcement would be made “before long”) — Norton has announced in a press release they will make three gifts of $200,000 each. The recipients are the Center for Catastrophe Preparedness and Response (CCPR) at NYU and their International Center for Enterprise Preparedness project, plus the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University, endowing Norton-9/11 Fellowships in International Relations. Norton president […]

Login to read full story
  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 3049
  • Page 3050
  • Page 3051
  • Page 3052
  • Page 3053
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 3183
  • Go to Next Page »

sidebar

Primary Free Sidebar

Login

Forgot Password Quick Pass User Login
Get Full Access
The Publishing Industry’s Essential Daily Read

Each Publishers Lunch Deluxe subscription includes full access to our searchable multi-year archive of industry news, a nightly email reporting 10 to 50 deal transactions, and our database of industry contacts, scripts, and posting privileges.

Learn More

RSS Automat

  • Belle Burden's STRANGERS Draw Hollywood Interest, Shopped by UTA February 26, 2026 Page Six
  • 'Poured Over' Host Miwa Messer On The Open Book Podcast February 26, 2026 Open Road
  • Sycamore Studios Is Developing Animated Musical Feature Based on "Madeline" February 25, 2026 Deadline
  • International Booker Prize Longlist February 24, 2026 NYT
  • A Wake for The Washington Post's Books Section February 24, 2026 New York Times
  • Tom Hanks to Star In -- and Co-Produce -- Film Version of "Lincoln in the Bardo" February 24, 2026 Deadline
  • Susan Sheehan, Chronicler of Lives on the Margins, Dies at 88 February 23, 2026 New York Times
  • Jynne Dilling on "Our Greatest Reader" Michael Silverblatt February 23, 2026 n+1
  • How the LA Review of Books Destroyed Itself February 20, 2026 Substack
  • Facing a Mental Health Crisis, an NJ School Pulled 'Oscar Wao' from English Class February 20, 2026 NPR
Publishers Marketplace logo

Contact Us

News

  • Publishers Marketplace
  • Report News
  • Discuss
  • Classifieds
  • Rights Offerings

Deals

  • Report A Deal

Books

  • Buzz Books

Jobs

  • Job Board
  • Privacy Policy Terms of Use