Archive for the ‘Print Publications’ Category

Getting to Know the “Vook” (aka Hybrid Book)

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

We’re looking at a new form of media (assuming it catches on) that librarians will likely have to catalog. We will catalog as a book? A Video? Audio? Or perhaps we will have to come up with specific cataloging rules for hybrid books.

From the Article:

…in the age of the iPhone, Kindle and YouTube, the notion of the book is becoming increasingly elastic as publishers mash together text, video and Web features in a scramble to keep readers interested in an archaic form of entertainment.

On Thursday, for instance, Simon & Schuster, the publisher of Ernest Hemingway and Stephen King, is working with a multimedia partner to release four “vooks,” which intersperse videos throughout electronic text that can be read — and viewed — online or on an iPhone or iPod Touch.

[Snip]

The most obvious way technology has changed the literary world is with electronic books. Over the past year devices like Amazon’s Kindle and Sony’s Reader have gained in popularity. But the digital editions displayed on these devices remain largely faithful to the traditional idea of a book by using words — and occasional pictures — to tell a story or explain a subject.

The new hybrids add much more. In one of the Simon & Schuster vooks, a fitness and diet title, readers can click on videos that show them how to perform the exercises. A beauty book contains videos that demonstrate how to make homemade skin-care potions.

“Everybody is trying to think about how books and information will best be put together in the 21st century,” said Judith Curr, publisher of Atria Books, the Simon & Schuster imprint that is releasing the electronic editions in partnership with Vook, a multimedia company. She added, “You can’t just be linear anymore with your text.”

In some cases, social-networking technologies enable conversations among readers that will influence how books are written.

[Snip]

Some authors believe the new technologies can enrich books. For his history of street songs in 18th-century France, Robert Darnton, director of the Harvard University Library, will include links to recordings of the actual tunes.

But Mr. Darnton, author of “The Case for Books: Past, Present and Future,” warned that reading itself was changing, and not necessarily for the better. “I think we can see enough already to worry about the loss of a certain kind of sustained reading,” he said.

Source: NY Times
Hat Tip: G.M.

Video Webcasts: Author Sessions from the 2009 National Book Festival Now Available Online

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Last week we posted a couple of items about the 2009 National Book Festival and how you could enjoy its many activities in person (over 130,000 people attended), on the web (including Twitter), or via C-SPAN.

Today, webcasts of a few of the many author sessions are beginning to come online with more to follow in coming days.

Here are Links to the Webcasts That are Accessible as of Today:

Sessions with:

+ John Grisham

+ Doug Brinkley

+ Michael Connelly

+ Kirsten Downey

+ The “Exquisite Corpse” team
(several children’s authors including Jon Scieszka)

+ Julia Glass

+ Liz Kessler

+ Mark Kurlansky

+ Valerie Martinez

+ Katherine Neville

+ James Patterson

+ James Swanson

More video webcasts are being posted daily.

Check back if the author(s) you want to see are not available. Here’s a list of all of the authors who took part in the festival. Click on an author name and look for a webcast link on the page.

Source: LC

See Also: Prior to the National Book Festival, Matt Raymond Interviewed Several Authors, You Can Listen to those Podcasts Here.

See Also: To Review/Search All Webcasts from National Book Festivals Back to 2001, Visit this Page. More Than 500 Webcasts are Currently Available.

Statistics: U.S. Book Sales, July 2009

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Book sales tracked by the Association of American Publishers (AAP) for the month of July increased by 2.0 percent at $1.54 billion and were up by 1.9 percent for the year.

The Adult Hardcover category was up by 6.9 percent in July with sales of $88.7 million; year-to-date sales were down by 15.5 percent. Adult Paperback sales increased 9.0 percent for the month ($124.0 million) but decreased by 11.2 percent for the year. The Adult Mass Market category was down 13.5 percent for July with sales totaling $68.2 million; sales were down by 5.3 percent year-to-date. The Children’s/YA Hardcover category decreased by 5.4 percent for the month with sales of $55.8 million, but sales for year-to-date were up by 22.2 percent. The Children’s/YA Paperback category was up by 4.1 percent in July with sales totaling $58.2 million; sales increased by 2.0 percent for the year.

Audio Book sales posted an increase of 3.5 percent in July with sales totaling $11.7 million; sales to-date decreased by 29.9 percent. E-books sales reached $16.2 million, reflecting a 213.5 percent increase for July, and a 173.9 percent year to-date. Religious Books saw a decrease of 9.3 percent for the month with sales totaling $42.4 million; sales were down by 8.1 percent for the year.

Sales of University Press Hardcover books reflected a 15.1 percent decrease in July with sales of $5.2 million; sales decreased by 8.6 percent for the year. University Press Paperback sales posted a decrease of 3.2 percent for the month with sales totaling $8.8 million; sales were down 5.5 percent for the year. Sales in the Professional and Scholarly category were up by 13.2 percent in July ($117.7 million) but decreased by 2.3 percent for the year.

Higher Education publishing sales rose by 0.9 percent for the month ($941.5 million) and increased 19.0 percent for the year. Finally, the net El-Hi (elementary/high school) basal and supplemental K-12 category posted a decrease of 32.2 percent in July with sales of $675.9 million; the category was down by 27.6 percent for the year.

NOTE: All sales figures cited in this release are domestic net sales

Source: Association of American Publishers (AAP)

The National Book Festival via Twitter, Podcasts, Webcasts, and C-SPAN

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

If you’re heading to the National Book Festival in DC this Saturday or just want to see what people are talking about at the event, the official Twitter hashtag is #nbf. If you’re taking pictures, the Flickr hashtag is #2009nbf.

The National Book Festival is full of useful information including maps and schedules.

One very exciting feature allows you to listen to a large collection of interviews online with some of the authors who will be in attendance. LC’s Matt Raymond is the interviewer.

Some of the Other Features Accessible on the National Book Festival Website Include:

+ Young Readers’ Toolkit

+ Materials (including podcasts) from past NBF. This link will allow you to browse all of the podcasts/interviews ever done for the festival. As we post this item 510 are available. You can also browse podcasts by category.

+ A Complete List of Authors

+ A Link to view the Official 2009 Festival Poster

This blog post talks about “connecting” with the NBF.

Topics include:

+ A web site optimized for mobile browsers

+ Text message updates (we’ve blogged about them a few weeks ago)

+ A large monitor in the Library of Congress Pavilion that will publicly display (in real time) all of twittering taking place at the festival. That’s right, tweets for all to read.

Source: LC

UPDATE 9/25 A Dozen Ways to Enjoy the National Book Festival (via LC Blog)

LC’s Matt Raymond goes over 12 ways (we mentioned a few above) to enjoy the festival while in DC or online elsewhere.
herlc/index.php”>via this page. You can also access webcasts from the 2007 and 2008 festivals here. Matt says that this year’s webcasts will be online by mid- to late-afternoon tomorrow. You can also find content direct from iTunesU and the Library of Congress Channel on YouTube.

If you’re near a TV you can also watch the festival via C-SPAN beginning at 9:50 am. Here’s the C-SPAN program schedule.

Again, a review of this latest blog post is more than worth a look. Nice job Matt!

Almost forgot:
If you’re going to the festival, don’t forget to visit the Digital Bookmobile. It will, “showcase eBooks and other digital formats available 24/7 from America’s libraries.” The bookmobile has a Twitter feed (@DigiBookmobile) and Facebook page.

Google Library and Harvard Offer On-Demand Books, Espresso Book Machine Comes to Cambridge

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

From the Article:

Starting next week, customers at Harvard Book Store will be able to buy in minutes books that once would have taken weeks to find. The service comes courtesy of the retailer’s new printing machine, which will make it the first bookseller in the nation with the ability to print 3.6 million titles on demand.

The Espresso Book Machine—produced by New York firm On Demand Books—has been rolled out to a select few stores to date, but the one at Harvard Book Store will be the first with access to the 2 million public-domain texts digitized by Google, which also announced a deal with On Demand last Thursday.

See Also: Video: The Espresso Book Machine in Action (Runs about 4 minutes)

See Also: On-Demand Publishing: Espresso Book Machine Gains Access to Google’s Collection of Public Domain Titles (9/17)

Source: UWIRE, Harvard Crimson

Publications: Dow Jones to Close Far Eastern Economic Review

Monday, September 21st, 2009

From the Story:

Dow Jones & Co. said Monday it will end publication of the Far Eastern Economic Review in December as part of a move to focus on its core publications

[Snip]

Current subscribers will be offered a one-year subscription to asia.wsj.com, Dow Jones said. The Far Eastern Economic Review was launched in 1946.

Source: Marketwatch
Hat Tip: Buslib

Amazon.com Forces Changes at LibraryThing

Friday, September 18th, 2009

From the Blog Post by Tim Spalding:

Amazon is requiring us remove links to other booksellers on work pages. We’re creating a new “Get it Now” page, with links to other booksellers, especially local bookstores and libraries, and a host of new features.

We’re days away from releasing a series of changes to our book pages, both forced and intentional. Amazon is requiring all websites, as a condition of getting any data from them, to have the primary page link to Amazon alone. Links to other booksellers are prohibited. Secondary pages—pages you go to from the primary page—can have non-Amazon links.

Everyone at LibraryThing disagrees with this decision. LibraryThing is not a social cataloging and social networking site for Amazon customers but for book lovers.

[Snip]

But agree or not, we have to follow their terms. We thought long and hard about giving up Amazon data entirely, converting to library data only, in concert with a commercial provider, like Bowker or Ingram, and with help from publishers and members. Unlike our competitors, who are exclusively based on Amazon and who don’t “catalog” so much as keep track of which Amazon items you have, that option is available to us. But we’d lose a lot, particularly book covers. Ultimately, we’ve decided the disadvantages outweigh the benefits.

[Snip]

Most of all, we think we’ve found a way to give Amazon what they require, and continue to provide members with options: We’re going cut back our primary-page links to Amazon alone, and give people the best, most diverse secondary pages we can make.
(more…)

Online Video: See OnDemand’s Espresso Book Machine in Action

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

We just posted (see below) about the Google deal with OnDemand Books and their Espresso Book Machine. If you are interested in seeing the machine in action, this four minute video is just what you need.

According to News.com, it can print a 300 page book in four minutes, “complete with a cover and a bound edge.”

You can access the video here.

Source: OnDemand Books

On-Demand Publishing: Espresso Book Machine Gains Access to Google’s Collection of Public Domain Titles

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

From the Article:

On Demand Books, makers of the Espresso Book Machine, are expected to announce Thursday that they have been granted access to Google’s library of public domain digital books for use with their product. The Espresso Book Machine can print a 300-page book in four minutes, complete with a cover and a bound edge.

[Snip]

A few companies, such as Lightning Source, a division of Ingram Content Group, have signed up with On Demand Books to help publishers get their content into the Espresso Book Machine, but adding Google’s public domain library dramatically increases what is available through one of the machines, said Dane Neller, chief executive officer of On Demand Books. Around 2 million public domain works have been scanned by Google, while On Demand Books offers 1.5 million titles through its existing agreements.

Source: News.com

+ Learn More About the Espresso Book Machine (Hardware) and EspressNet Software

See Also: Google Signs Agreement with On Demand Books, September 17, 2009 (Official News Release; PDF)

ALA: Booklist Launches Free Webinar Series

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Booklist is launching a free webinar series on Sept. 22, building on previous popular Booklist Online webinars.

The first in the new series, “The Scoop on Series Nonfiction: Best Uses, Best Practices, and Best New Titles for Fall,” will be useful to anyone involved in engaging reluctant readers, promoting reading success and keeping the library relevant in this era of accountability. Booklist youth editors will moderate as four top series nonfiction publishers—Lerner Publications, ABDO Publishing Company, Norwood House Press and Cherry Lake Publishing—share their expertise and introduce a selection of their fall titles. Webinar participants will also get a sneak peek at Booklist’s Oct. 1 Series Nonfiction Spotlight, including a focus on a new trend: series nonfiction for early primary children. You can sign up here or through Booklist Online webinars page.

Source: American Library Association

Is it a Book? Is it a Movie? Is it a Website? It’s a Digi-Novel

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

From the Article:Is it a book? Is it a movie? Is it a website? Actually it’s all three. Anthony Zuiker, creator of the “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation” U.S. television series, is releasing what he calls a “digi-novel” combining all three media — and giving a jolt to traditional book publishing.

Zuiker has created “Level 26,” a crime novel that also invites readers to log on to a website about every 20 pages using a special code to watch a “cyber-bridge” — a three-minute film clip tied to the story.

Starting next Tuesday, readers can buy the book, visit the website, log in to watch the “cyber-bridges,” read, discuss and contribute to the story.

“Just doing one thing great is not going to sustain business,” he said. “The future of business in terms of entertainment will have to be the convergence of different mediums. So we did that — publishing, movies and a website.”

Source: Reuters

The Economist Now Has a Facebook Page and YouTube Channel

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Direct to Facebook Page

Our page is regularly updated with new articles, upcoming events, topical videos and debates to keep you in touch with the latest analysis of international news and events.

Direct to YouTube Channel from The Economist

Containing videos from the multimedia centre on Economist.com and other brand-related videos, you can view the latest Economist content here. Currently we are featuring a videographic about piracy in Somalia and a film on child brides in Afghanistan.

Source: The Economist

Booklist Revamps Quick Tips E-Newsletter (Free)

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Quick Tips, the popular free monthly e-newsletter for youth librarians and teachers, is growing, relaunching in September 2009 with additional features and enhanced content. Renamed Booklist’s Quick Tips for Schools and Libraries, the newsletter will take greater advantage of Booklist Online’s extensive youth content, drawing from thousands of feature articles and more than 125,000 reviews from both Booklist and Book Links magazines

[Snip]

Quick Tips is unique among e-newsletters in the field, since it regularly features original content. The articles, tied to curricular themes, are written by highly respected practitioners in the field and reflect Booklist Publications’ commitment to promoting literature and literacy. With timely features, interviews and tips designed to enrich library programs and the K–12 classroom curriculum, each monthly issue speeds professional planning and puts a new spin on how to introduce books that will capture and hold children’s interest.

Register Here for Booklist’s Three Free Newsletters

Source: ALA

187 New Magazines Launch And 279 Fold In First Half Of 2009, According To Mediafinder.Com

Monday, August 10th, 2009

A bit late to the party with these stats released about a month ago.

From the Announcement:

New magazines continued to launch in 2009, with 187 new titles in the first half of the year, but a greater number — 279 titles — folded, according to MediaFinder.com.

Regional Interest magazines took a dive in the first half of 2009, with 27 titles folding, including Divine Delights, and Florida Inside Out. Other magazine categories that declined in the first of 2009 include Construction with 18 ceased titles; Lifestyle with 14 ceased titles and Business with 10 ceased titles. There were also 43 publications that ceased their print editions but continued online publications, including East Bay Living and Television Week.

Source: MediaFinder.com

Now With Twitter Feed: Kirkus Reviews

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

The well-known book reviewing resource now as a Twitter feed often providing alerts to new and upcoming reviews. Occasionally, you’ll also find links to complete reviews . You can follow Kirkus at: http://www.twitter.com/kirkusreviews. Btw, the 2009 Kirkus Reviews Reference Book Supplement will be published at the beginning of September.

A Few Interesting Factoids About U.S. Book Buyers

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

A new report from Bowker is out today (it’s a fee-based document, $999/U.S.) and titled, 2008 U.S. Book Consumer Demographics and Buying Behaviors Annual Report. While we haven’t seen the full report, the news release announcing the new publication does contain a few interesting factoids about U.S. book buyers.

+ 57% of book buyers are women yet women purchase 65% of the books sold in the U.S.

+ Mystery books are the most popular genre for book club sales, with 17% of all purchases of mystery books coming directly from book clubs

+ Generation X consumers buy more books online than any other demographic group, with 30% of them buying their books through the Internet

+ 21% of book buyers said they became aware of a book through some sort of online promotion or ad

+ Women made the majority of the purchases in the paperback, hardcover and audio-book segments, but men accounted for 55% of e-book purchases

Source: Bowker

New Words in the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary, 11th Ed., 2009 Update

Friday, July 17th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Hardworking word-lovers everywhere can now learn the meaning of the word staycation (”a vacation spent at home or nearby”) along with nearly 100 other new words and senses added to Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition. America’s best-selling dictionary offers its new 2009 entries in its updated print edition and online at Merriam-Webster.com.

“Our language evolves in many ways,” said John Morse, president and publisher of Merriam-Webster Inc. “As we’ve seen from our Open Dictionary feature on Merriam-Webster.com, people enjoy blending existing words, like combining ’stay’ and ‘vacation’ to make staycation. Staycation is a good example of a word meeting a need and establishing itself in the language very quickly. Our earliest record of use is from 2005, but it seems to have exploded into popular use in 2007.”

“Another example of this kind of creative wordplay from this year’s list,” said Morse, “is frenemy: one who pretends to be a friend but is actually an enemy. But, in addition to these ‘portmanteau words,’ we have added new words from more predictable categories, like science, health, technology, and popular culture, which have also seen widespread use across a variety of publications.”

Many of the new words reflect the importance of the environment (carbon footprint, green-collar), government activities (earmark, waterboarding), health and medicine (cardioprotective, locavore, naproxen, neuroprotective), pop culture (docusoap, fan fiction, flash mob, reggaeton), and online activities (sock puppet, vlog, webisode). Other words added include haram, memory foam, missalette, and zip line.

Source: Merriam-Webster

The World Almanac and Book of Facts Wants You!

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

From a World Almanac Blog Post:

We’re toiling away on the 2010 edition — rounding up the usual updates, sketching out some new features, and starting to argue over some of our annual “editor’s picks” lists, like top news stories and the time capsule.

But why should we have all the fun? This time around, I thought we might try to open that process up a bit, and invite readers to nominate and vote on items for these (and other) lists in the 2010 World Almanac. We’re going to try using Google Moderator to gather your input: visit this link to add suggestions and give a thumbs-up or thumbs-down to other reader’s ideas.

Source: World Almanac

Webcast: Reference Tools: A Look at the Latest Edition (9th) of Black’s Law Dictionary

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

A chat with two attorney’s who reviewed some of the terms in the latest edition of Black’s. They also discuss how they use this reference tool.

Direct to Audio (MP3)

Source: West Publishing / Thomson Reuters

See Also: Black’s Law Dictionary Now Available for the iPhone

Bowker Reports U.S. Book Production Declines 3% in 2008, but “On Demand” Publishing More than Doubles

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

From a News Release:

Bowker today released statistics on U.S. book publishing for 2008, compiled from its Books In Print database. Based on preliminary figures from U.S. publishers, Bowker is projecting that U.S. title output in 2008 decreased by 3.2%, with 275,232 new titles and editions, down from the 284,370 that were published in 2007.

Despite this decline in traditional book publishing, there was another extraordinary year of growth in the reported number of “On Demand” and short-run books produced in 2008. Bowker projects that 285, 394 On Demand books were produced last year, a staggering 132% increase over last year’s final total of 123,276 titles. This is the second consecutive year of triple-digit growth in the On Demand segment, which in 2008 was 462% above levels seen as recently as 2006.

Source: Bowker
Hat Tip: Teleread