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  • BEA 2013: Peter Gethers: It’s Easier to Love the Cat

    Although he admits to being too squeamish to become an animal doctor, publishing veteran Peter Gethers, author of the bestselling cat trilogy about his beloved cat Norton, has written Ask Bob (Holt, Aug.), a new novel about a vet and pet columnist in New York City who discovers that the best relationships are often the most surprising.

  • BEA 2013: Lisa Scottoline: Inspired by Her Family

    Chatting with bestselling crime novelist Lisa Scottoline, whose latest Rosato & Associates book is Accused (St. Martin’s, Oct.), is reminiscent of listening to the late Erma Bombeck read one of her commentaries about life: there is no pretense or self-consciousness, but plenty of warm laughter that spills over and punctuates her self-assessment.

  • BEA 2013: Doris Kearns Goodwin: Unfriending, 20th-Century Style

    “I love the Progressive Era: it’s one of the most dramatic and exciting eras in American history,” historian Doris Kearns Goodwin declares of the early 20th century.

  • BEA 2013: Ishmael Beah: After War

    Ishmael Beah came to prominence as a former child soldier who survived the civil war in Sierra Leone and wrote of his harrowing experiences in the 2007 bestselling memoir A Long Way Gone.

  • BEA 2013: IDPF 2013: Authors, Readers, Data, the Future

    While there was much anticipation over Goodreads founder Otis Chandler's post-Amazon-acquisition update at this year's IDPF 2013 Digital Book Conference at BEA, it was Writer's Digest publisher Phil Sexton who might have stolen the day, with the results of a survey of author reactions to self-publishing vs. traditional publishing.

  • HC Providing Digital Galleys to Its Authors

    HarperCollins has started a new program called e-Insider that will deliver digital galleys to its authors to use in their promotional efforts.

  • BEA 2013: The Readium Foundation Revs Up

    March 25 marked an important step forward in the evolution of digital publishing: the introduction of the Readium Foundation, a membership-based nonprofit formed to develop commercial-grade, open source e-reading software.

  • BEA 2013: Navigating the Digital Path

    The year 2015 may be a landmark year for many educational publishers, says CMO Rahul Arora of MPS Limited.

  • BEA 2013: The E-book Boom Years

    E-book sales of trade titles rose 44% in 2012 and have skyrocketed an astounding 4,660% since the format first began to gain traction in 2008, according to BookStats, the book industry statistical program overseen by the Association of American Publishers and the Book Industry Study Group.

  • BEA 2013: Digital Readers: E Ink, Tablets, Phones, and Phablets

    While Amazon and Apple continue to dominate the digital reading marketplace with their respective devices, that hasn’t stopped other manufacturers from introducing new upgraded e-readers, both dedicated E Ink devices, tablets, and hybrids.

  • BEA 2013: Discovering the Digital players

    To accommodate the growing number of digital companies that are now exhibiting at the show, BookExpo America officials have revamped and expanded the exhibit area into a new Digital Discovery Zone.

  • BEA 2013: The Seven Deadly Myths of Digital Publishing

    E-books may now outsell mass market paperbacks, but successfully selling digital editions of novels and other text-centric titles is only the first phase of a profound transformation of all segments of the traditional book publishing business.

  • Publishing Hackathon Prepares for BEA

    The Publishing Hackathon, a collaborative digital programming event for the book publishing industry focused on solving the digital discovery challenge, happened over 32 hours last weekend.

  • BEA Upbeat: Consumer Day, Live Streaming Plans

    Two weeks before BookExpo America officially kicks off, officials have released details on its live streaming program and talked a bit about expectations for the second consumer day planned for Saturday June 1.

  • Hackathon Update

    Approximately 170 hackers have signed up so far to take part in the Perseus Books Group-sponsored Publishing Hackathon, an event designed to put together teams to develop new approaches to book discoverability.

  • BEA 2013: Bringing in the Readers

    Last year BookExpo America invited the public for the first time.

  • BEA 2013: BEA’s Big Tent

    Book publishers, like all media producers, are well aware that generating valued content is only half the battle—the rest is getting it to consumers where, when, and how they want it.

  • BEA 2013: Map of the Houses

    At BookExpo America (BEA), the entire world of publishing seems to be jammed into New York's cavernous Javits Center, a convention space puzzle that can prove tiring to navigate, difficult to master, and ever harder to leave ("Taxi!").

  • BEA 2013: An In-Depth Preview

    Exhibitor listings, galleys to grab, bookstore of the year and more.

  • BEA 2013: Factory Town: New York City's MFA Industry

    Manufacturing in the U.S. might well be dead, but New York City’s M.F.A. programs are keeping the publishing industry in gear, boasting many of the nation’s most well-respected writers as faculty, and nurturing the literary stars of tomorrow.

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