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  • Deals

    Pittman Preempted Riverhead's Sarah McGrath preempted Ring of Fire: Marriage, Kids and Other Acts of Reckless Abandon by Good Housekeeping contributing editor and blogger Kyran Pittman; Sally Wofford-Girand at Brick House sold world rights. Through essays on love, family, sex, sex after children, money, foreclosure, etc.

  • Licensing Hotline: January 2009

    News of new licensees for The 39 Clues, Random House’s latest Pixar tie-ins, the first-ever VeggieTales Bible, the latest on Lucy Cousins licensing, a new brand from author Todd Parr, and merchandise and broadcast plans for Gaspard and Lisa.

  • 'Angelology' Goes to Viking

    After a bidding war among seven houses Angelology, the debut novel from Danielle Trussoni, has gone to Viking in a preempt.

  • Deals

    Norton Wins Enright Norton senior editor Maria Guarnaschelli won a best-bid auction for the next novel by Booker Prize—winner Anne Enright; Melanie Jackson made the U.S. rights sale in association with Gill Coleridge in London. Enright is the author of five works of fiction, the most recent being the prize-winning The Gathering, published by Grove.

  • Deals

    Dutton Wins Dunham In her first buy for Dutton, new executive editor Carrie Thornton won a multiple-bidder, two-day auction for comedian-ventriloquist Jeff Dunham's untitled memoir; Peter McGuigan at Foundry made the mid-six-figure North American rights sale. Dunham's account of his life and career will include commentary and other interruptions from his characters.

  • Deals

    Fiction Buys at SMP Jennifer Enderlin at St. Martin's preempted Still Missing by Chevy Stevens in a North American rights deal with Mel Berger at William Morris. The novel, about a woman who is kidnapped by a psychopath while holding an open house no one comes to, is told partly through sessions with the heroine's psychologist.

  • Deals: Week of 12/15/2008

    Ross Re-ups with FSG FSG editor-in-chief Eric Chinski has signed National Book Critics Circle Award—winner Alex Ross to a new two-book deal; Tina Bennett at Janklow & Nesbit sold North American rights. Based on Ross's New Yorker essays, Listen to This will introduce basic musical concepts in a broader conversation about classical and pop music; pub date is 2010.

  • Deals: Week of 12/8/2008

    Baum's Yellow Brick Road Deanne Urmy at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt bested four other bidders for Evan I. Schwartz's Finding Oz: How L. Frank Baum Discovered the Great American Story; Lane Zachary and Todd Shuster at Zachary Shuster Harmsworth negotiated the six-figure North American rights deal, which was made before HMH's acquisitions freeze.

  • Deals: Week of 12/1/2008

    Money Savvy Adrian Zackheim and Adrienne Schultz at Portfolio beat several other bidders in an auction for Zac Bissonette's first book via David Kuhn at Kuhn Projects. The author, a college sophomore and co-editor of AOL's WalletPop.com, will argue that American parents and their high school children need to rethink their approach to choosing and paying for college.

  • Deals: Week of 11/24/2008

    Four More Hours Timothy Ferriss has just signed a major deal with Crown to continue his 4-Hour brand; executive editor Heather Jackson bought world rights to a new 4-Hour title from Stephen Hanselman at Level5 Media. Ferriss, whose The 4-Hour Work Week has sold 600,000 hardcovers to date for Crown, will bring his approach to “lifestyle hacking” to an equally important area of our li...

  • Deals: Week of 11/17/08

    Silverstone to Rodale Pam Krauss at Rodale preempted a diet book by actress and animal rights advocate Alicia Silverstone, tentatively titled The Kind Diet; Peter Steinberg sold world rights. By exploring the connection between what we put in our bodies and what we're doing to the planet, the book will help readers choose the right foods in the kitchen; it will include a three-step diet program...

  • Deals: Another Buffett

    Another Buffett John Glusman at Harmony beat four other bidders in an auction for Peter Buffett’s Life Is What You Make It; Richard Pine at InkWell sold North American rights. Buffett, who forsook the chance to join his father’s business to pursue his own passion for music, will write about values, identity and growing up as one of Warren Buffett’s sons; as a young man, he wa...

  • A Behemoth at Center Stage

    A massive woman with massive problems anchors Tiffany Baker's first novel, The Little Giant of Aberdeen County (Reviews, Sept. 8). The story is told from the viewpoint of Truly Plaice, whose large stature is the result of a glandular disorder. What inspired you to feature such an unusual character? I started with the character—it was like tuning in a radio, and I got the Truly station.

  • Deals: Dorman Gets Debut

    Dorman Gets Debut In an overnight preempt, Pamela Dorman acquired a debut novel called Saving Ceecee Honeycutt for her imprint at Viking; the author is Kentucky native Beth Hoffman, and Catherine Drayton at InkWell sold world rights. Compared to The Secret Life of Bees as well as Steel Magnolias, the novel tells the story of a 12-year-old who spends the first years of her life taking care of he...

  • Licensing Hotline: October 2008

    A compilation of recent licensing news.

  • Deals: Less Is More

    Less Is More Rick Horgan at Crown preempted world rights to Un-Conform: Cancel All Your Meetings, One-Down the Competition and Discover Greatness by 37 Signals founders Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hanson; Lisa DiMona at Lark Productions made the six-figure sale. This manual will urge readers to under-do their competitors, focusing on just the important stuff in order to fight the epidemic ...

  • Q & A with Neil Gaiman

    Children's Bookshelf spoke with Neil Gaiman about his new novel, The Graveyard Book (HarperCollins).

  • Deals: Greenlaw Moves to Viking

    Greenlaw Moves to Viking Viking’s Wendy Wolf has acquired two new nonfiction books by Linda Greenlaw in a world rights deal with Stuart Krichevsky. The first, to be published in summer 2010, marks her return this fall to swordfishing (the career that brought her to the public eye in The Perfect Storm), beginning with her first trip to the Grand Banks in over a decade.

  • Foundry Lands Four Deals

    Last week was a big one for Foundry, the literary agency founded a little over one year ago. Mollie Glick, who left Jean Naggar to join Foundry last month, made her first sale at the agency, conducting an eight-house auction for Lenore Skenazy's Free Range Kids. Alan Rinzler at Jossey-Bass won North American rights to this parenting book, based on the New York Sun column Skenazy wrote about let...

  • Deals: Wilson's Novel

    Wilson's Novel Bob Weil at Norton has acquired world rights to Edward O. Wilson's first novel, The Anthill, as well as his next work of social biology, The Forces of Social Evolution, from John Taylor “Ike” Williams at Kneerim & Williams. The scientist's novel, to pub in 2010, deals with a young man whose life is shaped by poverty, a love of nature and a mission to save a unique...

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