Browse archive by date:
  • Danielle Steel to Do Children's Book for HC

    HarperCollins has acquired world rights to new children's picture book by Danielle Steel, The Happiest Hippo in the World.

  • Rose Goes to Morrow

    Rose Goes to Morrow Morrow executive editor Henry Ferris prevailed over three other bidders for a new book by Daniel Asa Rose called Larry’s Kidney: (Being the Story of) How I Found Myself in China with My Black Sheep Cousin and His Mail Order Bride, Breaking Chinese Law to Get Him a Transplant—and Save His Life.

  • Levy on Google

    Levy on Google S&S publisher David Rosenthal has acquired a new book by Steven Levy titled Searching for Google; Flip Brophy at Sterling Lord sold world rights, and senior editor Bob Bender will edit. Levy, chief technology writer at Newsweek, will tell how Google manages to realize its ambitions and how it generates new ideas and maintains a startup mentality in the face of explosive growt...

  • Levy on Google

    Levy on Google S&S publisher David Rosenthal has acquired a new book by Steven Levy titled Searching for Google; Flip Brophy at Sterling Lord sold world rights, and senior editor Bob Bender will edit. Levy, chief technology writer at Newsweek, will tell how Google manages to realize its ambitions and how it generates new ideas and maintains a startup mentality in the face of explosive growt...

  • Debut Preempts

    Debut Preempts Ellen Archer and Pamela Dorman at Voice preempted Cathy Marie Buchanan’s The Day the Falls Stood Still via Dorian Karchmar at William Morris, who sold North American rights. Set in Niagara Falls, Ontario, during WWI, this first novel focuses on a privileged young girl who suffers a tragedy that leaves her sister dead and her family disgraced, and a handsome, working-class ...

  • Tuttle to Publish U.S. Edition of Murdoch Tell-All

    The Far Eastern Economic Review, which Rupert Murdoch recently acquired, killed a review of the Viking Australia book Rupert's Adventures in China due to the book’s unfavorable look at Murdoch. With the book set for U.S. release this summer, it’s unclear how the media will handle it.

  • Race, Adversity and Triumph

    Race, Adversity and Triumph Chris Jackson at Spiegel & Grau beat five other houses in an auction for Wes Moore's Elevate; Linda Loewenthal at the David Black Agency sold world rights. The book will recount the author's triumph over a troubled adolescence to become a Rhodes Scholar, a White House Fellow and an investment banker by the age of 29, and will also follow the parallel life of anot...

  • Deen in New Deal with Simon & Schuster

    Bestselling author Paula Deen has inked at new multiple-book deal with Simon & Schuster, her publisher since 2002. In addition to cookbooks, the Food Network star will do a book on style and and children's cookbook.

  • Yates to Direct 'Hallows'?

    Though it has not yet been confirmed by Warner Bros., David Yates, who is currently directing Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince in London, may have nabbed the same job for the forthcoming Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final Potter film.

  • Norton Wins New Rosenberg

    Norton Wins New Rosenberg Bob Weil at Norton beat out six other houses in an auction for Tina Rosenberg's The Social Cure: Cracking the World's Toughest Problems Through the Power of the Group; Gail Ross sold North American rights. The book will look at intractable social problems, both global and domestic, that appear to have no solutions, providing inspirational cases in which peer pressure h...

  • Kensington Acquires Holloway House Backlist

    Kensington Publishing has acquired most of the publishing assets of Holloway House Publishing in Los Angeles, the original publisher of such classic black crime writers as Donald Goines, adding an historic trove of gritty African American popular literature to its publishing program.

  • Hyperion Auctions

    Hyperion Auctions Ellen Archer and Pamela Dorman at Voice won an auction for a debut novel titled The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe; Suzanne Gluck sold North American rights in this seven-figure, two-book deal. The debut, which begins with a Harvard graduate student cleaning out an old Marblehead family home and finding a slip of paper that sets her on a reckoning with her ...

  • Atria and CBS Films Bank on Flynn

    Atria has re-signed author Vince Flynn, inking him to a four-book deal, while corporate sister CBS Films has optioned the rights to the author's Mitch Rapp character for a potential film franchise.

  • One Author, Two Deals

    One Author, Two Deals In early January, Washington and Lee English professor Laura Brodie sold her first novel, The Widow’s Season, to Jackie Cantor at Berkley via Gail Hochman, who sold world English. Brodie was also at work on a memoir, titled One Good Year, about homeschooling her eldest daughter for fifth grade while her other two daughters continued at the public school.

  • S&S Wins New Fischer

    Bob Bender at S&S beat out at least five other houses in an auction for U.S. rights to a new book by David Hackett Fischer, in a deal rumored to be worth $800,000. Scott Moyers at the Wylie Agency represented Fischer in negotiations.

  • David Sedaris Becomes Engulfed in Flames

    David Sedaris's sixth collection of essays has undergown a third title change before it's June 3, 2008 one-day laydown. The newly titled When You Are Engulfed in Flames has an announced first printing of 650,000.

  • Twelve Rushing Paperback of McCain's 'Hard Call'

    After releasing John McCain's Hard Call in hardcover on August 2007, when the politician's run for the White House was crumbling, Twelve is hoping to have a second crack at the proverbial sales apple with a rushed paparback edition of the title slated for a February 29 release.

  • Not a Moment Too Earley

    Four years after being prematurely tapped for Granta's Best of the Young American Novelists club, Tony Earley finally released his debut novel, Jim the Boy (2000), a Depression-era pastoral about a 10-year-old and his North Carolina family. Eight years on, Little, Brown is releasing the sequel, The Blue Star (Reviews, Dec.

  • Hoop Dreams

    Hoop Dreams Mark Tavani at Random won an auction for George Dohrmann's Take Their Hearts Out via Andrew Blauner, who sold world rights. The Sports Illustrated writer, who won the Pulitzer in 2000 at the age of 27, will draw on eight years of reporting to immerse readers in the world of grassroots basketball.

  • Simon Spotlight to Publish Jose Canseco's Vindicated

    After Berkley/Penguin passed last week on Vindicated, Jose Canseco's follow-up to his memoir Juiced, Simon Spotlight has announced it will publish the book, in which Canseco vows to “save the game I love.”

X
Stay ahead with
Tip Sheet!
Free newsletter: the hottest new books, features and more
X
X
Email Address

Password

Log In Forgot Password

Premium online access is only available to PW subscribers. If you have an active subscription and need to set up or change your password, please click here.

New to PW? To set up immediate access, click here.

NOTE: If you had a previous PW subscription, click here to reactivate your immediate access. PW site license members have access to PW’s subscriber-only website content. If working at an office location and you are not "logged in", simply close and relaunch your preferred browser. For off-site access, click here. To find out more about PW’s site license subscription options, please email Mike Popalardo at: mike@nextstepsmarketing.com.

To subscribe: click here.