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  • Dispute Over Chicken Soup Brand Settled by HCI, CSSP

    Health Communications, Inc., the original publisher of the Chicken Soup for the Soul franchise, has settled a long-running dispute with Chicken Soup for the Soul Publishing company that gives CSSP rights to all Chicken Soup titles beginning July 1.

  • How the DoJ Changes the Agency vs. Wholesale Argument

    Don Linn, president of Firebrand Associates, offered the paradox concerning the wholesale vs. agency discussion running through publishing circles: "Publishers (often) earn more with wholesale than agency--so what's all the fuss about Amazon?"

  • News Corp. to Split, HC to Join Publishing Group

    News Corp. made it official Thursday morning, announcing that its board of directors has authorized the company’s management to split the company into entertainment and publishing companies.

  • Amazon Bids on Dorchester Assets

    Dorchester Publishing is likely to be acquired by Amazon which has made a bid to acquire the assets of the company.

  • Tracking Amazon: How Well Do Kindle Singles Sell?

    The top two bestselling Kindle Singles titles have cracked the regular Kindle top 100--as of the morning of June 28.

  • '50 Shades' Sales Slow

    Sales of the first book in the series are down 5%, and the sales for the box set are down 45%, according to Nielsen BookScan.

  • Tracking Amazon: Nora Ephron Books Jump

    In the morning after her death, three of Nora Ephron's books have seen a substantial increase in sales and are all in Amazon's top five Movers & Shakers.

  • '50 Ways To Play' E-Book Rides 50 Shades Wave

    Tarcher/Penguin will release the e-book version of 50 Ways to Play: BDSM for Nice People on June 29, with the paperback to follow on August 2.

  • Morgan James Launches Speakers Bureau

    Looking to give its authors a boost on the press circuit, Morgan James Publishing’s founder and CEO, David Hancock, has announced the launch of an in-house Speakers Bureau.

  • Authors Guild Sees Return of Predatory Pricing if DoJ Deal Stands

    With the time to submit comments to the DoJ about its settlement with publishers over its e-book pricing fixing case almost up, the Authors Guild filed its comments late Monday and minced no words in saying that the agreement would be a huge victory for Amazon.

  • Ruppel to Head McGraw-Hill Education International

    New McGraw-Hill Education CEO Lloyd "Buzz" Waterhouse" has announced a restructuring of the company's international business in order to create an integrated organization that leverages content.

  • 'Fahrenheit 451' Keeps Selling Following Bradbury's Death

    Since Ray Bradbury's death on June 5, his most famous work has been steadily increasing in sales.

  • Agency vs. Wholesale Webcast Announced

    O'Reilly is hosting a webcast, "Agency vs. Wholesale Model: Which One Is Best?" featuring Don Linn, president of Firebrand Associates, and Joe Wikert, general manager and publisher at O'Reilly.

  • Indie Publishers Back Agency Model, Criticize DoJ Deal

    Nine independent publishers have combined to file joint comments objecting to the pending settlements of the Department of Justice's lawsuit with Hachette, HarperCollins, and Simon & Schuster related to e-book pricing.

  • Thomson-Shore and Clays Ltd. Agree

    The global print initiative gives both printers access to each other’s market.

  • HMH Out of Chapter 11

    After receiving court approval for its restructuring plan last Thursday, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt announced late Friday that it had completed its financial restructuring and emerged from its Chapter 11.

  • June 3 is Trial Date for E-book Antitrust Case

    After weighing different proposals from the parties involved, Judge Denise Cote has set June 3, 2013 as the date for the Department of Justice’s e-book price fixing case against Apple, Penguin and Macmillan to begin.

  • Tracking Amazon: 'Becoming Sister Wives' Skyrockets Following TV Special

    On June 24, TLC aired the mid-season finale of Sister Wives and then immediately followed with NBC News' Natalie Morales interview with Kody Brown and his wives.

  • News Briefs: Week of June 25, 2012

    Harper Realigns Sales Group and more

  • ‘The Art Forger:’ Can Lightning Strike Twice for Algonquin?

    In a day and age when computer data rule book ordering and midlist authors can be penalized for their track records, Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill is trying to give Barbara Shapiro a fresh start for The Art Forger. It’s a tack that the press, an imprint of Workman Publishing, used successfully six years ago when it bought Sara Gruen’s novel about the world of the circus. Water for Elephants became a huge hit and was turned into a movie. Although Algonquin never claimed that the book, which was widely embraced by independent booksellers, was Gruen’s first, it did nothing to promote the fact that she had previously published two others, Flying Horses and Riding Lessons.

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