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  • Strength in Stitchery

    The DIY trend kick-started by a younger generation forming Stitch ’n Bitch knitting circles in the early 2000s hardly seems like a trend any longer. A decade and change on, it’s simply a part of the culture. As a result, publishers have seen the craft category—which encompasses titles about sewing, knitting, crochet, jewelry making, and just about any other handmade art you can think of—grow to a stable level of healthy demand.

  • Fiction Firsts for Fall: First Fiction 2012

    PW looks at 10 particularly intriguing and promising debut novels. A strikingly varied assortment, these fictional works discuss artificial intelligence, the extinction of human life, and the Iraq War from two distinctly different viewpoints.

  • Fall 2012 Audiobook Listings: The Sounds of Autumn

    Early fall audiobooks are already winging their way to retailers (digitally and otherwise), as casting and recording of the remainder of the season’s titles is in full swing. In our latest listing, we turn a spotlight on some of this robust season’s most interesting offerings.

  • Fall 2012 Religion Listings: No-brainers and Devout Wishes

    Some things don’t change. A few fall titles seem destined for greatness in sales. Grace: More than We Deserve, Greater than We Imagine by Max Lucado has a lot of things going for it: Lucado’s track record of millions and millions of books sold, a quarter-million dollar launch budget, and a concept—grace—that is one of Christian theology’s kindest. Also likely for the winner’s circle is The Bridge by Karen Kingsbury. Readers consume her inspirational novels like cookies; this one has some bonus ingredients in the recipe: it’s Christmasy, though not extensively so, and it features a financially threatened independent bookstore.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Literary Biographies, Essays, & Criticism - The Last Word

    When it comes to an author’s legacy, who gets the last word? (Let’s forget for a moment the noble idea that the work speaks for itself.) Is it the author, the biographer, or the critic? Fall’s books offer fans and scholars a multitude of perspectives on the literary life.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Science - The Sun, Energy, and Numbers, Oh, My

    From exploring the universe to understanding the role of mathematics, science books range widely this fall. There are cataclysms both cosmic and Earth-bound; a scientist takes on a Bible story; sleep gets a close examination; and numbers are made to show off their exciting side.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Sports - The Sporting News

    Inevitably, sports books sell and get significant attention when they are driven by events—great contests, great scandals, or the kinds of personalities that are events in themselves. This fall, there are several titles that stand out as likely to benefit from combinations of those headline-grabbing factors.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Poetry - Lives' Work

    Poetry is bringing out some of its biggest guns for fall 2012, massive retrospective collections from some of the most famous poets—and some of them are actually famous, not just poetry-famous—writing in English. Along with being famous, many of this fall’s poets are important and breathtakingly good. There are a bunch of poetry books coming out that everyone who reads poetry will have to own.

  • Introducing Our Fall 2012 Announcements

    Here are our editors’ picks of the notable books of the season by category, 1,093 titles in all across the 19 categories, ranging from art, business, and cookbooks to fiction, memoir, lifestyle, poetry, sports, and travel. Our editors also selected their top 10 books in each category, which they introduce with essays. We hope that this selection gives booksellers, librarians, and media a good snapshot of what the fall season holds in store. It’s bound to be cooler...right?

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Romance - Home Is Where the Hearts Are

    This fall’s romance listings have appeal for adventurers and risk-takers, but shy spirits needn’t worry—there’s also plenty of cozy comfort reading. It turns out there are as many definitions of “home” as there are couples looking to build new lives together.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Politics - Beyond Partisanship

    After an Obama-centric spring that tried to prep (or inflame) conscientious readers before the election, fall’s titles consider matters of state other than partisan gridlock. At least, some of them do.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Memoir

    Memoirs look at life: for Richard Russo, whose novels reflect his working-class origins, it’s contemplating a childhood marked by poverty in the factory town of Gloversville, N.Y., but also gifted with the love and inspiration of his mother, in Elsewhere: A Memoir. Literary critic Marco Roth tells a different story of childhood in The Scientists: A Family Romance.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Art & Architecture - Green Is the Color

    The environment is on everyone’s mind, one way or other, whether it is a subject that invites debate or advocacy—or terror. This fall’s books—especially in architecture but also in other, subtler contexts—will keep the environment front and center.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: History & Military History - From Monticello to Monte Cristo

    We mustn’t let the continuing plethora of books on the Civil War and Abraham Lincoln, not to mention commemorations of the War of 1812, mask the variety of history and military history books coming out this fall.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Mysteries & Thrillers - Distinguished Debuts, Hot Historicals

    This season boasts a number of impressive first novels, led by Ariel S. Walker’s The Twenty-year Death, which consists of three interrelated sections, each written in the style of an iconic crime writer—Georges Simenon, Raymond Chandler, and Jim Thompson—and set, respectively, in 1931, 1941, and 1951. This tour de force, as J.I. Baker notes in his boxed PW review, “transcends the formal gimmick at its heart.”

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Travel - It’s a Small World, After All

    Travel literature dates back to a time when seeing the world was an expensive and time-consuming enterprise reserved for the privileged, like Charles Dickens, whose Pictures from Italy, about a yearlong trip to Italy, combined his gifts of imagination and observation.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Business - It's the Economy, Stupid

    The two big themes of the economy in the past few years—the economic recovery, or lack thereof, from the Great Recession, and the march of technology—are reflected in business books set to hit retailers and e-tailers this fall. And with this being a presidential election year, some of the business titles contain a dose of politics.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Performing Arts - A World of Entertainment

    Broadway takes center stage in this fall's performing arts titles.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Lifestyle - From the Spiritual to the Profane—Really

    This fall's lifestyle books are all about mermaids, diets, and knowing when to say f**k it.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Fiction - Gone Hollywood

    In the next sixth months new books will arrive from the likes of Junot Díaz, Michael Chabon, Barbara Kingsolver, Mark Helprin, and more U.K. writers than you could cram into a lorry, including Zadie Smith, Irvine Welsh, and Martin Amis.

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