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  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Cookbooks - Back to Basics

    New cookbooks from former New York Times restaurant critic Sam Sifton, Lidia Batianich, the hit HBO series 'True Blood' and more are publishing this fall.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Sci-Fi, Horror, Fantasy - Taking the Plunge

    Going back to childhood and the first days of school, fall is the season of potential. That’s the theme for this fall’s science fiction and fantasy list, which is chock-full of authors both new and familiar embarking on exciting ventures in every area of speculative fiction.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Social Science - Maybe It Does Get Better

    A culture war still rages in America, but consider this: just two weeks ago, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta released an online video that thanked gay members of the military and their families for their service—remarkable, considering that those same service members last year faced court-martial just for being gay. It’s enough to give you hope that Dan Savage is right: maybe it does get better.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Music - Songwriters Turn to Books

    Neil Young, Pete Townshend, Courtney Love, and Wyclef Jean are just some of the big-name musicians with memoirs hitting this fall.

  • Fall 2012 Announcements: Comics and Graphic Novels: Good Yarns

    Why is a story about the sea always called a yarn? This season’s best graphic novels not only include two set on the water but a number of great yarns, some outright science fiction, that present the kind of larger than life stories comics are often known for.

  • Small Towns, Big Sales: Focus on Romance 2012

    Even as shelf space contracts in bricks-and-mortar retailers, publishers still believe in a happily-ever-after for the contemporary romance genre—and one that extends to signing new authors, particularly in the digital space.

  • Yes, Virgil, There Are Men Writing Romance: Focus on Romance 2012

    While female authors still greatly outnumber their male counterparts in the romance category, more men are writing love stories, though not always under their own names.

  • Country Crime: Six Regional Mystery Authors

    As in all genres, the mystery category enjoys trends or fads that capture readers’ attention and garner critical acclaim for a few months or a few years. Think of the ongoing influx of Scandinavian mysteries or the continuing fascination with serial killers or even spillover from Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series resulting in an upsurge of vampire mysteries. Sometimes these trends unfairly obscure the strong body of work represented in less flashy if just as substantial subgenres—in particular, regional mysteries.

  • Paging the Future: Focus on Reference 2012

    The Encyclopedia Britannica is now strictly digital? The thought left many stunned booklovers feeling that the prospects for looking up information were not... well, looking up. It was like learning your grandmother had gotten a tattoo and run off with a younger man.

  • Fall 2012 Announcement Listings Registration

    This page contains instructions and registration access for PW's fall 2012 announcement listings. Publishers wishing to submit their titles through Edelweiss should begin here.

  • Summertime Showtime: Movie Tie-Ins Spring 2012

    Made in America—mostly. Sure, Hollywood’s still pulling the strings, but a lot of the season’s flicks are either set in foreign locales (India, Sweden, Scotland, outer space), and/or filmed beyond Tinseltown (Louisiana, Paris, Russia).

  • Breaking Out

    Coming up on June 4, the Lambda Literary Awards marks the 24th year that the Lambda Literary Foundation has passed out accolades for achievement in LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) writing. The 119 finalists in 24 categories on the slate for the 2011 “Lammys” were selected from a record number of titles that exceeded 600 books (compared to last year’s record 520), which were published by 250 presses, up from 230 last year.

  • The New (Para) Normal

    Want to tackle a challenge? Then try to develop a universally accepted definition of the boundaries of paranormal fiction. Or even a planetary one. There’s just nothing even remotely resembling a consensus, even among some of the top authors with works included in the genre.

  • The Truth Is in the Crime

    “The human heart being what it is,” Truman Capote told George Plimpton in 1966 when discussing In Cold Blood, the story of a Kansas family’s murder that would become a landmark of the true crime genre, “murder was a theme not likely to darken and yellow with time.”

  • Objets d’Art: Art & Photography Books 2012

    The world of art and photography books is one of lushly illustrated and exciting titles, many of which are expensive, too. PW recently asked buyers at five bookstores specializing in art and photography titles to comment on the latest trends in this category and their predictions for the future.

  • Lower Unit Sales, Fewer Titles

    For both fiction and nonfiction hardcover titles, name-brand recognition is the key to bestseller success. While that is not new, the 2011 annual chart had fewer than usual new players. In fiction, there were two novelists debuting in the top 30. George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire series, with five titles, was perhaps the most successful franchise last year. [NOTE: this is a corrected version of the story that ran on 3/19/12].

  • E-books Boom: E-books: Facts and Figures 2012

    Last year was the first time PW gathered annual sales on e-books. Criteria were at least 10,000 copies or more sold during 2010’s 12 months and the publishers polled were the ones that also had print bestsellers. Not all publishers responded, and many submitted selected titles. Nevertheless, the annual list included about 275 titles, an impressive figure. With reports of e-book sales going through the roof last year, we wisely set 25,000 or more for this year’s cutoff point. The 2011 total for 25,000+ is even more impressive—340 titles; only 100 books on the 2010 list hit that mark. Unit sales for the e-books bestsellers also exploded. In 2010, five e-books had sales of 200,000 or more units; in 2011, a whopping 35 titles had sales of more than 200,000. Once again, there were publishers who did not want to share their e-book data while others shared selected titles.

  • Less Is Just Less

    Back in PW’s bestseller report of 2002, there were an astounding number of mass market bestsellers with sales over the million-copy mark. A total of eight books boasted sales of two million and more; an additional 39 claimed more than one million. That’s a dramatic contrast to the total of six million+ players noted in our 2012 report. Two current million-copy authors, John Grisham and Nora Roberts, were among the 2002 two million+, and Roberts had three on that list. The newcomer to the 2011 million-copy club is George R.R. Martin, with four books totaling more than 5.5-million copies.

  • Hardcover Fiction and Nonfiction: Facts and Figures 2012

    Hardcover Fiction Sales, 2011

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