Two HarperCollins Imprints Shut Down

Just add this to the list of Casualties of a Shitty Economy.

HarperCollins Publishers is shutting down two of its imprints, Collins and Bowen Books. Collins published nonfiction, and Bowen was a children’s publisher. Both divisions had reported lackluster sales at the close of last quarter.

HarperCollins CEO Brian Murray wrote the following in a memo distributed today: ”Over the last several months, the unstable economy has had a significant impact on businesses and consumer spending. Our industry is not immune to these market forces, and there is increasing pressure on us, along with our retail and wholesale partners, to adjust.”

Dayum.

Layoffs were also announced. Exiting the company are Steve Ross, who worked previously at Crown, and Barbara Bowen, a former Disney executive who headed her namesake divison at HC. Several other employees were laid off, but an exact number was not disclosed.

This is so goddamn depressing. Why is it that decent, book-lovin’ folks like Ross and Bowen have to lose their jobs, while illiterates like Paris Hilton continue to make money? I just don’t understand.

 

Story Source  Yahoo  |  Image Source  Babble

Adieu, Book World…

In yet another sign of the craptacular financial clusterfuck our country is in, The Washington Post has announced it will do away with Book World, its regular book section. Book World is one of the last remaining stand-alone book review sections in a daily newspaper.

Books will now be a part of the Style and Outlook sections. Great…look for an in-depth criticism of Proust right below an article featuring the latest in pastel-colored legwarmers. Wait. Does anyone wear legwarmers anymore? Or am I the only one?

Deputy Editor Rachel Hartigan Shea, who probably does not wear legwarmers, says the Post prints around 900 book reviews every year. She is hoping the publication will not suffer more than a 25 percent drop in the number of reviews published. Details of the new approach, however, are not definite.

Book World’s final edition will be published next month.

 

Story Source  Yahoo  |  Image Source  The Washington Post

Keitai Novels All the Rage in Japan

Cell phones are about as appealing to me as one of those 28-hour compilation DVDs of “SciFi Classics” (a.k.a. movies no one’s ever heard of) my snarkpanion insists on bringing home from the bargain bin at Best Buy. Nonetheless, I found this story interesting.

In Japan, 86% of high school students read cell phone novels. Yup, that’s just what it sounds like: novels that pop up on your cell phone. Authors publish short novels in 70-word increments, specifically targeted for cell phone reading.

The craze had its origins back in the 90s with the onslaught of pagers, but didn’t really get going till 2002, when writer Yoshi wrote Deep Love: Ayu’s Story for the cell phone. Deep Love, about the trials of a Tokyo prostitute, was a huge success and inspired [print] books, cartoons, a TV series, and a movie.

The cell phone — or keitai in Japanese — is wildly popular in Japan. Nearly every adult has a cell phone, and many adults have two: one for work and one for home. “According to a recent government report, 31.3% of elementary school students and 57.6% of middle school students have cell phones. Research firm Net Asia adds that as many as 22.3% self-identify as cell phone addicts.”

The keitei novels are an ideal way for readers to pass the time on long train commutes.

One other thing I found of particular interest about this story. Most of the keitai novelists (and readers) are women. Nearly all of the authors mentioned in the Japan Today article are female, and one is even a Buddhist nun: Jakucho Setouchi, who translated the The Tale of Genji into modern Japanese, has disclosed that she has written cell phone novels.

 

Story Source  Japan Today via Galleycat  |  Image Source  CBS News

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      WHAT IS A SNARK?




      The Snark is a creature created by Lewis Carroll in his poem "The Hunting of the Snark". To give a proper description of Snarks, one must look no further than Carroll himself, who summed them up in one word: Unimaginable.

      But this much we do know: some have feathers, some have whiskers. Snarks sleep a lot, yet they are an ambitious lot -- with very little sense of humor. They love bathing-machines and tend to bring them wherever they go; they are also handy for striking a light. Snarks live on a far-off island, a place filled with chasms and crags, and are constantly on the lookout for Snark-hunters. Their mortal enemies are hope, care, thimbles and forks.

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