Archive for the ‘Industry news’ Category

Temple wins the 2010 Miles Franklin for ‘Truth’ (Text Publishing)


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Posted: 23 June 2010 at 9:21 am

Well, as we reported in a special bulletin to our Weekly Book Newsletter subscribers last night, Peter Temple’s Truth (Text) is the winner of this year’s Miles Franklin Literary Award. (You can read our original review here.)

Not surprisingly, Text publisher Michael Heyward told us he was ‘over the moon’, following Temple’s win. He said Truth had ‘changed the possibility of the crime novel’. ‘Truth is a crime novel but also a novel about crime. It’s a contemporary tragedy,’ he said.

But, as Temple told Matthia Dempsey, in this interview from our September 2009 issue of the magazine, there was a time during the writing process for Truth when Heyward wasn’t quite so happy…

(Oh, and by the way, did you know the Miles Franklin was hitting the road? The ceremony comes to Melbourne in 2011 and other capital cities after that.)

INTERVIEW: Peter Temple on ‘Truth’ (Text Publishing)

You’ve referred to Truth as ‘the so-called sequel’ to The Broken Shore because, although that’s how it’s likely to be pitched, it’s not really a sequel. Why did you choose to focus on Villani, rather than write a second book on Cashin? Were you trying to avoid another series?

I love the Jack Irish series in a parental way. It’s part of me. And, to my great surprise and joy, many people want another Jack Irish book in the same way I once wanted another James Bond novel (well, perhaps not quite as much). But the idea of another series fills me with terror. When it came to think about what to write after The Broken Shore, I found myself thinking about Stephen Villani (a minor player in The Broken Shore). I’d enjoyed his character and I thought I’d try to capture him and his world in a way that treated cops as ordinary people who, as the poet said, have to save the sum of things for pay.

The Broken Shore won the Duncan Lawrie Dagger among many other awards. How did the success of that book affect the writing of this one?

It’s not the success or otherwise of the last book that matters. It’s that every book drains the well and it takes an ever-greater effort to begin each new one. I also have a horror of repeating myself, something that doesn’t help matters.

Truth follows two homicide investigations but also takes in the world of media and politics. Do you draw on your experience as a court reporter in creating your plots? Do you do a lot of research to get these worlds right?

Writing draws on everything that’s ever happened to you. My aim is always to get the feel of the book right. But it’s fiction. I make stuff up. That’s the fun of it.

As with The Broken Shore, one of the very appealing aspects of Truth is that the pared-back nature of the book makes the reader work a bit harder to keep everything in their headto make connections, remember characters. Is this your intention?

I like reading books that make you work, make you join the bits, reach your own conclusions, and so I try to write books like this.

Truth is set in the city but visits the country and The Broken Shore included descriptions of the natural world; what appeals to you about writing about nature?

Part of being a writer is being an observer. I like looking closely at things. I like staring at things, waiting for them to reveal themselves. To capture these impressions in ways that speak to the reader is the great challenge of writing. It’s also its greatest pleasure.

You’ve said that when you’re writing a book you don’t know where it’s going. Can you tell us at what point in the writing process you worked it all out? Was your publisher at all worried?

I generally begin to understand the story about three-quarters of the way through the writing. I don’t know how the process works but I now know that there is a process at work. I think worried is too mild a word for my publisher’s state of mind while he waited for the book. I think he had secretly given up on it. But he understands what miserable, lying creatures writers are and he never lets them off the hook, never gives them the excuse they are looking for to chuck the whole thing in.

Can you tell us what you’re working on next?

I’m fiddling around with the fifth Jack Irish novel and thinking about returning to the territory of In the Evil Day.

Kobo launch: forget about the device, look at the titles


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Posted: 25 May 2010 at 6:01 pm

[a version of this article first appeared in Crikey on Friday 21 May as a subscriber-only story. Many thanks to Crikey and its editor Sophie Black for permission to reproduce it here on Fancy Goods—TC]

As the REDgroup rolls out its Kobo ebooks platform, let’s forget about the device for a moment and look instead at the title offer. Mainstream media stories seemed to be all about the Kobo ereader, but this launch represents a notable step in the development of a local ebook market not because of the gizmo but because it’s the first time an ebook retailer has been able to offer a significant range of Australian ebooks to sell, across a range of reading devices. (Dymocks, of course, was a pioneer in launching its ebook offer in 2007, but Dymocks arguably went too early and have been held back thus far by a lack of local content …)

The Kobo reader itself is cheap—at $199 it’s pretty much the cheapest dedicated ereader on the market, and it is pretty basic. But that’s not really the point: ereading is quickly moving away from proprietary devices and multiple formats toward files in a standard format (ePub) that can be read on a range of devices. One of Kobo’s stated advantages is that it is cross-platform: Kobo promises that its ePub titles—while still being restricted/protected by Digital Rights Management to prevent copying/sharing—will be able to be read on a range of devices from smartphones to tablets to laptops to desktop PCs. And if you have ePub or PDF files from other sources, they should be readable on the Kobo reader or in the Kobo apps.  (Frustratingly, if you have already bought yourself a Kindle from Amazon &/or you have Kindle ebook files downloaded on your computer or iPhone, you probably won’t be able to easily read those on the Kobo reader … Amazon supplies its ebooks in a proprietary format that ties them to either the Kindle reader device or Kindle app.)

But what about the list of titles on offer? Kobo seems to have energised and engaged with Australian publishers in a way that the overseas players (Kindle, Apple, etc) haven’t so far. Australian readers will now be able to go to one place to buy ebook versions of books published by up to 100 local publishers, ranging from the local offerings of the multinationals: HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Pan Macmillan and Hachette, for example; to books from Allen & Unwin (which has offered many of its titles as ebooks for a number of years), MUP, UQP, Scribe, Text and many others from Australia’s diverse independent publishers. ‘The offer is about us trying to offer as many Australian titles on this open platform as we can,’ REDgroup’s communications manager Malcolm Neil said. Here are some authors whose titles you can buy now on Kobo you can’t (yet) get on Kindle: Kate Grenville, Shane Maloney, Peter Temple, Malcolm Knox, Thomas Kenneally … (more…)

Australian Book Design Awards: winners announced


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Posted: 21 May 2010 at 2:59 pm

The winners of this year’s Australian Publishers Association Book Design Awards were announced in a special event in Sydney last night. The winning books were:

Best designed cover Best designed book Best designed cookbook
Best designed nonfiction book Best designed fiction book Best designed literary fiction book
Best designed reference/scholarly book Best designed specialist illustrated book Best designed general illustrated book
Best designed YA book Best designed children’s fiction book Best designed children’s nonfiction book
Best designed children’s picture book Best designed children’s cover Best designed children’s series
Best designed primary education book Best designed secondary education book Best designed tertiary & further education book

Also announced on the night was the Young Designer of the Year award, which went this year to Swerve designer Adam Laszczuk for a body of work that also included the following titles:

 

What do you think? You can check out the shortlisted books on the Australian Publishers Association site here.

Excuse us while we take a moment…


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Posted: 20 May 2010 at 5:42 pm

We’re pretty snowed under here at Bookseller+Publisher headquarters, putting the finishing touches on the July issue after getting out this week’s bumper issue of the Weekly Book Newsletter.

Last week, Matthia was sweating it out at Darwin’s Wordstorm writers festival (you can read her post on Wordstorm here) and this week Andrea is soaking up Sydney Writers Festival (and heading to tonight’s Book Design Awards to see what titles are declared Australia’s best-looking: see the contenders here). This is what Andrea’s desk looks like now:

Also, as we reported in the Weekly Book Newsletter, REDgroup Retail, which owns Borders Asia-Pacific (and Angus & Robertson and Whitcoulls in New Zealand), launched its Kobo ebook platform yesterday, as well as its Kobo ereader: (more…)

BOOK REVIEW: Manning Clark: A Life (Allen & Unwin)


Posted: 17 May 2010 at 11:18 am

Manning Clark: A Life by Brian Matthews (Allen & Unwin) was announced as the winner of this year’s $20,000 National Biography Award this morning. Author Brendan Gullifer reviewed the book for us back in the October 2008 issue of Bookseller+Publisher, giving it five stars. Here’s what he had to say at the time:

Ironic, playful, iconoclastic and provocative, historian Manning Clark left an indelible mark on this country, our thinking, how we view ourselves and our past. In this brilliant new biography, Brian Matthews follows up his award-winning work on Henry Lawson’s mother (Louisa) with an unflinching, detailed, poignant and beautifully written portrait of a brilliant mind wracked with uncertainty, sensitive to criticism, crippled by a lack of self esteem and haunted by his faith and alcoholism. In his early years as a young academic, Clark grappled with numerous literary false-starts and doubts. He was fuelled by an overwhelming desire to write coupled with a fear that he might have nothing to say. Ultimately, his six volumes of Australian history were, according to Matthews, ‘the most ambitious, visionary evocation of the annals of his country every attempted’. And, Matthews explains, the ‘fault finders were assiduous and mean’. Clark was a man alive, one of the great teachers of his time, unfettered by the academic cloisters within which he worked, writing history in a way that still inspires and manages to capture our great, sprawling and often contrary national story in prose that is elegant, at times baroque, and—like this biography—never dull.

Brendan Gullifer is a Melbourne writer, his first novel, Sold, was published by Sleepers Publishing in 2009. This review first appeared in the October 2008 issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine. You can read the April 2010 issue of the magazine online here.

Google Editions: about ‘surfacing books’ not replacing bookstores, says Palma


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Posted: 5 May 2010 at 6:29 pm

The article below originally appeared in our Weekly Book Newsletter, back in February, but with the recent mainstream coverage of the fact Google is planning to sell ebooks, we thought it might be worth re-posting here: 

As an addendum event to the digital publishing symposium in Melbourne, a ‘digital chat’ session featuring Google’s Chris Palma, was held in February at the State Library of Victoria.

Palma took the audience through the concepts of the Google Books publisher partner program, in which publishers allow Google to scan the full text of books and then make percentages of this content viewable by customers on the publisher’s website or through Google’s search engine.

Interestingly, Palma said that when publishers in the program increased the percentage of the full-text that was viewable, the hits on the publisher’s ‘buy’ button for those books increased. While he did not recommend making the full 100% available to read he did say that ‘north of 20%’ resulted in more purchases.

Google Editions
Palma also outlined the workings of Google Editions, an ebook warehouse ‘in the cloud’ that would allow readers to purchase ebooks (in the case of Google Editions a license to read the electronic version of the book anywhere ‘in perpetuity’) via Google, a publisher’s website or through retailers’ sites (the latter being Google’s professed preference).

Under the Google Editions model, a book’s publisher retains 63% of revenue from a book sale while Google retains the remaining 37% or splits it with any retailer (in a split that is individually negotiated).

Some in the audience voiced concern that Google would ultimately push booksellers out of the supply chain, a claim that Palma insisted was not the case, emphasising that Google was not good at ‘merchandising’ and that its speciality was its search capability. ‘It’s about surfacing books’ for Google users who might not otherwise even have considered purchasing one, he said.

[Then] Australian Booksellers Association CEO Malcolm Neil [update: Neil has since joined REDgroup Retail, owner of Borders, Angus & Robertson and Whitcoulls in Australia and New Zealand, as Communications manager] said he was not concerned about Google’s entry into the digital supply chain and that it could in fact be of benefit, especially to independent booksellers. ‘I’m particularly excited about Google Editions,’ he said. ‘In the world of internet behemoths Google is more bookseller-friendly than most.’

Small(er) publishers to the fore: a surprise Australian Publishers Association election result


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Posted: 3 May 2010 at 12:08 pm

Annual general meetings are usually pretty dreary affairs: financial reports are read out, there is lots of proposing and seconding on the previous year’s minutes and the like, and then new office-bearers are announced. AGMs of the Australian Publishers Association (APA) usually follow much the same pattern, but this year’s APA AGM, held last Thursday in Sydney, held some surprises.

The main surprise was that there was an election for the presidency of the APA, and that the likely favourite didn’t win. Running against the high-profile Penguin Australia CEO Gabrielle Coyne was the little-known Stephen May, a psychologist and the founder of Brisbane-based Australian Academic Press. May apparently sent a letter introducing himself to all APA members and did some concerted lobbying, particularly among the smaller publishers and the academic/scholarly members, and he gained a majority of the votes from the APA’s diverse membership of 230 companies to seal the result.

There was also a strong range of candidates for the eight positions on the APA’s Independent Publishers Committee, with elections to decide the convenor (Rex Finch of Finch Publishing was elected) and the committee members, who represent publishers such as UQP, UNSW Press, Magabala, Spinifex and the National Library of Australia.

For many years there has been grumbling among the smaller publishers that the APA was dominated by the all-powerful Trade Publishers Committee, which in turn was dominated by the multinational companies (Penguin, Random, HarperCollins, Hachette, etc). The last few years have seen the composition of the APA’s senior office-bearers become more diverse and to better represent the breadth of publishing activity undertaken in Australia (for a start, it’s not often acknowledged in public ‘bookish’ spheres that educational publishing, from primary through to tertiary, makes up at least half of the publishing business in Australia).

When the election for the presidency was announced a few weeks ago, APA CEO Maree McKaskill told the Weekly Book Newsletter that it was ‘the sign of a healthy organisation that is not dormant’. She added: ‘The campaign on parallel importation of books [last year] has certainly created a real bond between the publishers and re-invigorated the membership so that they value the organisation and as such the elections reflect that.’

The composition of the new board of the APA is certainly more diverse than ever, with representatives from Black Dog Books, LemonFizz Media and Cengage sitting alongside those from Allen & Unwin, Random House and Pearson. Stephen May is to be congratulated on his election as president. His challenge is to bring together the differing views and priorities of publishers from varying sectors and to be able to present a united stance when needed (for the government’s Book Industry Study Group, for example).

Miller and the Miles Franklin: Do we have too many awards?


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Posted: 23 April 2010 at 4:47 pm

From today’s Crikey newsletter, former Bookseller+Publisher editor and literary blogger Angela Meyer writes:

Are there too many literary awards in Australia, and is our oldest one “slipping away”? If an Australian literary award was provided increased funding and focus, would the Miles Franklin be the most relevant?

Every year the Miles Franklin Literary Award attracts some debate and controversy, but the award’s prestige is waning, noted Alex Miller — a two-time winner and shortlisted author in this year’s awards — at the shortlisting ceremony yesterday. Miller, as reported in The Australian, said Prime Minister “Rudd the Dud” and arts minister Peter Garrett should have invested in the nation’s oldest literary award, instead of creating the Prime Minister’s Literary Award in 2008 (worth $100,000, to the MF’s $42,000), which he said “gets no publicity and will probably disappear when someone else becomes prime minister”.

Miller’s main point is that there are too many literary awards, and so it’s inevitable that there will be less focus on each. Besides the Prime Minister’s awards, there are various state Premier’s awards, and many other trust, media, festival, company and privately funded awards. Many are relevant for their individual fields and genres (such as the CBCA awards for children’s and young adult literature) but dispersing funding around for fiction awards when one solid, prestigious and attention-focused literary award could be developed, is a good point. Would the public pay more attention?

If this was put into effect, though, is the Miles Franklin really the award for the job? Sure, it was established in 1957, and has been won by culturally important, and stimulating, authors and books. Patrick White’s Voss was the recipient of the first award, as Miller noted. But the Miles Franklin’s criteria is stricter than awards established since: “It is awarded for the novel of the year which is of the highest literary merit and presents Australian life in any of its phases”. This is what Miles Franklin included with her bequest. What “Australian life in any of its phases” means, exactly, is something that comes up often in discussion of the shortlisted books. (more…)

Emerging Writers Festival: program launched


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Posted: 23 April 2010 at 11:11 am

The program for the 7th Emerging Writers Festival (21 to 30 May, 2010) was launched at the Wheeler Centre in Melbourne last night. New director Lisa Dempster said it would be a ‘bold, innovative and exciting’ festival, and the program, available to guests in compact little booklets (you could choose the colour scheme you liked best, nice touch), looks promising.

As a festival unashamedly for writers, the EWF centres around a lot of the vocational and workshop events that are only really offered on the fringes of the bigger writers’ festivals. From the Express Media Skills Share ‘how to write’ workshops (‘…reviews’ with The Big Issue’s Jo Case, ‘…television’ with Paul Kooperman, ‘…computer games’ with Paul Callaghan and ‘how to edit your work for publication’ with Davina Bell and Julia Carlomagno), to the great Living Library concept in which you can ‘borrow’ industry people for a brain-pick (getting fifteen minutes with, for example, Arcade’s Dale Campisi or literary agent Donica Bettanin of Jenny Darling & Associates), the events on offer are aimed squarely at those looking to be published—or published more often.

Prices for sessions are pretty reasonable—the Express Media workshops are $10, you can borrow Mr Campisi et al for a bargain $5, and even a full weekend pass will set you back only $45 ($30 concession). Of course some events are free too, including the great-sounding ‘Stuck in a Lift With …’, in which an emerging writer gets to quiz a literary hero on writing and the books they love.

Scattered through the festival booklet are various Twitter addresses for authors, and tweeters can join the EWF’s TwitterFEST at #ewfchat; Twitter addresses and hashtags aren’t something you see a lot of at the big festivals either (though of course, one of the best things about any festival is the chance to be there in the flesh with a lot of other excited and inspiring people, and the EWF has made a name for itself providing just that).

The festival booklet is worth tracking down, not just for the program itself, but for its participant bios: this year panellists were asked to describe how they write and the result is a whole lot of bite-sized writing advice to get attendees thinking.

Check out the EWF program at http://www.emergingwritersfestival.org.au/program/.

The new issue has landed!


Posted: 22 April 2010 at 11:05 am

Ah, there’s the new-magazine smell again. Yes, the May/June combined issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine just arrived in the office.

This issue has a gazillion reviews of as-yet-unpublished books (okay, 75), including such highly anticipated titles as Rebecca James’ Beautiful Malice (A&U, May), Fiona McGregor’s Indelible Ink (Scribe, June), Peter Rose’s Roddy Parr (Fourth Estate, July), Leanne Hall’s Text YA prize-winning This is Shyness (August) and Benjamin Law’s debut The Family Law (Black Inc., June). (If you want to know what some of our reviewers’ top picks were you can read about them in this post.)

As well as all those reviews, the May/June issue includes Kalinda Ashton (The Danger Game, Sleepers) writing about how she got where she is today, Kabita Dhara on the publishing scene in India, author interviews with Susan Maushart, Ben Groundwater, Bill McKibben, Amanda Braxton-Smith and James Phelan and lots more besides.

Subscribers, it will be on its way to you very soon. Non-subscribers, you’ll find a list of places you can buy a copy here. (Or you could, you know, subscribe: $130 a year. Bargain.)