Posts Tagged ‘Text Publishing’

‘Addition’ rights sales add up


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Posted: 1 September 2010 at 10:21 am

With the film rights to her debut novel Addition just sold, and a new novel—Fall Girl—due in October, things are looking pretty good for Toni Jordan. And that’s before you mention that Addition has now sold into (count them), 16 territories: the US, Brazil, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Israel, Netherlands, Portugal, Quebec, Russia, Serbia, Spain, Taiwan, Turkey, the UK and Italy.

Fancy Goods asked the author which of her many international covers she liked best. ‘That’s like choosing between offspring,’ she says. ‘Right now, I love the Italian one [left], but that might just be because it’s the newest. And I really want that coat.’

For Jordan, the international covers are something of a surprise. ‘Even though I don’t have jacket approval in my Australian contract, the publishers were fantastic in showing me their ideas and discussing them with me,’ she says. ‘My first Australian jacket was the toothbrushes. I loved it from the beginning. Kinda quirky, kinda sexy.’

‘The overseas jackets I have no input into whatsoever. They just appear in the mail.’ (more…)

Most mentioned books this week


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Posted: 24 August 2010 at 3:38 pm

Well, the weekend’s election result (or lack thereof) may have taken some by surprise, but it’s not exactly a shock that an election-related title topped the most mentioned chart this week. Jessica Rudd’s new novel Campaign Ruby (Text) has come in at the top of our chart for a second week in a row. Other politically themed titles getting a mention in the chart were Dominic Knight’s story about student politics in Comrades (Bantam) and Mary Delahunty’s political memoir and story of love and loss in Public Life, Private Grief (Hardie Grant). Joe Bageant’s Rainbow Pie (Scribe) and Stephen Daisley’s Traitor (Text) also nabbed a spot on the most mentioned chart this week—Media Extra.

If you would like to receive Media Extra to find out which titles are mentioned in the media each week, please contact subscriptions on (03) 8517-8333 or subscriptions@thorpe.com.au.

Most mentioned books this week


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Posted: 18 August 2010 at 3:21 pm

Ex-PM Kevin Rudd’s daughter Jessica Rudd graced the cover of the latest Good Weekend in promotion of her new novel Campaign Ruby (Text), and her book was certainly the most mentioned this week. At just 26 years of age, Jessica Rudd is already an ex-lawyer and an ex-campaign worker. Her previous careers must have come in handy when it came to write Campaign Ruby, as her protagonist finds herself accepting a role as financial policy adviser to the Federal Opposition Leader just before the announcement of an early election. In the book, Australia gets its first female PM by a way of a political coup. Perhaps Jessica Rudd is an ex-psychic as well! Also scoring a number of mentions this week were Bret Easton Ellis’ Imperial Bedrooms (Picador), after a controversial appearance by the author at the Byron Bay Writers Festival, and Karl Marlantes’ Matterhorn (Corvus), Jon Bauer’s Rocks in the Belly (Scribe) and Sheila Fitzpatrick’s My Father’s Daughter (MUP).

You can check out our interview with Jessica Rudd in this post.

INTERVIEW: Jessica Rudd on ‘Campaign Ruby’ (Text)


Posted: 6 August 2010 at 8:54 pm

Jessica Rudd tells regular Bookseller+Publisher reviewer Jo Case about her forthcoming novel Campaign Ruby, and how it felt to watch its political plot ‘become reality in such a gritty and personal way’.


Campaign Ruby seems to mint a new genre in Australian writing—campaign-trail chick-lit. It’s an unlikely but intriguing combination. How did you come up with the idea to marry politics with Bridget Jones style chick-lit?

As a West Wing tragic and Sex and the City junkie, political chick-lit seemed an obvious marriage to me. I love chick-lit—I feast on it. Marian Keyes and Sophie Kinsella make me laugh out loud. I identify with their characters.

When I was thinking about writing a novel an author friend of mine said, ‘it’s your first book—write what you know’. I know politics. I’ve grown up with it and have learned to love it. There is something exhilarating about campaigning, particularly when it’s for a greater purpose. With Campaign Ruby I wanted to share that buzz. The woman who puts Campaign Ruby in her handbag to read on the train should get bang for her buck. She deserves to laugh and cry with Ruby as she takes us on her maiden voyage in Australian politics.

You’ve worked as a PR consultant and on the federal election campaign trail. Your protagonist, Ruby Stanhope, is hired as a financial policy advisor but ends up mostly working in media management on the campaign trail. How has your experience fed into your writing?

When I worked on the Kevin07 campaign I noticed that regardless of a campaigner’s assigned role, sometimes there are things that just need doing which are a world away from your job description. It’s a bit miscellaneous. If you’re a speechwriter and your candidate needs a shirt ironed while they read their speech, you iron the shirt. If you’re a policy adviser briefing your candidate on economic policy and the phone rings, you answer it. In Ruby’s case, if you’re a financial policy adviser and a plane-load of journalists are hungry and cranky, you find a drive-through and feed them. Something else I really wanted to capture and share was the fun chaos of a major political campaign. I remember one particular occasion when we were campaigning in Mackay and Dad spontaneously jumped on board a massive sugar cane harvesting machine and went for a ride with its operator. Camera crew were chasing after this cane-munching contraption in a vast cane field—it was pretty dangerous. I was getting ready to call the paramedics. Dad’s press sec looked like she was going to have a coronary.

In your book, Australia gets its first female prime minister—and a snap election—following a coup by a senior colleague. Was it strange to see this situation mirrored in real life recently? What gave you the idea for this scenario when you were writing?

It was a bit spooky to watch parts of the utterly unimaginable scenario I had dreamed up become reality in such a gritty and personal way. There are a few major differences though. At the time I wrote Campaign Ruby, Labor was doing very well in the polls. The day my Dad stood down the government was on 52-48. It was—still is—a first-term government. In Campaign Ruby, the incumbent was in his thirteenth year in office. They were doing terribly in the polls when the treasurer seized the prime ministership and called an election to seek a mandate from the people.

The full interview and Jo Case’s review of Campaign Ruby appear in the September 2010 issue of Bookseller+Publisher magazine, with subscribers this week. For news of forthcoming Australian and New Zealand books, sign up for the free fortnightly Bookseller+Publisher Newsletter here.

BOOK REVIEW: The Crime of Huey Dunstan (James McNeish, Text)


Posted: 19 July 2010 at 11:54 am

First published in New Zealand by Random House, this is a dark courtroom drama in more than one sense. Professor Chesney is a blind psychologist acting as an expert witness for a young man who has admitted to killing a man who befriended him. Young Huey Dunstan claims the events from his past caused him to lash out in such a vicious way. As Professor Chesney tries to get Huey to talk to him about what triggered the attack, small pieces of a complicated jigsaw begin to join up—pieces that will reveal a brutal, deeply hidden past. This is the way The Crime of Huey Dunstan unfolds—shapelessly, but with plenty of substance, asking readers to think for themselves and make judgements that may or not be correct, much like the trial. James McNeish makes his readers pay attention to detail by going ‘off story’, but also keeps them guessing to the end by dropping vital information in a fairly random fashion. It’s a masterly way of working the novel in the age of the easy read. This will appeal to people who enjoy a challenging read.

Doris Mousdale is the owner of Arcadia Bookshop in Auckland and reviews books weekly on NewstalkZB and BBC Worldwide. This review first appeared in the July2010 issue of Bookseller+Publisher.

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.

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.)

Most mentioned books this week


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Posted: 12 April 2010 at 2:28 pm

Yann Martel, author of Booker prize-winning novel The Life of Pi (Canongate), is back with Beatrice and Virgil (Text), again about a man on a journey. The protagonist is a writer struggling to finish a book about the Holocaust. After receiving a mysterious letter, he finds himself in a taxidermist’s workshop. Among the stuffed animals in the workshop are Beatrice and Virgil: a monkey and a donkey. Ian McEwan’s Solar (Jonathan Cape) featured again on the most mentioned chart, as did Brenda Walker’s Reading by Moonlight: How Books Saved a Life (Hamish Hamilton). So Much for That (Fourth Estate), Lionel Shriver’s new book, continues to receive favourable reviews and local celebrity Juanita Phillips has received considerable interest in A Pressure Cooker Saved My Life (ABC Books), about keeping a healthy balance between work and family life.

Most mentioned this week


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Posted: 29 March 2010 at 12:15 pm

The 50-year anniversary of architect Robin Boyd’s The Australian Ugliness (Text) has arrived, along with an anniversary edition to commemorate it, featuring a foreword by Christos Tsiolkas. Boyd was a fierce critic of Australian design and resented Australia’s imitation of all things American. The new edition received several media mentions this week. Ian McEwan’s Solar (Jonathan Cape) and Melina Marchetta’s The Piper’s Son (Viking) again continued to receive coverage. Other books mentioned this week include Anita Heiss’ Manhattan Dreaming (Bantam), Brenda Walker’s Reading by Moonlight: How Books Saved a Life (Hamish Hamilton), William Poundstone’s Priceless (Scribe) and Ron Rash’s Serena (Text)—Media Extra.

How did I get here?: Mandy Brett from Text Publishing


Posted: 18 March 2010 at 4:22 pm

Mandy Brett, senior editor at Text Publishing, tells us how her publishing career got started:

It’s late 1997. My best friend Samantha* rings me from Alice Springs.

‘Mand,’ says Samantha, ‘there’s a job going here that might suit you.’

I weigh this up for some time. About five seconds in total, because against the fact that central Australia’s a long way off, expensive in every way and populated exclusively (apart from Samantha) with people I don’t know, there is my current situation. I’ve been trying to make a living as a freelance editor, and I’ve discovered I’m deficient in all the attributes you need at least one of: a humungous reputation, a sleek, well-fed address book or the ability to hustle for work. Fair to say the piggy-bank’s becoming reluctant to turn its back on the hammer. So, a salary? Oh well, if you insist.** (more…)