Posts tagged as:

Publishing

CC-BY Flickr/jblyberg Dear Authors, Your Next Book Should be an App, Not an iBook is a great call to action from writer and media entrepreneur Cody Brown, who reflects on the way writers can and should adapt their creative practice to new platforms (because audiences sure as heck will)

If you, as an author, see the iPad as a place to ‘publish’ your next book, you are completely missing the point. What do you think would have happened if George Orwell had the iPad? Do you think he would have written for print then copy and pasted his story into the iBookstore? If this didn’t work out well, do you think he would have complained that there aren’t any serious-readers anymore? No. He would have looked at the medium, then blown our minds.

Read the whole piece at TechCrunch.

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Copyright restrictions on parallel imports to stay

November 11, 2009

Well, the battle is over (for now). The Australian Government has today announced that current copyright legislation forbidding parallel importation of books will remain unchanged. The Australian and Bookseller+Publisher have reported the news and the full statement from Dr Craig Emerson, Minister for Competition Policy and Consumer Affairs, can be found here. I like Sophie Cunningham’s [...]

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Better than an iTunes for poetry

November 9, 2009

I know my mate Graham Nunn over at Another Lost Shark will be sitting up in his chair when he sees this piece come through his RSS feed.  Thanks also to Chris Meade at if:book London for the heads up. PoetrySpeaks.com is a way-impressive new online community for poets and poetry. In his plug on bookfutures, [...]

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What do authors need?

October 28, 2009

Mark Coker, founder and CEO of dynamic e-book publishing company Smashwords, is asking “do authors still need publishers?” In his article for The Huffington Post, Mark argues that an author with the fanbase and platform of Stephen King, or J.K. Rowling or  Dan Brown, could get a much better return from the marketplace by self-publishing. Certainly this [...]

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What does 130,000,000 tonnes of paper look like?

October 25, 2009

Oh wow. I’m currently reading The Gutenberg Revolution: How Printing Changed the Course of History by John Man. Here are some staggering numbers I came across in just the first few pages: Today, books pour off presses at the rate of 10,000 million a year. That’s some 50 million tonnes of paper. Add in 8,000 [...]

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