Posts Tagged ‘publishing’

NY Art Book Fair 2010

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

NYC’s art book fair returns for its fifth year with an exciting lineup of events and books The fifth-annual NY Art Book Fair is around the corner, and organizer Printed Matter (NYC’s premiere art bookstore) have put together an exciting lineup of readings, signings, limited editions and more from an intriguing cadre of artists and international presses. The world’s biggest art book fair, the three-day-long events at MoMA PS1 showcase some of the brightest minds in contemporary publishing. Highlights include artist Leidy Churchman ‘s lobby installation—a massive set of facsimile book paintings on wood that depict “artists’ publications from the last hundred years”—as well as a special gallery project from San Francisco’s Gotebl

Agenda and Edit

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

Phaidon relaunches their site adding a new online format to their roster of publications Known the world over for their well-edited books on culture, Phaidon Press recently relaunched their site and with it new sections highlighting current movements in architecture, art, design, food and photography. The publisher organizes the news into two main sections— Agenda and Edit . Updated weekly, Agenda showcases the five categories alongside a video section dedicated to exclusive content, behind-the-scenes glimpses and recommended films. While still covering the same topics as Agenda, Edit spotlights stories from around the web as selected by Phaidon editors. To see the exciting new updates and to sign up for the weekly newsletter, check out the Phaidon site.

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Agenda and Edit

Online dictionaries: which is best?

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Online dictionaries: which is best?” was written by Aida Edemariam, for The Guardian on Monday 30th August 2010 19.00 UTC

Sad news for those of us with fond memories of long minutes lost in the more arcane histories of English words: the third edition of the Oxford English Dictionary, which a team of 80 lexicographers has been working on since 1989, will probably never be printed. “The print dictionary market is just disappearing,” Oxford University Press CEO Nigel Portwood told a Sunday newspaper. It will still be available online – in fact, in December, the web version is being relaunched, including for the first time the historical thesaurus of the OED, which contains almost every word in English from Old English to the present. The problem is that it is a tad pricey: £7 plus VAT for a week’s access; £205 plus VAT for a year. Luckily, there are alternatives:

Collins

This paper’s preferred arbiter, in its print version, the pocket version is available free online – though, it must be said, boasting some rather confusing orthography. The second entry for the word “help”, for example, reads “2. to contribute to, to help Latin America’s economies” – some italics, or brackets, or bold letters would help. You can buy a 1,888-page hard copy for £70, or download it for a mere £9.99.

Chambers

The Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, with its 75,000 words and phrases and 110,000 definitions, is free online. This is much more presentable, with quite satisfying lists of definitions, and examples of the word in context. A little bit of etymology, too. Chambers is not, however, accepting new subscribers to the full shebang – 170,000 words and phrases and 270,000 definitions. The 1,871-page print version sells for £40.

Macmillan

The definitions are short and to the point, with no information about sources or background (though there are sample phrases, and a direct link to a thesaurus). It also lets you submit words of your own, and gives you the option of British or American English. Macmillan’s particular wheeze, useful to learners of English, is to highlight the 7,500 core, high-frequency words in the English language: three-star words are the most frequent; one-star words less so. It’s free online, but you’ll pay £24 for a hard copy.

OneLook

A real discovery, this online site trawls 18,967,499 words in 1,060 different dictionaries – all the major English ones, but also dictionaries for specific subjects (business, art, medicine) or languages. You can customise your search – only in slang, for example; compare entries in different dictionaries; do a wildcard search (asterisks, hashtags or @ symbols account for the characters you can’t remember), or a reverse search (type in “being tried twice for the same crime”, for “double jeopardy”, for example). It doesn’t, however, link to a Scrabble dictionary, which some might feel is an important omission.

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Eat, pray, cash in

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Eat, pray, cash in” was written by Emma Brockes, for The Guardian on Friday 13th August 2010 23.02 UTC

Last week, Julia Roberts appeared on US television to advertise her latest film, an adaptation of Elizabeth Gilbert’s travel memoir, Eat Pray Love. Roberts, who while shooting the film in India became a Hindu, described it in terms of her character’s spiritual journey and “the gamut” of emotions she runs, from divorce and despair to new love and happiness. It’s an exciting gambit for the studio, too, which to promote the film’s release yesterday in the US (it is out in the UK next month) is offering three Eat Pray Love fragrances in conjunction with Fresh, and tie-in chakra beads from an Los Angeles-based jeweller.

Spiritual journeys are a basic requirement of good story telling, as marketing campaigns are of Hollywood films, so it is churlish get too outraged by Sony Pictures’s conflation of the two. As any gap-year returnee with an arm full of string knows, the appeal of eastern philosophy has always come down, in part, to the accessories. “Has Liz Gilbert sold out?” asked various book blogs last week and although the structure of the book, divided into 108 tales after the number of meditation beads in a traditional set, raises certain expectations, Gilbert never claims to be anything more holy than a burnt-out journalist on a year out, trying to put her life back together.

And so she does. The arresting thing is how many people want to follow her. With 5m copies in print and a new edition on the bestseller list, Eat Pray Love and its imitators start to look like primers in wish- fulfilment, sacred rules to a better existence. You know how it goes – the combination of self-indulgence and self-denial which women must navigate in order to feel good about themselves and which, in Gilbert’s case, seems to boil down to the following principle: if you go on holiday for a year, eat pasta, sit on a beach and meet a gorgeous Brazilian there’s a good chance you’ll be “happy”, or at least, get a book out of it with a citation on the dust jacket from Minnie Driver. The question is why this has come as such news to us.

It is partly a function of our demanding times – one strand of a broader publishing trend in how to be happy, once thought a by-product of other diversions and now a pursuit in itself. Anything with “happiness” in the title and a set of rules to follow stands a good chance of vaulting into the bestseller lists, from business books (Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose by Tony Hsieh) to Gretchen Rubin’s the Happiness Project. If it can be combined with some kind of esoteric activity, all the better, as in Cleaving, Julie Powell’s follow up to Julie & Julia, in which she enrolls in butcher’s school in upstate New York while trying to figure out what to do with her marriage. Or Yoga School Drop Out, by Lucy Edge, or Frances Mayes’s project to renovate an Italian villa in Under the Tuscan Sun. In order to work, the journey at the heart of these books must be presented as a form of rebellion, in opposition to the grinding work culture which threatens to crush our spirits and kill our creativity.

It is also connected to the self-empowerment movement, rooted in gym culture in the US, which appeals to a lucrative demographic of urban women. It is here, perhaps, that the appeal starts to wane. Self-empowerment is an admirable thing and everyone has a right to it. But as with the consciousness-raising groups of the 1970s, one suspects that self-empowerment classes in America today are patronised by women who start from a position of relative advantage. Like people who use the phrase “me-time” (as distinct, one always wonders, from what exactly?) there is something vaguely comic about a room full of Manhattan women – who, if they were any more assertive, could launch a coup d’etat – “empowering” themselves via chants about how great they all are.

Still, everyone deserves a holiday. It’s a question of what claims are made for it. Going off to find yourself isn’t a new idea and in this age of sophisticated marketing techniques “spiritual journey” is almost a tautology. The film’s tagline is Let Yourself Go, or rather, Let Yourself GO, to emphasis the journey aspect and it trades on the promise behind every holiday: that by going somewhere else you will magically resolve all your issues and return a cleaner, better person. This is indicated in the film’s poster by a picture of Roberts looking pensive on the end of a bench in Italy, with half a nun sitting at the other end. “Half-nun” could, at this point, be a recognised marketing term.

It’s an attractive sell, particularly since the heroic journey has, historically, been a guy thing; specifically one man, a rugged landscape, a dog, possibly a horse and a lot of lingering looks at the horizon. The female equivalent, childbirth, seems poor value when the men get to go on holiday. The Wife of Bath is always brought up at this point as the mother of the picaresque heroine (although today she’d be said to have anger management issues), as well as her modern-day heir, before Gilbert, the heroine of Erica Jong’s Fear of Flying. But whereas in 1973, Isadora Wing misbehaved her way around Europe, self-control is now the order of the day.

So: yes to pasta, no to casual sex. Yes to expensive holidays, no to empty materialism. Yes to new experience, no to new shoes. In the new austerity, it is important, even if you spend lots of money getting there, to go to a place where life is simpler. For men, in the 1990s, this impulse was immortalised in the film City Slickers, in which Billy Crystal and his cohorts were taught invaluable life lessons by Jack Palance on a horse. In 2010, for women, it is the yoga, cooking or spiritual guru.

In Gilbert’s case, it is Ketut Liyer, a woodcarver and medicine man from Ubud, in Bali, with whom she goes to study. Before the book came out, Liyer was down on his luck, suffering as a result of reduced tourist numbers after the 2002 Bali terrorist bombing. These days there are, according to a recent visitor, never fewer than 20 western women outside his hut, clutching copies of the book. He tends to tell people they are “a very good person”, a “very lucky person”, in possession of “very good karma” and a husband who is a “very good man”. What’s not to like? Liyer has quadrupled his prices to (£16) a palm reading and 0 for one of his “magic paintings”.

Which brings us to Dogeared, the company behind the Eat Pray Love jewellery line. “We relate,” said a spokesman, “to the theme of a woman’s journey for self-fulfilment and happiness,” which in this case means the “Eat Pray Love 109 wishes prayer turquoise bead necklace” (2), the “Eat Pray Love beauty is everywhere sterling silver reminder necklace” () and a range called I Deserve Something Beautiful, which includes macramé bracelets, necklaces in the shape of lotus petals, cascade earrings and an “Eat Pray Love meditate sterling silver om bead necklace”, which sounds like a meltdown in a Buddhist reading shop. Even the Scientologists could learn a trick or two about selling spirituality from this lot.

In his book The Gift, Lewis Hyde defines the spiritual benefit of giving thus: “I am not concerned with gifts given in spite or fear, nor those gifts we accept out of servility or obligation; my concern is the gift we long for, the gift that, when it comes, speaks commandingly to the soul and irresistibly moves us.” I might be wrong, but I don’t think he’s talking about the Eat Pray Love gold-dipped engraved bangle ().

At least in the book, Gilbert is true to Hyde’s principle. The emotional denouement is not her meeting her future husband, but having a whip-round of her friends in New York to buy a house for a Balinese woman and her daughter. Eat Pray Love, the book, has other charms. It’s smart. It’s funny. It’s a welcome addition to the genre of one-woman’s-journey-to-self-fulfilment via means other than shopping. Unlike some of its copycats, it doesn’t feel like a cynical exercise. When Gilbert gets what she wants, she has the decency at least to be smug about it.

If there is disingenuousness, it is in the wide-eyed tone she adopts for the enterprise. When she embarked on her journey, she was not an ingenue but a sophisticated 30-something journalist from Manhattan, well travelled, with three books and a Hollywood film under her belt. It was hard to believe she found the fact that – how insane! How adorable! – all books in Italian bookshops are in Italian, quite so charming. And far from dropping out and letting go, her trip was insured by the fact she had sold a book proposal in advance. Going to an ashram to write about it with guaranteed publication is a wholly different exercise to going with nothing. On her website, she confesses to getting up early in the morning to write. Perhaps that’s the appeal – stealth confirmation of the status quo.

The real lesson of Gilbert’s salvation isn’t let yourself go, but get down to work.

On the path to enlightenment …

A new breed of self-discovery lit coming to a bookshelf near you

Cleaving

By Julie Powell

Embroiled in an extramarital affair and determined to rescue her failing marriage, the author embarks on a butchery course. The resulting book, A Story of Marriage, Meat and Obsession, was published last year, coinciding with the release of Nora Ephron’s film adaptation of Powell’s first bestseller, Julie & Julia.

The Happiness Project

By Gretchen Rubin

Rubin’s subtitle says it all: Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun. The Happiness Project hit the top of the New York Times bestseller list in February.

The Handbag and Wellies Yoga Club

By Lucy Edge

After Yoga School Dropout, which charted an emotional journey through a series of ashrams in India, Edge’s latest book, published last year, follows her move to Norfolk. As her publishers promise, the book is ‘one woman’s search for love and friendship in the lotus position’.

I Loved, I Lost, I Made Spaghetti

By Giulia Melucci

Subtitled A Memoir of Good Food and Bad Boyfriends, Melucci’s 2009 confessional proved you didn’t have to leave home to look for love – or eat pasta.

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Amazon’s ebook milestone: digital sales outstrip hardbacks for first time in US

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Amazon’s ebook milestone: digital sales outstrip hardbacks for first time in US” was written by David Teather, for The Guardian on Tuesday 20th July 2010 19.38 UTC

The following correction was printed in the Guardian’s Corrections and clarifications column, Thursday 22 July 2010

The author of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo is Stieg, not Steig, Larsson.


It is an announcement that will provoke horror among those who can think of nothing better than spending an afternoon rummaging around a musty old bookshop. In what could be a watershed for the publishing industry, Amazon said sales of digital books have outstripped US sales of hardbacks on its website for the first time.

Amazon claims to have sold 143 digital books for its e-reader, the Kindle, for every 100 hardback books over the past three months. The pace of change is also accelerating. Amazon said that in the most recent four weeks, the rate reached 180 ebooks for every 100 hardbacks sold. Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon, said sales of the Kindle and ebooks had reached a “tipping point”, with five authors including Steig Larsson, the writer of Girl with a Dragon Tattoo, and Stephenie Meyer, who penned the Twilight series, each selling more than 500,000 digital books. Earlier this month, Hachette said that James Patterson had sold 1.1m ebooks to date.

Neill Denny, editor-in-chief of the Bookseller, said the figures from Amazon were “eye-catching”, but added a note of scepticism. He said that while ebooks had outnumbered hardbacks in volume, they were likely to be some distance behind in value. Some of the bestsellers listed on the Kindle top 10 list today were retailing for as little as .16 (75p). Free downloads of books no longer in copyright were excluded from the figures.

It does not appear that the growth of ebooks is damaging sales of physical books. According to the Association of American Publishers, hardback sales are still growing in the US, up 22% this year.

The association says that ebook sales in the US account for 6% of the consumer book market. One publisher in London said the US is “two or three years ahead of us. But there is no reason to suppose we won’t see the same thing happening here.”

Kate Pool, deputy general secretary of the Royal Society of Authors, said most authors would be “delighted” to sell large numbers of digital books. “If you speak to most authors, they couldn’t bear to get rid of their old bookshelves, but if their readers want to read on an e-reader, then great. They are in it to earn a living after all.”

The market is still relatively small in Britain. Digital sales were around £150m last year, says the Publishers’ Association, over 80% in the academic-professional sector, with only £5m in consumer sales.

The Kindle has been available in the UK since October, although customers still need to visit the US site and get the device delivered from America.

The books catalogue is also available only through the American site and the titles priced in dollars. A spokesman said there are 390,000 titles available for UK readers to download. The company will not release figures on the number of Kindles sold. “We are nowhere near the same level as the US,” Denny added. “I have never seen anyone using a Kindle in Britain. The iPad is more interesting.”

Amazon cut the price of its device in June in response to the launch of Apple’s iPad, which many believe could provide a substantial threat to the Kindle’s market. Waterstones has sold ebooks from its website for the Sony Reader since September 2008 and will sell its one-millionth title this year, a spokesman said.

Pool said she had yet to invest in an ebook reader. “I have played around with one, but I haven’t read a full book on one. It is not that I am a Luddite, more of a scrooge, which I think is the same for many people. I am waiting for the price to come down, for the amount of content available to go up and I want to be sure I am not buying the wrong thing. I don’t want to be left with a Betamax when everyone else is watching VHS.”

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RISD XYZ Magazine

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Metropolis Creative Director and RISD alum Criswell Lappin on redesigning his alma mater’s new magazine When RISD President John Maeda decided to reinvent their alumni magazine, he decided to do it from the ground up. Renaming it RISD XYZ and shifting from a more traditional focus on the school to instead celebrate the accomplishments of its graduates, he knew he had to do something about the design too. While previous versions typically tasked three alumni with a section each, the resulting layout felt disjointed and made it tough to read. As a solution, Maeda turned to RISD alum Criswell Lappin to realize the vision of the new concept. Lappin—who in addition to running his own design consultancy Wellnow , has art directed the award-winning magazine Metropolis for the past decade —recently answered a few of our questions on how he and his crack team of fellow alums pulled off the fresh new design in just 10 weeks. Read on to learn more about some of his favorite designers, the project’s reality TV potential, and the beers it took to unwind when he was done. How did your experience attending RISD influence your work on the magazine? I learned just as much, if not more, from my fellow classmates while in Providence. We knew that the school’s talents that were not being utilized well in the previous incarnation could provide invaluable assets to this project. What other alumni were involved with the project? Dungjai Pungauthaikan, also Metropolis’ Art Director was on the Wellnow design team (with non-alum but nevertheless important Nancy Nowacek). One of the big ideas for the new publication was to turn to the alumni to help shape it. We asked Kate Johnson of Dresser Johnson to help with the headers and the logo. We used typefaces by Cyrus Highsmith and Tobias Frere-Jones. We asked Nicholas Felton to distill all of the information in the “Class Notes” section into an infographic. We also crafted areas for commissioned illustration on the Editor’s Letter and Opinion page. So Jessica Walsh and Lauren Nassef helped out with those. Lisa Maione helped style the contributors page. We laid the framework and directed these other contributors, but this magazine is meant to be a voice for the artist and designers who went to RISD. We hope it fosters more interest in alumni to contribute their visual ideas to subsequent issues. Was it difficult working with a team of alums, or did you all have similar ideas on how you envisioned the redesign? It would have not made good reality television because there was very little drama. Everyone we engaged was enthusiastic and collaborated well, each adding their expertise to the magazine and making it stronger. Who was the client for the project? The initial invitation came from John Maeda , but the client was RISD’s Media + Partners department. Editor Liisa Silander was our primary point person. How long did it take you to complete the redesign? What was the feedback and edit process like? From start to finish it was a ten-week project. Fortunately we were on the same page as RISD in wanting to turn this from a magazine that seemed to come from the administration into one centered on the alumni. Four weeks after being awarded the job, we showed RISD two design directions and they essentially signed off on one. Over the course of the next five weeks we designed and produced each section, which would circulate back to RISD for design approval. The last week or two was spent fine-tuning the cover and finishing up production. Then I think I had a beer…or six. Were there any major obstacles? The timing was tight—especially given that we were designing Metropolis at the same time—but not insurmountable. There were two or three breakdowns in communication but we were able to resolve them because Liisa and I were in constant dialogue. A critical moment came about two weeks prior to printing where thought we almost had final sign-off on the cover, but it completely fell apart. So we basically had to rethink that from scratch over a weekend. Fortunately, overcoming all of those obstacles made the magazine stronger. Did I just become a politician? Who did you have in mind as the reader and what do you hope they take away from it? All alumni and possibly potential students. We hope it creates a culture of creative contribution where alumni want to be a part of it—either as an editorial subject or generating visual content. Are there any RISD alums or up-and-coming designers that you think our readers should know about? Start with the list of contributors to the first issue. Seriously, look at Nick Felton’s work. He does sexy things with information. Paul Loebach ‘s furniture is getting noticed. She’s pretty well established, but Katie Salen has to be mentioned because her “Institute of Play” is going to be a significant force in educational circles. Christopher Ro, Morgan Blair and Sloan Kulper are all certainly worth watching too.

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RISD XYZ Magazine

Monocle Mediterraneo Newspaper

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Tyler Brûlé’s new broadsheet designed for leisurely summer reading An antidote to disco-worthy iPads and nerdy eReaders unfit for the beach, Monocle ‘s recently published ” Mediterraneo ” newspaper, like their magazine, goes against the publishing grain for a glare-free summer read. The 64-page extension of the acclaimed glossy comes packed with sensible tips, progressive geopolitical thinking, and their reputable take on fashion and design. Meant as holiday companion, the mini-edition is now on sale at resorts from California to Lebanon and at select airports in between. The newspaper also sells online for