Random House announced that it will be starting a new television division to develop scripted programs based on its books. This is not Random House's first foray into the movie and television industry. Unbeknownst to me, and probably many others considering it has only released two films thus far, the publishing house entered the movie business in 2005 with the launch of Random House Films. Random House Television will follow the model established by their film division, which works with Random House editors, authors, and author's agents to obtain dramatic rights to titles in addition to working on potential movie projects with authors. Random House Television was made possible through a partnership between the US division of the publishing house and FremantleMedia, a television production and distribution company. Both companies are owne... [more Random House Launches Television Division]
Blog posts by Susan Benne
Susan is the Executive Director of the ABAA. She collects material on Brooklyn as well as ephemera and vernacular photography. Susan is focused on making the book trade diverse and equitable.
First Edition Cover Art The very rare first edition of The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, which I previously posted about, brought in 30,000 ($46,737) at auction in London last week. The book was inscribed by 'Jack' Lewis and was originally estimated to be worth 19,000 ($29,600.10). Rare Chronicles of Narnia book sells for 30,000 [more Update: First Edition Narnia Book Inscribed by 'Jack' Lewis]
One publishing house is trying to ride the wave of erotic fiction that broke with the overwhelming popularity of Fifty Shades of Grey by producing erotic rewrites of classic literature. Jane Eyre, Sherlock Holmes, Pride and Prejudice, and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea are just a few tomes that will get the erotic treatment from UK publisher Total-E-Bound. Dubbed "Clandestine Classics", the publisher writes that in these reworked novels: "The old fashioned pleasantries and timidity have all been stripped away, quite literally. You didn't really think that these much loved characters only held hands and pecked cheeks did you? Come with us, as we embark on a breathtaking experience—behind the closed bedroom doors of our favourite, most-beloved British characters. Learn what Sherlock really thought of Watson, what Mr Darcy really wa... [more Literary Classics Get Fifty Shades of Grey Treatment]
There's a great article in this morning's NY Times about Rare Book School, check it out! UPDATE: A companion piece in the NY Times Arts Blog about the Hinman Collator is also worth a read. Rare Book School [more NY Times Profiles Rare Book School]
ABAA members James Bryant of Carpe Diem Fine Books in Monterey, CA and Edward Nudelman of Nudelman Rare Books in Seattle, WA recently received some attention in the press. Carpe Diem was written about by Cynthia Haven of Stanford University who dubbed the shop "the best bookstore I've never seen", and Rebecca Rego Barry of Fine Books & Collections magazine profiled Ed Nudelman. Congrats to James and Ed! [more Members in the News: Carpe Diem Fine Books & Nudelman Rare Books]
First English edition of The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli, 1640 (image via Keys) The first English edition of Niccolo Machiavelli's seminal work The Prince, dated 1640, was recently discovered during a collection evaluation in Norfolk, UK. Andrew Bullock, the head of the book department at Keys auction house was combing through a late collector's books when he was drawn to a particular shelf. "The Machiavelli was on a shelf hidden amongst a number of Common Prayer books, but some sort of sixth sense asserted itself, and I took it down to take a closer look,” Bullock said. No matter what 'sixth book sense' brought Bullock to his discovery, he and many collectors are very happy that it did. Bullock called it an "extremely exciting find" as "it is very rare for an English first edition of such an important work to come to auction." The b... [more First English Edition of Machiavelli's 'The Prince' Goes to Auction Thursday]
Stephen Colbert's manuscript for his recently published children's book I Am a Pole (And So Can You!) will be on display at the Rosenbach Museum and Library and will reside next to James Joyce's manuscript for Ulysses. (No, I'm not kidding.) Colbert conceived of the book during an interview with Maurice Sendak earlier this year. Coincidentally, the Rosenbach is the major repository for Sendak's works. As one ABAA member commented, "If you are a James Joyce fan, you will cringe", and yes, I did cringe a little, but the video is hilarious. Besides, any talk of rare books and manuscripts in popular culture is pretty awesome. [more Strange Bedfellows: Stephen Colbert & James Joyce]
The New Orleans Public Library and the Southern Food and Beverage Museum (SoFAB) have partnered to open the largest culinary library in the South. The two organizations have been in talks about the project since 2010, but the museum had to be "mature enough to acquire a building", said SoFAB president Liz Williams. The museum currently has over 9,000 cookbooks, menus, recipes, archival documents, and literature about food, all of which will be housed at the new library. In addition, there will be a collection of children's materials related to the culinary arts, food, and nutrition. Library director Charles Brown said that, once completed, this children's culinary collection will be the most comprehensive of its kind. Brown also stated the library's intention to become a repository for "the papers of people in the culinary world." The li... [more New Orleans Set to Open Largest Culinary Library in the South]
A new anthology of Latin American fiction has been printed in a very unique way: publishers used a special ink so that the entire text will fade in two months time. The book, appropriately titled El Libro que No Puede Esperar (The Book That Can't Wait), was produced by Eterna Cadencia, an independent Argentinian publishing house, in conjunction with DraftFCB, an advertising agency. It comes in a sealed package and the ink begins to fade as soon as it makes contact with air and light, giving the reader eight weeks to read and enjoy the text before it disappears completely. El Libro que No Puede Esperar is a special edition of The Future is Not Ours: New Latin American Literature, an anthology of stories from twenty-three Latin American writers who were born between 1970 and 1980. The aim of the publication, which is expanded upon in the v... [more Speed Read: Latin American Anthology Published in Disappearing Ink]
Reading Rainbow, one of my favorite shows as a child, is returning to teach a new generation about the magical journeys books can take you on, but will do so in a whole new medium. Originally a television program that aired on PBS from 1983 to 2006, Reading Rainbow will now be available as an app. LeVar Burton, the host of the television show, acquired the "Reading Rainbow" license last year for his new digital multimedia company, RRKidz. Burton recognized the changes occurring in the children's publishing industry; like the entire industry, things are moving more and more toward digital platforms and he saw a perfect opportunity to reinvent what he did for 25 years on Reading Rainbow: get kids excited about reading books through the use of technology. “We're still tying literature and the real world together, and where it meets is in t... [more 'Reading Rainbow' Returns as an App]