Category Archives: Bookselling

School Library Journal Battle of Books

The School Library Journal is talking up sixteen of last year’s best juvenile books in a type of book-on-book row, judged by fifteen authors of such books. I assume all conflicts of interest have been mitigated. Two of the matches have been judged so far. The Journal copied their idea from The Morning News, which has done a book battle for a few years.

Author and book battle judge Roger Sutton notes, “Much as we might wish it, books ain’t basketball. The thing about March Madness, which I only dimly comprehend after watching the last ten minutes of Michigan State over Connecticut, is that everybody is playing the same game. So not so with books, but given that proviso, let’s begin.”

Fair enough.

Klavan scores again!

Does just one black character make the whole novel black or is there a special section for mulatto novels with characters of both colors? And if all the novels about black people are in the black section, does that make the Literature section the white section? Why don’t we call it that then? I’m confused.

Read the whole thing here.

Tax Protest Parties Spur Product Sales

Rally for those that think Stimulus Act is wrong action

“Online retailers are recording hundreds of thousands of dollars in sales of mugs and sweats, buttons and bumper stickers, with much of the proceeds going toward organizing the tax-day tea parties, takeoffs on the original 1773 protest of British taxes,” reports Fox News. The head of Patriot Depot, Jay Taylor, says they’ve been so busy, he doesn’t know what their profit is.

Taylor is partnering with the Augusta, Ga.-based Reagan.org to send tens of thousands of tea bags north to Washington for a massive tax day tea dump. Though Reagan.org is asking for about $1 per bag, they estimate they’ll end up losing money in the transaction.

“What we figure is that we’ll probably end up losing a little bit of money on it,” said Joshua Bolin, executive director of Reagan.org, who told FOXNews.com that his organization accepted requests to send 30,000 tea bags packing in just the first two days of its promotion.

Now, can I brew you a cup of tea?

How Big is Too Big?

Author Brandon Sanderson is finishing up the popular Wheel of Time series, created and kept on life-support by the late Robert Jordan, and he has submitted 300,000 words to his publisher for the final book. The publisher said that’s too big for a fantasy book and booksellers will complain, so let’s split the book into three books released over the next two years.

Scott Esposito states, “So somebody explain to me how this isn’t about the money.” Brandon Sanderson talks about it at length here.

Good Fun Reading

One of the guys behind The Dangerous Book for Boys has written a historical fiction novel, Genghis: Bones of the Hills. Some bloggers are asking what genre this should be in? Macho lit? Warrior lit?

I think the term “lit” is part of the problem. It works with Chick lit, because of the assonance, but it doesn’t have to be part of a genre label for action-oriented, historical (and maybe non-historical) fiction involving mostly fathers and sons.

New Bestseller Lists

Hardcover, softcover, and manga are now categories in new NYT bestseller lists for graphic novels. Number one on the hardcover list: Starman Omnibus, Vol 2. At the top of the softcover list: Watchmen, out in theaters today. On the Manga list: Naruto, Vol. 38.

The Economy is Up

At least, it is for sales of Any Rand’s Atlas Shrugged and guns.

“‘Americans are flocking to buy and read Atlas Shrugged because there are uncanny similarities between the plot-line of the book and the events of our day’ said Yaron Brook, Executive Director at the Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights.” I haven’t read the book. Is it a tragedy? I keep thinking about buying a gun too, but I haven’t. I hear the supply is down because demand is so far up. No need to fear, Americans. Nancy Pelosi said she wasn’t interested in restricting second amendment rights for the time being.

Children’s Lit Awards

The Cybils Awards for 2008 have been announced. The Cybils come from children’s and young adult lit-bloggers who want to “reward the children’s and young adult authors (and illustrators) whose books combine the highest literary merit and kid appeal.”

More on CPSIA

Overlawyered has a long list of links for people talking and reporting on the impact of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, which went into effect this week. Even though some of this may be overreaction, congress and the commission are responsible for the confusion. Here’s part of a press release from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, issued last month. I hope this is accurate, not some kind of doublespeak:

The new law requires that domestic manufacturers and importers certify that children’s products made after February 10 meet all the new safety standards and the lead ban. Sellers of used children’s products, such as thrift stores and consignment stores, are not required to certify that those products meet the new lead limits, phthalates standard or new toy standards.

The new safety law does not require resellers to test children’s products in inventory for compliance with the lead limit before they are sold. However, resellers cannot sell children’s products that exceed the lead limit and therefore should avoid products that are likely to have lead content, unless they have testing or other information to indicate the products being sold have less than the new limit. Those resellers that do sell products in violation of the new limits could face civil and/or criminal penalties.

More “guidance” from the commission is here.

Quietly Trashing All the Children’s Books

Sherry blogs about the Consumer Products Safety Improvement Act, saying she knows of a used bookstore trashing all of it’s children’s books out of fear of this Improvement Act. I thought second-hand stores, thrift, used, and libraries, were exempt from this act, but even if that’s true, some store owners are not comforted by it.

The CPSC has, as of last week, made an exception for “ordinary children’s books printed after 1985.” Supposedly, some inks used before 1985 may have contained some lead. (However, the eight, nine, or ten year old reading a copy of Winnie the Pooh printed before 1985 would have to eat the book to get get any level of lead into their system. My four to twelve year olds don’t eat books. Do yours?) Right now, the bookstore where my daughter works is getting around the law by reclassifying their children’s books printed before 1985 as “vintage books” for adult collectors. Of course, this strategy is just that, a way of circumventing the law. That 1983 copy of Winnie the Pooh isn’t really vintage or collectible; it also isn’t dangerous to children.

Apparently, youth dirt bikes and ATVS are illegal to sell under the same act. Is the government trying to put small companies and many retailers out of business? It sure seems to be. Do we hate congress enough to rally for mandatory six-month vacations now? The less time they spend in Washington, the better we’ll be.