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New & UpcomingFriday May 09, 2008
Cinema's First Great Vampire Finally Gets Bio
UnBeige: The Circus Is Coming to Print![]() Stephanie Murg of UnBeige, mediabistro.com's design blog, spotlights Taschen's new collection of circus art, which features "over 900 color and black-and-white illustrations, including photographs by everyone from Matthew Brady and Walker Evans to Lisette Model and, get this, Charles and Ray Eames." And, as the above illustration demonstrates, lots of posters. Wednesday May 07, 2008
'The Score' Explains The Science Behind 'The Game'
"The male uses his penis like a hypodermic needle, piercing the skin on the female's arms ... since the female has no vagina. Then, with hydraulic force, the male injects her with four-inch-long tadpole-shaped "spermatophores" ... the penis is about five feet long when flaccid. The end of the penis has a cartilaginous lance, the better for stabbing ... sometimes the female will bite off the male's penis or arms with her deadly beak. It may be that one or both sexes don't survive the encounter. If human males faced these sorts of hazards, it would seem perfectly understandable that they'd gather in pickup classes and related support seminars, there to boost one another's courage to approach the opposite sex." Tuesday May 06, 2008
Imagine Michael Gross's Gossip Girls...Heretofore, I've known Jennifer Banash as one of the powers behind Iowa City indie Impetus Press, and though I've seen her novel, Hollywoodland, I have to admit that I was surprised by the news that she's also the author of The Elite, a YA series debuting next month set in "the most exclusive luxury apartment building on New York's Upper East Side." Now I'm going to have that synth line stuck in my head for the rest of the afternoon. Monday May 05, 2008
The Book Trailer as History Channel InformercialIn just under three minutes, Steven Pressfield sets the stage for his latest novel, Killing Rommel. In fact, you would barely be able to tell from this short film that the book—which ships this week—is fiction; everything about the presentation is grounded in the conventions of TV documentary... the visual flourish of Pressfield drawing a map of the theater of operations in the desert sands is a particularly nice touch. But you can only put so much information across in three minutes, which is why there's an extended, 10-minute version of the film that goes deeper into Rommel's background and his tactics for desert warfare, along with more information about how the British army's Long Range Desert Group developed a counterstrategy that finally pushed the German army back, then goes on to reveal Rommel's eventual fate following his evacuation to Europe. This video actually hints at some interesting possibilities when it comes to using short films to promote both fiction and nonfiction titles. If a production company can create something like this out of stock footage and a remote location shoot, how much harder can it be to make a 22- or 23-minute version which, in addition to being podcastable, is ready for cable broadcast? Obviously, this wouldn't work for every novel, or even every nonfiction book, and there's only so many titles that would command the level of investment required, but perhaps, for somebody reading this post right now, it's something worth thinking about. (And, too, a 30-second trailer which is in some respects as much an ad for the longer videos as it is for the book.) Thursday Apr 10, 2008
Ron Paul Late to Big Book Game, But Still Better Marketed Than Kucinich
According to Wikipedia, Representative Paul is the author or co-author of 18 previous titles, most of them self-published through the Foundation for Rational Economics and Education. But I don't think they should count Ron Paul Speaks, which is really just a collection of quotes that two other guys compiled to cash in on the presidential candidate's growing popularity (as opposed to the book the candidate wrote himself to cash in on his growing popularity). Wednesday Apr 02, 2008
Seton Hall Arsonists Remain in Jail as Victims' Story Nears Bookstores
We also wondered what had originally drawn her to telling the story of Simons and Llanos's recovery. "When it was proposed to me by an editor, I knew immediately it had the potential to be the story of a career and that is exactly what it has turned out to be," she said. "I always said this was a story that was meant to be told. Everything fell into place quickly. You can't make up more compelling characters than Shawn Simons and Alvaro Llanos. You root for them through the whole book. The payoff for the reader is that they are so worth rooting for. They're so special." (This photo of Fisher with Simons and Llanos was taken by Matt Rainey, whose photos for the original newspaper articles won the Pulitzer Prize.) Moving Book Trailers into the Virtual WorldThis one-minute trailer for The Salvation of Billy Wayne Carter, a novella by M. David Hornbuckle, starts out with some interesting computer animation—the only jarring element is that while the man in the film is done up in a somewhat realistic style, the woman's facial features are much more cartoonish, and the effect is somewhat jarring. But a machinima book trailer is a great idea in principle—anybody else got one? (Clarification: Although animator Peter Bernard goes by the handle "pbmachinima," this video's computer animation is actually built from scratch.) Tuesday Mar 25, 2008
Look What Kavalier & Clay Hath Wrought
At GalleyCat, we hold both those propositions to be true, and not just because of our longstanding admiration for Michael Chabon and David Hajdu. We've also got the expertise of veteran Marvel Comics editor (and mediabistro.com instructor) Danny Fingeroth, who published Disguised as Clark Kent: Jews, Comics, and the Creation of the Superhero just last fall. His PW interview (with fellow '80s Marvel Bullpenner Peter Sanderson) hits most of the book's thematic points, including his interest in universalizing the question—in Fingeroth's words, his history can be defined beyond the Jewish question as exploring "the sparks that are ignited when people struggle, consciously or unconsciously, with the balance between their individual and their group identities." Anyway, I'm looking forward to seeing what Prof. Brod—a philosopher whose previous work includes a consideration of Jewish masculinity, along with other men's studies issues—brings to this fertile discussion area. Friday Mar 14, 2008
The Best News I've Heard All Week
You can actually find Bridge of Birds kicking around if you look hard enough, and I highly recommend you do, but turning up the two sequels gets a little trickier—apparently Eight Skilled Gentlemen was published so haphazardly hardly anyone, including me, could find it when it came out—but, thanks to the prodding of John Scalzi (yes, him again), Subterranean Press is producing a limited-edition omnibus of all three novels. It's not even St. Patrick's Day yet, and already I know what I want for Christmas. PreviouslyVIDEO: Parag Khanna's Second World Launch Party Because We Really Need Another OJ Book Can't Wait for the I Can Has Cheezburger Book? Jennifer 8. Lee Shares Fortune Cookie With Media The Future Is Not Quite Now: Waiting for Gawker's Sci-Fi Blog All the Nudes Now Fit to Print National Geographic's Literary Dinosaurs, Redux Beschloss's New Book Deal? That's Old News! The New Small Talk: She Does It So Awfully Well Meg Cabot Is Ruining the Classics (with apologies to Spike Jones) "Advice Goddess" Sells McGraw-Hill on Her War Against Bad Manners Training the Next Generation of Conspiracy Nuts The Book Babes Have a Book Deal Even New Directions Has Book Trailers Now Fleeting Encounters Inspire Graphic Short-Shorts Anti-Stoning Anthology Extends Deadline for Submission Your Tuesday Morning Book Trailer: The Kept Man GalleyCat: Now With Equal Time for Dogs Doug Brinkley's Snake River Canyon Detour Britney's Mom Sold a Parenting Memoir? Calling This Video "A Delight" Would Be Cliched A Sneak Peek at Presentation Zen Valerie Plame's Memoir In (Some) Stores Now Contents of Second Philip K. Dick Compendium Revealed Daring Girls Ready to Break Loose Death or Glory Becomes Just Another Story A Book Trailer That Shows a Little Skin Book Pros by Day, Lit Mag Editors By Night Now That's What I Call Turnaround Unbridled Turns BookSense Pick into Six-Figure PB Deal Library of America Unveils 2nd Philip K. Dick Omnibus Touchstone Unveils New Crop of Aspiring Writers, While Publishing First Batch Will the Book Party Have a Mosh Pit? Viner Accuses Goldmans of "Gross Exploitation" Beaufort Prepping New If I Did It Cover? "The Big Read" Goes to XM Radio B&N Will Carry If I Did It Now 25K More Copies of If I Did It: Why? Quick Update on the End of the World B&N Rejects OJ Book; Borders Lukewarm Paper of Record Takes Note of OJ Book New Publisher Of OJ Simpson Book Offers Details OJ Book Deal Met With Resounding Meh BREAKING: Beaufort Lands The OJ Book Who's Publishing If I Did It Now? Wooden Personality Dominates Stace's Latest Starbucks Selection #3: Oral History Kinky Sci-Fi Epic Returns from Limbo The Best Deathly Hallows Fakeout Ever A Campaign in Trouble as a Pub Date Nears This 4th of July, MAD TPs the White House UK's New PM Takes Cue from JFK Det. Munch's Meta-Mysteries @ Simon & Schuster Outrage at "Honor Killing" Spurs Anthology Book Deals We're Catching Up With Gerald Nicosia Is Full of It, Daddy-O This Must Be Philip Turner's Week We're Doing More Puzzles: USA Today Scores Branding Deals with Multiple Publishers Average American Sequel: "Better and in Heels" You Go to Press With the Manuscript You Have? No Half-Measures for Aussie Art Writer's Mainstreaming Second-Guessing Our Oprah Guesses Scrotum-Fearing Librarians Apparently Unwelcome in the Colbert Nation With Friends Like Johnny Knoxville... BBC Audiobooks Coming to America Of Course It's About the Sales Peeking at The Books of Summer Some Quick Hits from FishbowlNY.com Jim Dale Knows How Deathly Hallows Ends Why Is This Haggadah Different President Talks, Historian Takes Notes Can't Wait to Read Meg Gardiner? "Please Hammer Don't Hurt Them" B&N Imprint Rushes Libby Book to Stores What Do Women Think About Katherine Taylor Falls Into Chick Lit Bait Trap Add T.C. Boyle to the Best Shorts More Best American Shorts Exposed Confirmed: Mantle Novel Lyons' Biggest Book Algonquin Announces Stories from the South Vatican Gives Doubleday Its Blessing Meet This February's Relationship Advice Icon D-Nasty's 1st Serial Goes to Radar Michael Chabon Prepares Swashbuckler for NYT Caravan Project Announces Multi-Platform List Harper Gives Mantle Novel Intentional Walk Newsweek Teases with a Taste of OJ Starbucks Taps Ex-Child Soldier for Book Sales |
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