First They Came for the Trade Publication: Kirkus Closes
Kirkus was always known, to the booksellers and industry reporters who relied on its write-ups of forthcoming titles, as the cranky review house.
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Kirkus was always known, to the booksellers and industry reporters who relied on its write-ups of forthcoming titles, as the cranky review house.
Rubin, ousted from Doubleday, announced he'll head the much smaller Henry Holt, and make it more "focused."
"A woman I have never met but a woman whom I love deeply: Janet Maslin of the New York 'Times.'"
With the attention of more than 100 conventiongoers at stake, Sully's heroic brevity at BookExpo landed listeners safely at the five o'clock cocktail hour.
The once-joyous red-letter events of the cultural calendar reduced to doom-y article ledes.
Topics included raccoon hunting, African cranes, harmonic fifths, and growing up in the Bronx with big lips.
Adam Bellow finally has a chance to prove his genius.
HarperCollins, the publishing monster from which she was fired as CEO last June, is really bumming.
health carnage, tiger woods, senate, tiger catches tail, barack obama, congress, the most important people in the world, health care, kate hudson, goldman sachs, ink-stained wretches, joe lieberman, jude law, david paterson, harry reid, sienna miller, aig, ben nelson, mayor bloomberg, wall street, white men with money, a-rod, ballsy crime, ben bernanke, chuck schumer, courtney love, crime, intel, jake gyllenhaal, jerks, john mccain, jon gosselin, kirsten gillibrand, polls, public option