Literature

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Archived version: https://archive.ph/HSmIX

‘I wanted to be No 1. But a certain JK Rowling came along’: Jacqueline Wilson on rivalry, censorship – and love

Interview by Simon Hattenstone

Raised by a ‘scary’ father and a ‘terrible snob’ of a mother, the Tracy Beaker author has always understood the loneliness that marks so many young lives. But at 77, she’s never been happier.

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Archived version: https://archive.ph/eK1Rx

The two-up, two-down terraced house on a cobbled Hebden Bridge street does not look like the headquarters of a multi award-winning publishing house.

There is no gleaming edifice, no sign and certainly no reception desk. The green front door leads straight into Kevin Duffy’s living room, the nerve centre of Bluemoose books, his independent literary hit factory.

It is at a cluttered table in the corner that Duffy has built a business with a success rate that billion-pound publishers regard with envy.

Each year, Bluemoose puts out no more than 10 titles, but a remarkable number end up in contention for major literary prizes.

Each author is handpicked by Duffy, 62, a self-confessed “control freak” from Stockport, Greater Manchester, who spent years as a salesperson for big publishers before remortgaging his house to start Bluemoose in 2006.

“We don’t publish a lot, but what we publish will stay with you for the rest of your life,” he promised.

It was Duffy who published Benjamin Myers’ The Gallows Pole, which has been made into a BBC series that was given five stars by the Guardian’s Lucy Mangan.

In March, Bluemoose won best northern publisher at the Small Press of the Year awards. In April, a Bluemoose title – I Am Not Your Eve, the debut novel by Devika Ponnambalam, which tells the story of Paul Gauguin’s child bride and muse, Teha’amana – was shortlisted for the £25,000 Walter Scott prize for historical fiction, which Myers won in 2018.

Bluemoose’s current bestselling author is Rónán Hession, a former musician who balances his writing career with being the assistant general secretary of the department of social protection in the Irish government.

Hession’s 2019 debut Leonard and Hungry Paul, a funny and tender story about kindness, has sold more than 125,000 copies worldwide. A bestseller in Germany, it has also attracted fans in Hollywood – Duffy recalls receiving an email from someone claiming to be Julia Roberts’s agent while having dinner in the Old Gate, a Hebden Bridge pub.

“I deleted it, I thought someone was taking the piss. Then her PR person got in touch saying she wanted to get in touch with Rónán because she loved the book. I was spitting potatoes across the room. How wonderful is that? She just wanted to say thank you,” he said. Hession will not be drawn on whether Roberts is buying the film rights.

Another Bluemoose success story with a day job is Stuart Hennigan, a librarian from Leeds. Ghost Signs, an eyewitness account of the impact of the early days of the pandemic on those living in poverty, made the shortlist of the Parliamentary Book awards.

Duffy shares an anarchic streak with Hennigan, finding it hilarious when he turned up to the Tory-packed ceremony in a T-shirt that said: “Still hate Thatcher”.

Major publishers have too many shareholders and overheads to take gambles, said Duffy.

“They’re not going to take risks on working-class and diverse writers because they need to get their money back … when you’ve got a 40m-high steel and glass edifice on the Embankment, there are costs to be taken care of.”

Take Penguin Random House, he said, part of Bertelsmann, the world’s biggest publisher. “It’s a €30bn organisation. Every year, their CEO says that they’ve got to grow by 10%. That’s €3bn, every year.”

In contrast, Duffy remains Bluemoose’s only employee, drawing a “tiny” salary, working with five freelance editors, including his lawyer wife, Hetha.

He is happy that way. “I don’t want to be the next Penguin. I don’t want to be a huge business. I just want to publish eight to 10 books a year, make a bit of a profit and invest it all back into the business to find new writers,” Duffy said.

Running Bluemoose is a seven-day-a-week vocation. On an average day, Duffy receives 10-20 unsolicited pitches, usually the first three chapters of a new book, all of which, he insists, he reads. Perhaps four in a month will grab his attention enough for him to ask for the full manuscript.

Duffy insists that there remains a “class ceiling” in the publishing of literary fiction. LGBTQ+ writers are being given deals, as well as people of colour, he says, but working-class writers are not being heard.

“It’s been a problem in publishing for 40 years and it’s getting worse,” he said.

“The people making those publishing decisions, because of their educational background and their life background, are not reading books about people in the rest of the country.

“You know, 93% of the people in this country don’t go to private school. There’s a reading public out there that wants books about themselves and the areas they live in.”

Myers, he notes, originally signed with Picador, which would not publish Pig Iron, his third novel about a Travelling community in the north-east.

“Because, they said, ‘who would be interested in a working-class character from a small northern town?’ That small northern town was Durham, theological capital of Europe for 2,500 years.

“Pig Iron went on to win the inaugural Gordon Burn prize. Ben’s next book, Beastings, won the £10,000 Portico prize. Then The Gallows Pole won the world’s leading prize for historical fiction. Then all the agents were interested,” he said.

Myers then signed to Bloomsbury, but Duffy insists that there are no sour grapes, not least because Myers insisted that Bloomsbury keep the Bluemoose titles in print as part of his deal. “We still go out for a brew and a slice of cake,” said Duffy. “We wish him well.”

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Archived version: https://archive.ph/Uz7ql

The famous Waterstones in London’s Piccadilly is a modernist/art deco building. It started life as a menswear store and has the feel of that sort of traditional shop that is fast disappearing. But this bookshop, like many others, is enjoying a very modern sales boost from social media.

Groups of teenage girls regularly gather here to buy new books and meet new friends, both discovered on the social media app TikTok. Recommendations by influencers for authors and novels on BookTok – a community of users who are passionate about books and make videos recommending titles – can send sales into the stratosphere.

But while very much an online phenomenon, BookTok is having a material impact on the high street, with TikTok now pushing people to buy their books from bricks-and-mortar booksellers through a partnership with bookshop.org, which allows people to buy online and support independent bookshops at the same time.

Last year, Waterstones Piccadilly hosted a BookTok festival. One sales assistant told the Observer: “I can’t stress how much BookTok sells books. It’s driven huge sales of YA [young adult] and romance books, including titles such as The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller and authors such as Colleen Hoover.

“The demographic is almost exclusively teenage girls, but the power it has is huge. We have a ‘BookTok recommended’ table – and you can tell which books are trending by the speed at which they sell.”

Caroline Hardman, a literary agent at the Hardman & Swainson agency, says: “It’s driving the appetite for romance and ‘romantasy’ in a really big way, so it’s having a strong effect on what publishers look for too.”

BookTok was established in 2020 but this year brings new developments to a community which has so far been an organic phenomenon. This month, the winners of the inaugural TikTok book awards will be unveiled.

Users of the platform voted on a shortlist announced in May, with contenders for BookTok Book of the Year including Honey & Spice by Bolu Babalola, Lies We Sing to the Sea by Sarah Underwood, Young Mungo by Douglas Stuart and Maame by Jessica George.

There are also awards for BookTok influencers, independent bookshops, books to end a reading slump, and crucially, Best BookTok Revival, which has brought older novels to a new audience. The finalists in the revival category include One Day by David Nicholls, Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen and George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four.

James Stafford, a general manager at TikTok UK, calls the shortlist “a true celebration of the variety of literature that resonates with the TikTok community”.

Book awards typically boost authors’ profiles and can lead to higher sales. As BookTok is already providing remarkable publicity, it will be interesting to see how these awards affect the shortlisted authors’ sales.

In April, TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, also filed a trademark for a book publisher – 8th Note Press. The company has appointed Katherine Pelz, formerly from Penguin Random House, as acquisitions editor. Her specialist area is romance. Nothing is yet known about plans for 8th Note Press, although some self-published romance writers have said they have been approached about book deals.

According to the New York Times, the new publisher will focus on digital books until TikTok launches an online retail platform – something the company plans to do in the US later this year.

There is concern in the publishing industry that BookTok could become focused on books from ByteDance’s own publishing house. If the company can also sell the books direct to its users, that has repercussions for bookshops as well as publishers.

But could TikTok replicate the magic it has wrought in influencing book sales with its own products? Alice Harandon, who owns the St Ives Bookseller, isn’t sure. Her small but busy shop in the Cornish seaside resort regularly gets shoppers coming in to buy BookTok recommendations. The Secret History by Donna Tartt is a frequent request, as is A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J Maas and Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid.

“When traditional publishers try to muscle in on the BookTok market, it never seems to work out quite the same way as an organic, viral recommendation,” she says. “It works best when a good book that has already been out in the world for a while – and is genuinely good – finds a natural following rather than trying to write books for the market. It starts to look very commercial, and will turn some people off.”

Rhea Kurien is editorial director at Orion Fiction, one of the biggest traditional publishers in the UK. She’s interested to see if TikTok can become more than a marketing tool for authors. “If the BookTok effect on consumer buying behaviour wears off, what will they be offering their authors that other publishers aren’t?

“What has been interesting for me is looking at the self-published authors who are doing incredibly well because of TikTok. They’ve established demand for their books and, as traditional publishers, we can then get them out to even more readers. This is especially the case for authors whose books are very big in the US but less so in the rest of the world. That’s where UK publishers can help. I’m also just not sure the TikTok generation is one that wants to be steered this much by publishers.”

The reaction of BookTok’s key market will be crucial to success. The most recent Publishers Association research says that BookTok is overwhelmingly a factor in Gen Z reading habits. In a poll of more than 2,000 16- to 25-year-olds, almost 59% said that BookTok had helped them discover a passion for reading.

The report says: “BookTok and book influencers significantly influence what choices this audience make about what they read, with 55% of respondents saying they turn to the platform for book recommendations.”

One in three use it to discover books they wouldn’t otherwise hear about. It encourages diversity, with one in three readers polled saying they discovered books by authors from different cultures, and almost 40% being introduced to new genres by the app.

Bluemoose Books, based in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire, is an independent publisher that first put out The Gallows Pole by Ben Myers, recently made into a BBC drama. Founder Kevin Duffy thinks that a new publisher entering the market is a positive step, but sounds a note of caution.

“My concern is that a bigger slice of the publishing pie will go to celebrities who already have huge social media profiles, and further reduce the opportunities of talented but under-represented writers to see their work published.”

BookTok has had a major effect on how the traditional publishing model works, and while Kurien acknowledges the fears of the creation of a small, elite group of celebrity TikTok authors, she thinks it’s a challenge the industry needs to rise to. “The disadvantage to TikTok’s influence is simply that it’s taking up so many slots on our bestseller lists, tables in bookshops and spaces in supermarkets,” she says.

“The rise of BookTok titles has meant less visibility for other titles, whether they’re longstanding authors or debuts. But I think it’s good for our industry to be shaken up at times, for us to reconsider what we think our readers want and to make way for these new trends.”

Judging by Waterstones Piccadilly, BookTok has created both online and real-life communities that warm the hearts of the booksellers. Waterstones says: “Girls are meeting up and having bookshop days out. They save up their money and come into the shop in gaggles, getting really excitable about what they want to buy. Their energy is amazing and their friendships are really strong, They’ve bonded over books and the things they love, and that’s awesome.”

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#SFWA "Take No Prisoners" #StoryBundle🔥 https://storybundle.com/sfwa

Today’s #featured #book
WALTER JON WILLIAMS

METROPOLITAN

Aiah has fought her way from poverty and discovered a limitless source of power for her world-city. A charismatic revolutionary seizes the opportunity.

A spectacular blend of fantastic science, high politics, and low intrigue.

Nominated: #Nebula Award

#BookToot #ScienceFantasy #UrbanDystopia #Charity #NonProfit @bookstodon @fantasy @sffbookclub @bookstadon @literature

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#SFWA "Take No Prisoners" #StoryBundle
Here! :scremcat: https://storybundle.com/sfwa

Today’s #featured #book
C.J. LAVIGNE's

IN VERITAS

"Things that are and are not, she thinks, and the dog is a snake."

Shortlisted: 2023 Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writer Prize

2021 Crawford Award finalist

Speculative Fiction Book of the Year 2021 Alberta Book Publishing Awards.

#Canadian
#BookToot #UrbanFantasy #Paranormal #Contemporary #Charity #NonProfit @bookstodon @fantasy @paranormal @fflitclub @literature

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Hey Beehaw (and friends)! What're you reading?

Novels, nonfiction, ebooks, audiobooks, graphic novels, etc - everything counts!

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The longlist has been announced! It features work from four continents, four Irish writers, four debut novelists – and ten authors who are recognised by the Booker Prize for the first time

Novelist Esi Edugyan, twice-shortlisted for the Booker Prize, is the chair of the 2023 judging panel and is joined by actor, writer and director Adjoa Andoh; poet, lecturer, editor and critic Mary Jean Chan; Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and Shakespeare specialist James Shapiro; and actor and writer Robert Webb.

The judges are looking for the best work of long-form fiction, selected from entries published in the UK and Ireland between October 1 2022 and September 30 2023.

The longlist of 13 books – the ‘Booker Dozen’ – was announced on August 1, 2023 with the shortlist of six books to follow on September 21. The winner of the £50,000 prize will be announced at an event at Old Billingsgate, London, on November 26, 2023.

Longlist

  • The House of Doors
  • The Bee Sting
  • Western Lane
  • In Ascension
  • Prophet Song
  • All the Little Bird-Hearts
  • Pearl
  • This Other Eden
  • How to Build a Boat
  • If I Survive You
  • Study for Obedience
  • Old God's Time
  • A Spell of Good Things

The 13 longlisted books explore universal and topical themes: from deeply moving personal dramas to tragi-comic family sagas; from the effects of climate change to the oppression of minorities; from scientific breakthroughs to competitive sport. The list includes:

  • 10 writers longlisted for the first time, including four debut novelists
  • Three writers with seven previous nominations between them
  • Writers from seven countries across four continents
  • Four Irish writers, making up a third of the longlist for the first time
  • A novel featuring a neurodiverse protagonist, written from personal experience
  • ‘All 13 novels cast new light on what it means to exist in our time, and they do so in original and thrilling ways,’ according to Esi Edugyan, Chair of the judges
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When most people discuss perpetual copyrights, they’re usually its at least somewhat hyperbolic.

Outside of Mexico, copyrights in every nation expire and works become free for others to use without permission or royalty.

However, there is one interesting exception to that rule: Peter Pan.

Through a special bill in the U.K., the boy who never grows up has been granted a copyright that, at least in part, will never expire.

While the case of Peter Pan is certainly an unusual one, it raises much larger questions about the purpose of copyright, how long copyright terms should be and what the function of copyright law should be.

So it’s worth taking a moment to understand how the boy who won’t grow up became the boy who won’t completely enter the public domain.

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Working with the Booker Prize Foundation, Dua Lipa recently visited HMP Downview, a women’s prison in Surrey, to get a firsthand glimpse of Books Unlocked, a program set up by the BPF and the National Literacy to foster a culture of reading for incarcerated people. Lipa, who recently launched a book club of her own, said of the visit:

It was just kind of going into the room and understanding the books they love to read in their own time, how that makes them feel, how that’s been able to help them understand different emotions and feelings. [It] has been really inspiring and I’ve felt very privileged to be in that room to experience that with them.

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Hi guys, how's it going? I'm trying to identify the source of a commonly cited quote by Lytton Strachey that goes as follows: "Perhaps the best test of a man's intelligence is his capacity for making a summary."

Searching for this serves me countless results from quotes-websites, with no reference to where it was written / said and when. Do any of you know this? I'm beginning to wonder if it really is a genuine quote.

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“I knew these books were coming into the library, and I just hadn’t had time to research it. I finally got the time back at the end of January,” Egger said. He added that he knows about the industry from having owned a bookstore years ago. “It’s been a huge push from the publishers and the librarians to get these books in — books that say a boy can become a girl and a girl can become a boy.”

That's because Queer children exist, ya bloody dipstick.

His family wasn’t directly exposed to the books — Egger said he has lived in Front Royal 32 years and has five grown children and seven grandchildren, though most do not live in the area. But Egger views the topics as inherently wrong.

“I wasn’t focusing on anything but books that had sexual perversity in it … and books that promoted the lie of transgenderism,” he said.

Ugh. I hate that people like this can decide to have certain books removed on behalf of everyone else's family. Don't want your own kids or grand kids reading them? Fine, don't let them read those books. But they shouldn't be allowed to dictate what other peoples kids and grand kids can read; that's violating other peoples family rights.

In April, he filed formal complaints against three titles — “I Am Jazz,” a picture book about Jazz Jennings, a trans woman who writes she was “born with a girl’s brain in a boy’s body”; “This Is Why They Hate Us,” a young adult novel about a bisexual Latino boy; and “Ana on the Edge,” about a figure skater coming to terms with gender identity.

This shit is literally just another bogyman for right-wingers and other fascists. They lost the cultural "war" when equal marriage became legal across America, so the past few years they've been finding old reasons and modernizing them to hate queer people; what was old is now new again.

“Christ told us to be ‘cunning as serpents, and innocent as doves,’” an early version of the site said, inviting concerned residents to a “Beer, Babysitting, and Cleaning Up the Samuels Library” event in a local park. “Right now, innocence is under attack at our local Samuels Library. Explicity pornographic ‘young adult’ books, as well as books that promote fetishes such as the LGBTQ+ ideology have been found in the children’s and young adults sections of the library.”

They don't care about the "innocence" of queer kids, at all.

Anyways, this is a good read. This article made me angry from the ignorance and bigotry.

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Probably the best source of non-copyrighted literature on the planet, imho, and a necessary bookmark for any lit addict

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cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/books/t/223208

Perhaps the most surprising thing about prolific queer erotica author Chuck Tingle—who, talking via Zoom, wears a bubblegum pink bag over...

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2022 winners of the AIGA competition for best designed books and covers of the year. I've bought more than a few books specifically because of the cover design and there are several of the winners here that I've added to my "to read" list. As much as I read digitally, I still love the physicality of books and think that a well-designed and constructed book can enhance the joy of reading.

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Some of these look really interesting! Definitely want to check out Silver Nitrate since I’ve enjoyed her work in the past. Anything catch your eye?

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So I have been buying my ebooks from Amazon for many years. I used to even have a Kindle Voyage for a few years (it got destroyed like two years ago, never bothered to replace).

A friend introduced me to Calibre recently since she knows I like reading on my phone and I like being able to change the tags, cover, description, etc myself; but what I don't like is not being able to read my own ebooks with any ereader app that isn't the Kindle app.

And before anyone goes "just use the drm crack in Calibre" it doesn't work anymore and hasn't for months. I checked. I tried. No one seems to have been able to make it work for awhile now.

Ever since I started taking my privacy more seriously, I've been giving Amazon the side-eye and have been trying to move away from using it for literally anything. I've already replaced all my paid books with epub versions (I don't think I need to explain how, now do I?) but I still want to actually buy my books to support the authors.

But where the hell do I go that isn't Amazon? Is Kobo viable? How about B&N? I've a soft spot for B&N, but I won't touch it with a 10-foot pole if I can't directly download my bought ebooks and use them with any reading app.

I also backed-up all my ebooks to cloud storage for safe keeping, so being able to do that is also a requirement.

I am open to suggestions. I read mostly just fiction; fantasy, scifi, paranormal, LitRPG, Romance, etc.

I'm also considering buying the Boox Palma as my newest physical ereader in years, and I use Moon+ Reader Pro as my main reading app on it.

Quick note: I also use Libby from time to time (yay libraries) but it doesn't always have what I'm looking for or it's like a month long wait-time for the more popular, well known books. Plus I like owning my ebooks.

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Masha du Toit is celebrating the release of their books on 7 new platforms by making them free until 31st July (except on Amazon because Amazon has other ideas). Sci-fi and fantasy, LGBTQ.

Spread the word :)

To start with, Masha recommends "The Babylon Eye", "We Broke the Moon" (YA drama), or "Ray and the Cat Thing" (quite light).

Post on Mastodon: https://mefi.social/@Zumbador/110699839834664849

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I had an interesting thought yesterday. I was pondering, what if some of the archaic literature we relied upon to document past events was actually fictional accounts intended to be read for leisure?

This prompted me to ask what ancient or medieval (preferably before the 15th century) do you know of? Some may describe The Iliad as historical fiction, what do you think.

P.S. Regarding fictional accounts mistook as historical, I found this enlightening discussion on reddit, libreddit link.

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More #Shakespeare in Early Modern pronunciation

"Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears"

Antony speaks to the crowd from Julius Caesar, read in early 17th century pronunciation by yours truly

@literature @poetry @linguistics @histodons @bookstodon

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What do you read when you're struggling to read what you usually read?

Or to put it another way, what's your junk food/comfort read?

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I been in a lots of stress recently with social media and reading No longer human as my most recent book. So i just look for something positive to see a bit. I enjoy the Tatami Galaxy and The cat that save book for reference.

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