3 de julho de 2011

Leituras Digitais (26 de Junho a 2 de Julho)



Rubrica semanal de notícias e artigos relacionados com a edição de livros digitais.

  The British Library has signed a deal with Google, which will see one of the largest collections of books and pamphlets in the world made available and searchable online for the first time. The deal included 250,000 out-of-copyright books from the Library’s collections, covering up to 40 million pages from 1700-1870, from the French Revolution to the end of slavery.
  The world's largest pub­lishers have begun growing again after weathering the global recession over the past three years, with ­Pearson once again emerging as top dog.
According to the annual ranking of global pub­lishing performance, compiled on behalf of Livres Hebdo, Buchreport, Publishers Weekly and The Bookseller, publishing revenues in 2010 have overtaken the total ­revenues for 2008 and 2009.
  John Locke has become the first self-published author to sell more than one million e-books through Amazon.
  Locke said: "Kindle Direct Publishing has provided an opportunity for independent authors to compete on a level playing field with the giants of the book selling industry. Not only did KDP give me a chance, they helped at every turn. Quite simply, KDP is the greatest friend an author can have."
  During a discussion on "New Skill Sets: Capabilities Publishers Don't Have and How They're Developing Them", Charlie Redmayne, global executive vice-president for digital at HarperCollins, stressed editors needed to look beyond the book, or give it over to the best person who could "tell the story digitally". He said: "Editors need to become not just editors of books, but people with the content vision, and there are not enough editors in the industry who have those skills."
  What used to be seen as a last resort is fast becoming the most successful trend in writing. Alison Flood talks to the authors doing it themselves.
  The most impressive thing of all, though, is the way Rowling has managed to present the whole thing as an act of altruism. "I wanted to give something back to the fans that have followed Harry so devotedly over the years, and to bring the stories to a new generation," she says. This isn't necessarily hogwash: at this stage in her fantastically lucrative career, money presumably isn't the driving force for Rowling and there's every chance that she does love the fans who have made her so successful.
  The Pew Research Center just released the results of  their most recent survey, and guess what? Twelve percent of Americans now own an e-reader. That’s double the results from the November 2010 survey. The increase stands in stark contrast to the number of tablet owners. Between January 2011 and may 2011, that figure rose from 7% to only 8%.
  Before the magazine, I ran a bookstore, Clarkesworld Books, which some of you have seen me selling the remnants of at conventions. I entered that career through a love of books and a somewhat compulsive book collecting habit. A few of my friends find it ironic that I publish an online magazine, design ebooks and own a Kindle. Honestly, I don't see it. I love the stories and the format doesn't always matter to me. My collecting has taken a few turns, but there are still genuine paper books arriving in my house.
New York Times E-Book Best Sellers

These lists are an expanded version of those appearing in the July 10, 2011 print edition of the Book Review, reflecting sales for the week ending June 25, 2011.

E-Book Fiction

1.                      SMOKIN' SEVENTEEN, by Janet Evanovich
2.                      THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett
3.                      WATER FOR ELEPHANTS, by Sara Gruen
4.                      A GAME OF THRONES, by George R. R. Martin
5.                      SILVER GIRL, by Elin Hilderbrand

E-Book Nonfiction

1.                      HEAVEN IS FOR REAL, by Todd Burpo with Lynn Vincent
2.                      IN THE GARDEN OF BEASTS, by Erik Larson
3.                      BOSSYPANTS, by Tina Fey
4.                      UNBROKEN, by Laura Hillenbrand
5.                      MY HORIZONTAL LIFE, by Chelsea Handler

30 de junho de 2011

Lisboa Electropunk

  O propósito desta antologia temática será retratar Lisboa na volta do Milénio — Natal do Ano 2000 — mas um Milénio diferente tal como poderia ter sido imaginado pelos autores do início do séc XX.
Trata-se pois de um conceito semelhante ao tão popular género steampunk, mas com duas diferenças. As narrativas terão de decorrer precisamente no ano 2000, ou seja, no futuro e a base de energia não será o vapor, tão caro aos autores com Blaylock, Powers e Gibson, mas sim a electricidade cuja utilização começava já a despontar na aurora do século XX.
A nossa intenção será criar um mundo consensual, de uma série de contos interligados no mesmo tempo (uma semana), no mesmo futuro/passado (ano 2000), onde serão utilizadas todas as tecnologias sonhadas pelos nossos avós.
Com organização de João Barreiros, a editora Saída de Emergência aceita submissões para esta nova antologia que deverá ser publicada no verão de 2012.
O regulamento completo pode ser consultado aqui.

Mapa Literário

O Literature-Map.com é um website que, após a introdução do nome de um escritor, gera uma lista de sugestões em que o escritor seleccionado ocupa a posição central e os escritores sugeridos gravitam em torno deste, sendo a distância o principal indicador de semelhança entre os mesmos. Uma ferramenta de fácil utilização que permite descobrir novos autores tendo em conta os gostos literários de cada um.

27 de junho de 2011

Gonçalo M. Tavares Vence o Grande Prémio de Romance e Novela APE/MC 2010

  Relativamente aos livros publicados em 2010, o Grande Prémio de Romance e Novela APE/MC, atribuído desde 1982, em vinte e nove anos consecutivos, acaba de galardoar a obra “Uma Viagem à Índia”, de Gonçalo M. Tavares (Caminho).
Ao reunir pela 3.ª vez, o júri, constituído por José Correia Tavares, que presidiu, Cristina Robalo Cordeiro, Fernando Dacosta, Isabel Cristina Rodrigues, José Manuel de Vasconcelos e Violante Magalhães, deliberou por maioria, pois Isabel Cristina Rodrigues e José Manuel de Vasconcelos votaram em “A Cidade do Homem”, de Amadeu Lopes Sabino (Sextante).
As 99 obras admitidas ao concurso (mais 14 do que no ano passado), e dado que duas são de co-autoria, outras duas de um mesmo autor e mais duas de um outro, correspondem também a 99 escritores, 74 homens, 25 mulheres, tendo a chancela de 43 editoras (mais 10 do que no ano passado).
O Grande Prémio de Romance e Novela, no montante de 15 000 Euros, já distinguiu 25 autores, de 16 editoras, havendo 4 que bisaram: Vergílio Ferreira, António Lobo Antunes, Agustina Bessa-Luís e Maria Gabriela Llansol. Foram patrocinadores, relativamente a esta sua última edição: o Ministério da Cultura, a Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, a Imprensa Nacional-Casa da Moeda, o Instituto Camões, o Município de Grândola e a Sociedade Portuguesa de Autores.

Leilão "Livros e Manuscritos: Séculos XVI a XX"

Livros e Manuscritos: Séculos XVI a XX
Data: 27 de Junho, pelas 21.00h
Local: Palácio da Independência, Lisboa

26 de junho de 2011

Leituras Digitais (19 a 25 de Junho)



Rubrica semanal de notícias e artigos relacionados com a edição de livros digitais.

  The British Library has signed a deal with Google, which will see one of the largest collections of books and pamphlets in the world made available and searchable online for the first time. The deal included 250,000 out-of-copyright books from the Library’s collections, covering up to 40 million pages from 1700-1870, from the French Revolution to the end of slavery.
  The world's largest pub­lishers have begun growing again after weathering the global recession over the past three years, with ­Pearson once again emerging as top dog.
  According to the annual ranking of global pub­lishing performance, compiled on behalf of Livres Hebdo, Buchreport, Publishers Weekly and The Bookseller, publishing revenues in 2010 have overtaken the total ­revenues for 2008 and 2009.
  Locke said: "Kindle Direct Publishing has provided an opportunity for independent authors to compete on a level playing field with the giants of the book selling industry. Not only did KDP give me a chance, they helped at every turn. Quite simply, KDP is the greatest friend an author can have."
  During a discussion on "New Skill Sets: Capabilities Publishers Don't Have and How They're Developing Them", Charlie Redmayne, global executive vice-president for digital at HarperCollins, stressed editors needed to look beyond the book, or give it over to the best person who could "tell the story digitally". He said: "Editors need to become not just editors of books, but people with the content vision, and there are not enough editors in the industry who have those skills."
  What used to be seen as a last resort is fast becoming the most successful trend in writing. Alison Flood talks to the authors doing it themselves.
  Once again, JK Rowling and her marketing team have left the rest of the publishing world standing while she blazes a trail into the record books. I'll eat my hardback copy of The Deathly Hallows if the Harry Potters aren't the fastest-selling ebooks in history by the end of this year – and I can only tip my hat in admiration.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...