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The Mac Blog will be written by a number of executives and influencers from across the Macmillan family of companies and imprints, including adult trade, children's, college and academic, and magazine publishing. Check back often, or subscribe to the RSS feed, to watch us change.

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Archive for the ‘Authors’ Category

The Best Books of 2007

Friday, January 4th, 2008

At the end of 2007 we were gratified to find many of our books included in year-end round-ups by various newspapers, magazines, and electronic media. These books would be worthy additions to your 2008 reading lists.The following books appeared on various “Best of 2007” lists published by the New York Times. We are very proud to break through the immense competition and receive recognition for these fine and varied books.

The New York Times Book Review Best Illustrated Books of 2007
From Farrar, Straus and Giroux Books for Young Readers
The Wall: Growing up Behind the Iron Curtain by Peter Sís

New York Times 10 Best Books of 2007
From Farrar, Straus and Giroux
The Rest is Noise by Alex Ross
The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño
Tree of Smoke by Dennis Johnson

The New York Times critic picks of 2007 (William Grimes)
From Farrar, Straus and Giroux
House of Happy Endings by Leslie Garis
Troublesome Young Men by Lynn Olson

New York Times Top 10 Books of 2007
From Graywolf Press
Out Stealing Horses by Per Petterson

From Farrar, Straus and Giroux
The Rest is Noise by Alex Ross
The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño
Tree of Smoke by Denis Johnson

New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2007
From St. Martin’s Press
The Abstinence Teacher by Tom Perrotta

From Farrar, Straus and Giroux
The Bad Girl by Mario Vargas Llosa
Call Me by your Name by André Aciman
Cleopatra’s Nose by Judith Thurman
Dancing to “Alemandra” by Mayra Montero
The Invisible Cure by Helen Epstein
Gomorrah by Roberto Saviano
The Rest is Noise by Alex Ross
The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño
Tree of Smoke by Denis Johnson

From Graywolf Press
Out Stealing Horses by Per Petterson

From Henry Holt
The Day of Battle by Rick Atkinson

From Drawn and Quarterly
Shortcomings by Adrian Tomine

From Metropolitan Books
The Whisperers by Orlando Figes

New York Times Economics: The Year in Books
From Metropolitan Books
Better by Atul Gawande

Celebrations

Monday, November 19th, 2007

I’ve just come back from the celebration of the first hundred years of Mondadori, Italy’s largest publisher, with 35% of the market in their country. It was an elegant and exuberant occasion, capped by an extraordinary concert at the world-famous Teatro alla Scala which was attended by authors and publishers from all over the world—a stirring reminder of the central importance of publishing in the life of a culture. I think everyone who was there felt privileged to share in saluting this remarkable milestone.

Meanwhile, in the U.S. we have just had our own literary celebration—the 58th National Book Awards here in New York. The NBAs, too, draw attention to the vital importance of books in our culture. That is why the awards are National: they help us define what our country is really all about.

The books chosen this year vindicate that assertion, I think. The winner in children’s literature, Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Story of a Part-Time Indian, is a powerful novel drawn from the author’s own experience that has already won a wide and admiring audience. Tim Weiner’s Legacy of Ashes, a devastating history of the CIA, won in non-fiction. Robert Hass, a former US poet laureate whose work has helped define the preoccupations of a generation, received the poetry prize for Time and Materials. And the fiction award went to FSG’s novelist Denis Johnson for Tree of Smoke, a deep and intense novel about Americans in Vietnam which the judges called “a careening journey into our national subconscious.”

I’m particularly proud to add that FSG had three other nominees this year: Mischa Berlinski’s first novel Fieldwork and Lydia Davis’s story collection Varieties of Disturbance, her fifth book with FSG, were also selected in the fiction category, while Woody Holton’s Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution, published by our Hill & Wang imprint, was nominated in non-fiction.

All of us have reservations about awards, and not only when our own favorites don’t win, but in a certain sense it’s not really who the winner is that counts in the end. What matters is that we take time to celebrate the centrality of writers and their work in our national life, calling attention to how books help us to understand and feel more deeply the lives we are living. Publishers need extraordinary interventions today—from other media, from trusted public figures, from new retailing opportunities, and from prize juries, too—to break through the swelling background noise of the ever-increasing claims on our attention. Prizes, if they’re done right, can help get really good books noticed and sold in great quantities today—as we see in Britain with the Mann Booker Prize, the Prix Goncourt in France, and the Premio Strega in Italy.

I think all of us would like the NBAs to gain in prominence so that they have the kind of broader recognition that, say, the Pulitzer Prizes do, and there are ongoing debates about how to achieve this. My own feeling is that the NBAs should not try to become more popular, but to seek to single out the best as it is understood by the writers selected to be judges in a particular year. No decision of any jury is ever going to please everyone, but if the awards are honest and thoughtful, as the NBAs by and large have been, they will continue to gain in authority over time. Harold Augenbraum, who directs the National Book Foundation, deserves recognition and support for his dedicated and imaginative approach to administering these important prizes and for working with publishers to help them achieve the greater public recognition they deserve.

Jonathan Galassi is the President and Publisher of Farrar, Straus & Giroux

Blind/Orphan/Pony

Monday, November 12th, 2007

As a children’s book publisher ‘lo these many years, I consider myself a kind of expert in knowing what children will read. That’s not the same thing as knowing what books librarians will choose for their award lists, what teachers are recommending for the classroom, or what parents remember from their own childhoods.

Having been the architect and creator of some of the bestselling children’s books and series of the past two decades, I have an instinctive appreciation, understanding and respect for this audience that lives between the ages of 0-14. The Feiwel and Friends publishing list, which was officially launched just this last month, is about finding books that kids will want to read and we hope will be books that will leave a lasting impression. While other publishers may be looking for the next wizard, the next brand, the next blockbuster, we believe in building a program book by book, and sticking to the enduring categories in children’s reading.

And what might those be? I used to rely on three words that seemed to me to capture my editorial philosophy. That was blind/orphan/pony. In those three words was a lot of editorial information. Blind meant a story about struggling with some kind of disability or difficulty. And let’s face it, Helen Keller was the only biography that seemed forever popular. Orphan meant kids operating without parents—living independently. Parents didn’t necessarily have to be dead (like in The Boxcar Children or Bambi), just conveniently absent (as in the Babysitters Club). And pony, well, kids love animal stories of all kinds. That editorial guideline served me well for many years. But over time I have expanded the definition of my publishing (which does still include blind/orphan/pony). It is now about tried and true themes that endure in children’s reading regardless of how hurried their childhoods and how much more sophisticated and media savvy they are. Children are children.

The books I publish fall into the tried and true categories: fiction and non-fiction about animals, friendship, sports, school, holidays, seasons. Stories that make you laugh and cry. Oh, and let’s not forget those scary stories which allow kids the opportunity to feel scared but be safe at the same time. Books can do that.

There are more than a few books I would want to share with you from our list (and I hope you will visit us at our Feiwel and Friends website to find out about what we’re doing—you can also visit with Holden Caulfield, our Newfoundland team mascot). But please be sure to check out Ballerina Dreams by Lauren Thompson and James Estrin, a picture book and a true story about dreams coming true that will be featured this next Friday, November 16 on the “TODAY SHOW.”

You’ll laugh and cry—and I promise you won’t forget it.

Jean Feiwel is the publisher of Feiwel and Friends.

Get Rhett!

Monday, November 5th, 2007

So proclaims a full page, full color ad on the back of the art section of today’s New York Times. Rhett Butler’s People by Donald McCaig is the powerful companion novel to Margaret Mitchell’s classic Gone With The Wind. (You heard it on MySpace first!)

It hits bookstores tomorrow (Tuesday, November 6, 2007), and has been well worth the wait for millions of devoted “Windies” who’ve always wanted to know more about that dashing, mysterious Rhett Butler.

In a world where Hollywood pushes out sequels and spin-offs practically before the popcorn is even swept out of the Multiplex, Rhett is big media news. The biggest movie of all time, based on one of the biggest books of all time. . . and we have to wait 70 years to hear Rhett’s story? What’s that all about? The answer is simple. The Margaret Mitchell estate, St. Martin’s, and Donald McCaig wanted to make sure that it did literary justice to Gone With The Wind. And it does.

So a major ad campaign is certainly a fitting way for its proud publisher (St. Martin’s Press) to launch Rhett Butler’s People. On the heels of terrific reviews, including one in the New York Times Book Review on Sunday, our print ads will certainly help to get the word out.

But if you are like most people in the digital era, chances are that you heard about this book long before today. And chances are that you did not hear about it first in a newspaper ad or from a book review. In the age of Facebook, people learn about music, movies, books, and games from a million sources. They learn from websites, social networks (e.g. MySpace and Facebook), blogs, bookmarking sites, widgets and, most of all, from each other. The speed of the social network is incredible. Old fashioned word of mouth, but on steroids.

So, to launch Rhett, our brilliant publishers went to work early. They wanted to create buzz, but where to start? First, they created a beautiful site for the book (www.RhettButlersPeople.com) so that people had a place to go to experience a taste of the book. They created an online excerpt and promoted it with a newsletter (The Rhett Watch). They created a content widget so people can put Rhett on their own sites all over the Web. They ran pre-publication ads on Yahoo for two weeks to drive people to www.RhettButlersPeople.com. They used an online publicist to blog and twitter about the book, as well as post video content all over the Web. They even encouraged Rhett and his friends get his own MySpace page. Which they did.

I particularly loved the little note that “Lauren” from Washington D.C. (who appears to be a vampire) sent to Rhett on MySpace last week saying “Can’t wait for your new book this weekend!” As a publisher, that makes me very, very happy. (Note to my friends at the Barnes and Noble in D.C.: Watch your necks tomorrow night.)

The result of all this is that ads in the New York Times are the culmination, rather than the start, of the promotion of Rhett Butler’s People. In the old days of publishing, buzz began in the industry and among booksellers. In the Facebook world, we spread the content out there in cyberspace and hope that readers like what they see. If they do, the buzz takes care of itself.

It seems to have worked for Rhett.

Brian Napack is the President of Macmillan.

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