The New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards are usually news
for a few hours in the morning after the award ceremony. The only people who
seem to care are Booksellers, Librarians and the Kid Lit community here in NZ. Not
So This Year.
This year the Public have been warned that the winner of
Book Of The Year and Senior Fiction (that’s Young Adult) is a smutty book with
naughty language and deviant drug behaviour not to mention (gasp) the sex.
The media frenzy over a bookseller refusing to stock it, a
conservative political party denouncing it, and an editorial in a major Sunday
paper declaring it a waste of space is really sad. In the quotes and comments that
the journalists chose to focus on, it was clear that the people doing the loudest
complaining hadn’t even read the book but picked up that it might be
‘questionable.’
As one children’s writer commented...’have they forgotten
that the Children’s Book Awards cover Young Adult fiction and this book is
aimed at 15+
Into The River, by Ted Dawe, is a hard hitting book. It is
aimed unapologetically at the hardest to reach demographic in our society. It
shines a spotlight on something the wider public would rather not
acknowledge...the disenfranchisement of young Maori men.
Bernard Beckett, The
chief judge of these awards has finally been asked why it was chosen and he makes a clear case for the importance of this book.
Emma Neale one of the early
editors also makes an impassioned plea for the book. They are two who have read
it and thought about the issues and so they have some authority to judge.
Reporting
knee-jerk reactionary comments from people who have not read the book is sloppy
journalism.
The rest of the Kid Lit community here can’t believe Ted’s
luck. All this publicity means the book should be flying out book sellers
doors. Add in that it was self published and the world definitely changed in
New Zealand’s Publishing landscape last week.
Across the world the rumbling of disquiet over Barnes and
Nobles decision to stop making the Nook e-reader had pundits scrambling to
explain what it would mean.
Publerati came out to say this is what happened to the photographic industry...and offered advice to Barnes and Noble.
Digital Book World has taken the demise of the Nook and
focused on where digital content may be heading...along the way they take a
look at the children’s book industry.
Futurebook looked at the rise and rise of Book Apps and mobile media and
wondered why Apple was not connecting the dots on this in their digital publishingmarketplace.
This all makes interesting reading about publishing futures when
you add in Amazon’s latest news the patenting of e-book extras...or enhanced e-books.
In Craft,
Writeitsideways has 6 ways to hook readers on the first line.
Shortstorywritinggroup has this week’s story writing exercises
Badlanguage looks at research tips
In Marketing,
Joanna Penn has a new marketing book to check out
Kris Rusch talks about word of mouth and how to get it.
Roz Morris investigates changing Book Covers for results
Bestsellerlabs has a look at the marketing maze and how to navigate it.
To Finish,
John Scalzi has laid down the law on his future appearances at Sci Fi Cons. As he is a draw card and attendance at Cons is built into Sci
Fi publishing contracts...this is putting a firm stake in the ground on the
side of anti harassment of his female colleagues. Of course he is getting
dissed for it.
The Bookselfmuse has a great guest post on weathering reviews and taking criticism, something that might come in handy if you’ve had
a week like Ted’s.
2 comments:
Someone needs to inform the US patent office about the concept of "prior art", then show them how to use Google. The Amazon patent on interactive ebooks should never have been awarded. Try a Google search on "enhanced ebook" with a date range set prior to their Nov 2010 filing. The good news of course (for all of the other companies out there doing this) is that they can ignore patent trolling on this from Amazon (we hope).
Facepalm.
I have been wondering lately who cursed the publishing industry that they should live in interesting times. The Random Penguin merger is supposed to be a big enough conglomerate to rival Amazon...with all the 'new' CEO's being appointed...it just looks like business as usual. Amazon sure has the the jump on R&D. HarperCollins may have something interesting up its sleeve now that Charlie Redmayne form Pottermore has been poached back.
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