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Publishers Weekly
Book and Periodical Publishing
New York, NY 62,359 followers
The international news venue of the book publishing industry
About us
Welcome to Publishers Weekly Group. We’re a group of over 47,000 members that are book industry professionals, librarians, booksellers, book enthusiasts, and writers. Popular topics in this group include content and resources for book publishing, bookselling including business news, 9,000 pre-pub reviews, bestseller lists, commentary, self-publishing resources, and more. Publishers Weekly has published continuously since 1872, now both in print and digital. PublisherWeekly.com has more than 14 million unique visitors annually and enjoys more than 1.20 million social media followers. PW’s highly popular archives of over 700,000 pages plus the latest industry news and opinions is available for subscription plus free subscriptions to newsletters on a variety of key PW topics. SUBSCRIBE to PW Magazine: publishersweekly.com/magazinesub SUBSCRIBE (free) to PW Newsletters: publishersweekly.com/newslettersub In order to keep this group successful, please observe the following three rules: 1) Content posted must ask a question or contain advice of value in the post. NOTE FOR MARKETERS: We’re all book publishing professionals and have lots of content to share, but this is not the place to promote your services or next book. This is the place to ask your peers’ advice and share your experiences and resources. Content that is auto-posted, does not contain a relevant question, is solicitation, SPAM or a sales pitch, and will be deleted immediately. 2) Be curious with your fellow group members. This means respecting opinions (cordial disagreement is fine), refraining from rude or violent language, and not soliciting group members. Violation of this rule will result in automatic removal from the group. 3) Please do not be “spammy" with posts. This means posting the same post multiple times or posting articles without commentary. Please be sure to point out something interesting from the article when you post. Thank you for joining the Publishers Weekly group.
- Website
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http://www.publishersweekly.com
External link for Publishers Weekly
- Industry
- Book and Periodical Publishing
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- New York, NY
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1872
Locations
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Primary
Get directions
49 W 23rd St
9th floor
New York, NY 10010, US
Employees at Publishers Weekly
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Thad McIlroy
New book just out: "The AI Revolution in Book Publishing: A Concise Guide to Navigating Artificial Intelligence for Writers and Publishers"
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Serena Donadoni
Writer Seeking Job Opportunities
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Carl Pritzkat
Chief Operating Officer; President of BookLife.com at Publishers Weekly (PWxyz, LLC)
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Heidi MacDonald
Editor in Chief at The Comics Beat
Updates
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We take a look at Italian publishing, the Japanese book market, English-language exports in Europe, the romantasy boom in the U.S., and more in today's Frankfurt Show Daily. https://buff.ly/4h5liYT
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See what we published in this week's print issue of 'Publishers Weekly,' including our 10th annual PW Star Watch feature and more. https://buff.ly/4eHMXgJ
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Taylor Norman, the executive editor at Holiday House/Neal Porter Books, has been named as Publishers Weekly's 2024 Star Watch Superstar. In a discussion, she shares insights into her role, highlights some of the significant books she’s worked on, and provides a glimpse into an eagerly anticipated project currently in development.
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See what we published in this week's print issue of 'Publishers Weekly,' including our annual holiday gift guide and more. https://buff.ly/3TMUq5V
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See what we published in this week's print issue of 'Publishers Weekly,' including our guide to this year’s Frankfurt Book Fair and more. https://buff.ly/4eN1WWx
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See what we published in this week's print issue of 'Publishers Weekly,' including our preview of this year's New York Comic Con and more. https://buff.ly/3BcJojU
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Martha Hickson, media specialist at North Hunterdon High School in Annandale, N.J., was among the vanguard raising a torch for the freedom to read when, in 2019, a superintendent demanded she remove Alison Bechdel’s memoir Fun Home from library shelves. “I refused, and a protracted battle ensued,” Hickson recalls. “I thought that fight was the worst thing that ever happened to me. Little did I know what was to come.” In 2021, administrators again went after Fun Home, this time along with Juno Dawson’s This Book Is Gay, Jonathan Evison’s Lawn Boy, George M. Johnson’s All Boys Aren’t Blue, and Maia Kobabe’s Gender Queer. Hickson again defended the books. “All of the books that have been challenged at my school have been associated with LGBTQ+ content,” she says. “The book banners in my area of the world understand that it’s not a good look to go after racially based content, but for whatever reason they have no problem being accused of being homophobic.” #BooksNotBans #SupportLibraries #LibrariesAreForEveryone #BannedBooksWeek #Bookstagram #FreedomToRead
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According to AAP's StatShot program, industry sales were up 5.6% in the first half of 2024. Sales of adult titles rose 6.7%, but sales in the children's and young adult segment fell 2.7%.
Publishing Sales Saw Solid Six-Month Gains, Per AAP
publishersweekly.com
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Today, Brooky Parks works as a business and economics reference librarian at the University of Denver. But from 2019 to 2021, she served at northeastern Colorado’s Erie Community Library. “When I was in grad school, I didn’t want to go into school libraries, because I thought I’d have to deal with more censorship. I decided to go into public libraries. But it’s not safe at all,” Parks says, after the job she says she loved was taken from her by book banners. In Erie, Parks organized an LGBTQ book club for teens and youth anti-racist programming. But when a handful of patrons complained, the High Plains Library District canceled her projects. When she protested, the district fired her. Parks says she was offered $5,000 “to help bridge the gap in between employment,” on the condition she sign an agreement not to sue. Instead, she filed an anti-discrimination lawsuit. With the help of lawyer Iris Halpern, Parks negotiated a $250,000 settlement in September 2023. But while the legal victory made national headlines, the money has done nothing to ease the feelings of loss for being forced out of her job. “It’s hard not to take it personally,” Parks says. “It feels very isolating.” #BooksNotBans #SupportLibraries #LibrariesAreForEveryone #BannedBooksWeek #Bookstagram #FreedomToRead
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