JK Rowling tells story of alter ego Robert Galbraith

per the UK Daily Guardian:

 

JK Rowling

Pottering no more … JK Rowling has revealed more about her pseudonymous detective novel. Photograph: Ian West/PA

JK Rowling chose her alter ego of Robert Galbraith by conflating the name of her political hero Robert F Kennedy and her childhood fantasy name “Ella Galbraith”, the Harry Potter writer has explained on her alternative persona’s official author website.

 

The author, who was outed last week as the writer of detective novel The Cuckoo’s Calling, also confirmed that she has “just finished the sequel” – the first of a projected series featuring sleuth Cormoran Strike – which is to be published in 2014.

 

Amid the FAQs on the official Robert Galbraith author website, Rowling declared “I successfully channelled my inner bloke!” when editor David Shelley, who first read the novel without knowing who its true author was, said, “I never would have thought a woman wrote that.”

 

The Cuckoo’s Calling, shot to No 1 in the hardback fiction charts last week, selling 17,662 copies after Rowling was revealed to be its author, charting above Dan Brown’s Inferno at number two, and Second Honeymoon by James Patterson at number three. In the overall UK book charts, it reached third place, behind paperbacks of John Grisham’s The Racketeer at No 1, and Rowling’s previous adult novel The Casual Vacancy, which also climbed rapidly following the news, at number two.

 

Writing on the Galbraith website, Rowling reaffirmed the line that the pseudonymous story “was not a leak or marketing ploy by me, my publisher or agent, both of whom have been completely supportive of my desire to fly under the radar. If sales were what mattered to me most, I would have written under my own name from the start, and with the greatest fanfare.”

 

The decision to choose a male pseudonym was driven by a desire to “take my writing persona as far away as possible from me”, Rowling said. By choosing as her hero a military man working in national security – taking a lead from former SAS solider and bestselling author Andy McNab – she created an “excuse not to make personal appearances or to provide a photograph”.

 

“When I was a child, I really wanted to be called Ella Galbraith, I’ve no idea why. The name had a fascination for me. I actually considered calling myself LA Galbraith for the Strike series, but for fairly obvious reasons decided that initials were a bad idea,” Rowling said.

“I know a number of soldiers and I’m close to two people in particular who were incredibly generous as I researched my hero’s background,” Rowling wrote. Her military contacts also helped to construct a fake CV for Robert Galbraith. “One of these friends is from the Special Investigations Bureau. So while Strike himself is entirely fictional, his career and the experiences he’s had are based on factual accounts of real soldiers.”

 

Rowling also reveals that lead character’s first name “was a gift from his flaky groupie of a mother, is unusual and a recurring irritation to him as people normally get it wrong; we sense that he would much rather be called Bob.”

 

The character of Strike’s assistant, Robin, a temporary secretary, grew “largely out of my own experiences as a temp, long ago in London where I could always make rent between jobs because I could type 100 words a minute due to writing fiction in my spare time.”

 

The book’s title is taken from A Dirge, the mournful poem by Christina Rossetti which is a lament for one who died too young.

 

Rowling was “yearning to go back to the beginning of a writing career in this new genre, to work without hype or expectation and to receive totally unvarnished feedback. It was a fantastic experience and I only wish it could have gone on a little longer,” she said. Most of the Harry Potter books are “whodunits at heart”, she added, saying that she “loves detective fiction”.

 

Its London setting was chosen above Scotland, where Rowling lives, because “you could write about London all your life and not exhaust the plots, settings or history,” she said.

 

Rowling’s identity as the author of The Cuckoo’s Calling was leaked last week by a friend of one of her lawyers. At that point, the book had sold 8,500 English-language copies across all formats (hardback, eBook, library and audiobook), and received two offers from television production companies.

 

“The situation was becoming increasingly complicated,” Rowling admitted, “largely because Robert was doing rather better than we had expected … but we all still hoped to keep the secret a little longer. Robert’s success during his first three months as a published writer (discounting sales made after I was found out) actually compares favourably with JK Rowling’s success over the equivalent period of her career.”

 

 

‘Cuckoo’s Calling’ Gets 300K Print Run as Booksellers, Fans Scramble for Copies

By Rachel Deahl with additional reporting by Judith Rosen |
Jul 16, 2013

The Cuckoo’s Calling, a mystery by an unknown British author, which became one of the most talked-about books in the country over the weekend, is getting a hefty new print run. After theSunday Times revealed that the book was written under a pseudonym by J.K. Rowling, other media outlets pounced on the story and booksellers started taking orders for a title they did not have in stock. Now, Rowling’s U.S. publisher, Hachette’s Mulholland Books imprint, which currenlty has 10,000 copies of the title available in all formats, is going back to press for another 300,000 copies, which it will begin to ship later this week.

On Monday, many independent booksellers across the U.S. were deling with interest in the book, but not closing any sales. Dale Szczeblowski, manager of Porter Square Books in Cambridge, Mass., said he had sold the store’s last copy of Cuckoo’s Calling when news hit that Rowling had written it. “Obviously, we’ve ordered more since,” he said.

A number of stores, though, did not have any copies of the book on hand. At places like Malaprop’s Bookstore/Cafe in Asheville, N.C., and Books & Books in Westhampton Beach, N.Y., the scramble began once the Times‘s story broke. “We have it on order just because of the news,” explained a bookseller named Mike at Books & Books.

Both Barnes & Noble and Amazon said late Monday afternoon that they were working with the publisher to get more copies, but weren’t sure when more books would arrive. Amazon noted that the novel is available as an e-book, something that bothered some indie booksellers who wondered how much business they may lose to e-books before the print editon arrives.

Other booksellers noted that those who already bought the book could be sitting on a valuable collector’s item. Cathy Langer, head buyer at Denver’s Tattered Cover, said those first sales, which happened on Sunday, were made by “smart people” who will have first editions.

So just how much could a first edition be worth? Already at least one seller has taken to eBay to find out. A U.K., signed first edition of The Cuckoo’s Calling is currently being auctioned off and, as of this writing, the price had hit 885P (a little over $1,300). A press representative for Rowling, Nicky Stonehill at StonehillSalt PR, confirmed that the author did sign “a few copies” of The Cuckoo’s Calling as Galbraith and that those books were put on sale.

But Stonehill couldn’t speak to the authenticity of the particular book fetching such a hefty sum on the auction Web site, saying she could not “verify whether any particular book currently on eBay is genuine.” She did say, though, that “any future books signed in this way will be authenticated.” The eBay seller of The Cuckoo’s Calling said the title came from London’s Specialist bookshop which “obtained the signed book straight from the publishers.”

Folio Merges With Literary Group

per publisher’s weekly

 

Folio Literary Management, LLC, has merged with The Literary Group International. The two literary agencies joined on July 1. With the combination, Frank Weimann, president of LGI, will become senior v-p and director of operations at Folio. Katherine Latshaw and Jeff Silberman will both continue with their titles as agents. The combined company will go under the Folio name.

Folio was founded in 2006 and its clients include Andrew Morton, Garth Stein and 2013 Pulitzer finalist Eowyn Ivey. The Literary Group was founded in 1986 and its clients include Gregg Allman, Jenni Rivera, Georgina Bloomberg and Nancy Grace.

Judge rules Apple conspired to raise prices on e-books

Reuters – 13 minutes ago

By Nate Raymond and Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK (Reuters) – In a sweeping rejection of Apple Inc’s strategy for selling electronic books on the Internet, a federal judge ruled that the company conspired with five major publishers to raise e-book prices.

U.S. District Judge Denise Cote in Manhattan found “compelling evidence” that Apple violated federal antitrust law by playing a “central role” in a conspiracy with the publishers to eliminate retail price competition and raise e-book prices.

Wednesday’s decision could expose Apple to substantial damages. It is a victory for the U.S. Department of Justice and the 33 U.S. states and territories that brought the civil antitrust case. The five publishers previously settled.

Apple was accused of pursuing the conspiracy to undercut online retailer Amazon.com Inc’s e-book dominance, causing some e-book prices to rise to $12.99 or $14.99 from the $9.99 that Amazon charged. Amazon once held a 90 percent market share.

“Apple chose to join forces with the publisher defendants to raise e-book prices and equipped them with the means to do so,” Cote said in a 159-page decision. “Without Apple’s orchestration of this conspiracy, it would not have succeeded as it did.”

The decision was not a total surprise. Cote indicated before the 2-1/2 week non-jury trial began on June 3 that Apple’s defenses might fail. The judge on Wednesday ordered a trial to set damages.

“This result is a victory for millions of consumers who choose to read books electronically,” Bill Baer, head of the Justice Department’s antitrust division, said in a statement. “This decision by the court is a critical step in undoing the harm caused by Apple’s illegal actions.”

Baer said Cote’s decision, together with the earlier settlements, help consumers by reducing prices of e-books. Barnes & Noble Inc also competes in that market.

In a statement, Apple said it will appeal Cote’s decision.

“Apple did not conspire to fix e-book pricing,” spokesman Tom Neumayr said. “When we introduced the iBookstore in 2010, we gave customers more choice, injecting much needed innovation and competition into the market, breaking Amazon’s monopolistic grip on the publishing industry. We’ve done nothing wrong.”

Last year, Apple settled a separate antitrust case over e-book pricing with the European Commission, without admitting wrongdoing.

IMPACT

The alleged collusion began in late 2009 and continued into early 2010, in connection with the Silicon Valley giant’s launch of its popular iPad tablet.

Only Apple went to trial, while the publishers agreed to pay more than $166 million combined to benefit consumers.

The publishers included Lagardere SCA’s Hachette Book Group Inc, News Corp’s HarperCollins Publishers LLC, Pearson Plc’s Penguin Group (USA) Inc, CBS Corp’s Simon & Schuster Inc and Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck GmbH’s Macmillan.

Geoffrey Manne, who teaches at Lewis & Clark Law School in Portland, Oregon, said Cote’s decision may not change the e-books market much because of the earlier settlements with publishers, which ended their pricing arrangements with Apple.

“To the extent the remedy might be behavioral constraints in the e-books market, the settlements with publishers already deal with that,” Manne said.

In afternoon trading, Apple shares were down 52 cents at $421.83 on the Nasdaq.

Steve Berman, a partner at Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro pursuing consumer class-action litigation against Apple, called Cote’s decision “a very big deal.”

“It exposes Apple to hundreds of millions of dollars in damages, which is what we’ll ask for,” Berman said.

Apple ended March with nearly $145 billion of cash and marketable securities. It plans to spend $100 billion on share buybacks and higher dividends through 2015.

STEVE JOBS

Amazon’s strategy involved buying e-books at wholesale and then selling them at below cost, in an effort to promote its Kindle reading device.

Apple, in contrast, entered into “agency agreements” in which publishers were able to set prices, and pay 30 percent commissions to the Cupertino, California-based company.

The federal government said this arrangement pushed Amazon into a similar model, and resulted in prices of e-books from the five publishers increasing by 18 percent.

“What happens next may depend on Amazon,” said Keith Hylton, a Boston University law professor and antitrust specialist. “If Amazon feels a need to keep driving e-book prices down to maximize Kindle sales, it could put downward pressure on prices overall, and perhaps help Amazon win market share back.”

Amazon spokesman Drew Herdener declined to comment.

Evidence in the case included emails from Apple’s late co-founder Steve Jobs to News Corp executive James Murdoch that the government said reflected Jobs’ desire to boost prices and “create a real mainstream e-books market at $12.99 and $14.99.”

Those emails hurt Apple’s case.

“Apple has struggled mightily to reinterpret Jobs’s statements in a way that will eliminate their bite,” Cote said. “Its efforts have proven fruitless.”

Cote also rejected Apple’s argument that it would be unfair to single out the company when Amazon and Google Inc, among others, entered similar agency agreements with publishers.

Apple had argued that it never even understood that publishers might have talked among themselves about higher prices before the iPad launch.

“There is no such thing as a conspiracy by telepathy,” Apple’s lawyer Orin Snyder said in closing arguments on June 20.

The decision allows the plaintiffs to seek injunctive relief to prevent further pricing conspiracies.

At trial, the Justice Department said it wanted to block Apple from using the agency model for two years. It also wants to stop Apple over a five-year period from entering contracts with clauses designed to ensure it offers the lowest prices.

The case is U.S. v. Apple Inc et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-02826.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by Alistair Barr; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and John Wallace)

Top 5 Best Selling Trade Paperbacks

Per Publishersweekly.com

 

1
Joyland
Stephen King, Author
2
Entwined with You
Sylvia Day, Author
3
Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey Into the Afterlife
Eben Alexander, Author
4
NYPD Red
James Patterson, Author, Marshall Karp, Author
5
World War Z (Movie Tie-In Edition): An Oral History of the Zombie War
Max Brooks, Author

Lynch Resigns from B&N, Succeeded by Huseby

By Jim Milliot |
Jul 08, 2013
16735-1
With its Nook Media strategy floundering, the architect of that effort, William Lynch, resigned Monday as CEO of parent company Barnes & Noble. With Lynch’s departure, Michael Huseby, who joined B&N in March 2012 as CFO, has been named CEO of Nook Media LLC and president of Barnes & Noble Inc. Huseby, along with Mitchell Klipper, CEO of the B&N Retail Group, will report to B&N executive chairman Len Riggio. Max Roberts, CEO of B&N College, will continue to lead the digital education strategy and report to Huseby, as will the executive management team of Nook Media. 

“We thank William Lynch for helping transform Barnes & Noble into a leading digital content provider and for leading in the development of our award-winning line of NOOK® products,” said Riggio in a statement. “As the bookselling industry continues to undergo significant transformation, we believe that Michael, Mitchell and Max are the right executives to lead us into the future.”

Other executive changes included the promotions of Allen Lindstrom from v-p and controller to CFO and that of Kanuj Malhotra from v-p of corporate development to CFO of Nook Media LLC.

Lynch’s resignation as CEO, and from the B&N board as well, comes three-and-a-half years after he was appointed to the position and more than four years after he first joined B&N from HSNi to head up Barnes & Noble.com. Lynch was credited with overseeing B&N’s aggressive expansion into device manufacturing and with seeing through Microsoft’s investment in what would become Nook Media. Following disastrous sales of Nook devices over the holidays that continued into 2013, B&N announced in late June it was sharply scaling back its manufacturing efforts, particularly in the tablet area.

Lynch’s departure is sure to increase investor (and publisher) interest on when B&N’s board will make a decision on the offer by Riggio to buy the company’s trade retail stores. In the press release, Riggio said B&N continues to review its strategic plan “and will provide an update when appropriate.”