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Here are some literary events to pencil in your calendar this week.
To get your event posted on our calendar, visit our Facebook Your Literary Event page. Please post your event at least one week prior to its date.
The organizers behind the Pen Parentis literary nonprofit will host an end-of-year-party. Join in at Andaz Wall Street on Tuesday, Dec. 8 from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. (New York, NY)
Rick Moody will read from his latest novel, entitled Hotels of North America, at the next session of the Macaulay Author Series. Hear him at CUNY’s Macaulay Honors College on Thursday, Dec. 10 starting 7 p.m. (New York, NY)
Six children’s books creators will take part in Books of Wonder’s December Picture Book Bonanza panel. Meet them on Saturday, Dec. 12 from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. (New York, NY) (Photo Credit: Laurel Nakadate)
Bestselling author Rick Moody has inked a deal with digital book publisher Open Road Integrated Media (ORIM).
The imprint will publish e-book editions of four of Moody’s backlist titles, which have never been available in digital formats previously. The works include: The Ice Storm, Purple America, The Black Veil, and The Ring of Brightest Angels Around Heaven.
“I was always hopeful that I would find the right spot for the digital editions of my early work,” stated Moody. “Open Road is that spot: a wonderful, energetic, and enthusiastic home. They have an amazing list, full of authors I greatly admire, and I am therefore very honored and delighted to be a part of their innovative and brave project.”
Writer Rick Moody has signed a deal to write a new memoir. Henry Holt, an imprint at Macmillan, will publish The Long Accomplishment in 2017.
With this book, Moody will offer month-by-month details on the first year of marriage shared between himself and his second wife Laurel Nakadate. Executive editor Barbara Jones negotiated the deal with literary agent Melanie Jackson.
Here’s more from the press release: “Moody’s most intimate book to date, The Long Accomplishment begins at the happy start of Moody’s second marriage and follows him and his new wife through a sudden, yearlong storm of troubles. Although Moody worries that his past bad behaviors have somehow brought these trials – including serious illness, abruptly aging and infirm parents, a child custody battle, the deaths of close friends, and a calamitous home invasion – upon the family he loves, with humor, wit, and heartrending insight, he discovers that love is a sturdy boat, indeed the only boat, that can carry us across.”

This afternoon, GalleyCat joined Bloomberg News book review editor Laurie Muchnick, Library Journal book review editor Heather McCormack, and Publishers Weekly children’s book editor Diane Roback on the Book Reviewer Panel for the Young to Publishing Group. We wanted to follow up with some helpful links for all authors, publicists, and publishing folk contacting GalleyCat.
Kate Childs (the executive assistant to the president & publisher of Random House Publishing Group) tweeted the entire event and took the picture embedded above and the panel was moderated by Newmarket Press sales & marketing coordinator Haley Pierson-Cox.
Most importantly, we urged everybody to use GalleyCat’s “New Books” page on Facebook. We use this page to create our Coming Attractions features and organize our book review coverage. Want to include your book? Just follow the easy directions on our Facebook Your New or Upcoming Book post.
We also stressed GalleyCat’s constant push for inclusiveness, from to sponsoring the Book Pitch Party next month to our new book giveaway contests to our massive Book Reviewers on Twitter list–we hope to keep the GalleyCat community growing.
continued…
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
(taken from the eastern end of the R5 platform at 30th Street Station, 7:17 PM, Rick Moody's
The Four Fingers of Death in my bag)
by Michael
There's
an excellent post up on the Vroman's blog today about the failed Rick Moody story-tweeting experiment. The piece makes very good points about the insularity of publishing, which is something I've given much thought to, especially as I've headed out West. If the same group of people has the same conversations in the same spaces over and over again, what good is it really doing us? How do we reach new readers? How do we hear what book-buyers really want?
For me, this isn't about the failure of Twitter to promote books (as some who have picked up on the story have been highlighting), but rather about publishing never looking outside itself for ideas, both about how to promote books and what kinds of books people want to read. It definitely got me thinking this morning. What do you think? Is Twitter just a bad way to promote books, or is there something more to be learned here?
By:
Christine Onorati,
on 12/9/2008
Blog:
WORD
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We’re always so happy when praise for the store surfaces in our google alerts. This one just came today. Thanks Colleen! (and for the record, ABE books is now owned by Amazon, so they are not quite as independent as they once were).
Here’s more recent praise from the cyber world:
Thanks to our friend Maura Madden, the queen of crafts, for telling the world she’s obsessed with the store on her blog.
David Rees’ thanks on his site made us smile.
Here’s a glowing review of our Rick Moody event.
Finally, thanks to Miss Heather for profiling our exclusive “Greetings from Greenpoint” postcards on her site.

This makes me wish I was there.
Among the myriad things your blog does for me is give me a renewed appreciation for Philly, through your love of it.
More book anticipation for you -- and me. Last night I bought a copy of Gail Caldwell's Let's Take the Long Way Home Tonight. The plan is to read it tonight.
Love to visit Philadelphia some day.
Great colours and shapes.
What a great picture ... it's amazing how many colors are in this dusk shot!
I was going to say, "Yo! Where you at?"
But now I know.
;-) A.