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1. Schiel & Denver Book Publishers opens up new book publishing market channels outside the U.S. and Europe in Australia and Asia

The world is looking for solutions. At Schiel & Denver Book Publishers, one of the reasons we invest so deeply in sustainable publishing methods, and cherish our independent authors and talented writers so much, is that you have taken the time to make the changes needed to achieve a more shared, secure and sustainable future through your work. Whether you’re a children’s author giving a child that first love of learning to read, a poet, thriller writer or Christian author; we pledge our support to your continued literary brilliance in the fantastic independent books that you pen, and on your admirable personal commitment to your writing.

The fact is that world needs more writers. The literary output of the U.S. can never be too prolific. Sustainable development is a global imperative: over one billion people lack access to food, electricity and drinking water; a majority of our ecosystems are in decline; and there is an enormous deficit in decent jobs, especially for youth globally. Climate change will only compound these challenges – and threatens progress, peace and stability in societies and global markets – including books and publishing.

The book publishing industry is changing beyond all recognition, and for the independent author, getting your book into the hands of reachers in a timely fashion with expert speed to market, has become an increasingly dominant critical factor – where once publishers and authors could rely on long-tail sales and word of mouth. Schiel & Denver Book Publishers is therefore committed to professional book distribution into all markets, on behalf of our authors, and we are pleased to be opening up new channels in Australasia, Asia, China, Africa and Brazil, (outside our main infrastructure in North America and Europe) as a means to set our authors apart in the market with greater numbers of books printed, more sales and more royalties generated per ISBN title.

In a time when reaching agreement on critical issues is proving difficult and divisive — whether at home domestically in America or on the international platform — Schiel & Denver‘s comprehensive book publishing strategies will continue to give independent authors a voice, with dedicated marketing to the retail buying units of stores like Barnes & Noble, Amazon and Books-A-Million, to ensure your voice is heard.

Our corporate sustainability is charging ahead as a collaborative and innovative space for action based on the risks and opportunities at hand. After more than a decade of building up principles and partnerships, we stand on the brink of unleashing global business action as a main-stream, independent book publisher championing author’s intellectual output on a massive scale.

Schiel & Denver only succeeds when our authors thrive with successful book sales derived from worldwide market access and expert distribution to major bookstores. Making this happen is our enduring commitment: more engagement, more innovation, more collaboration.

Book publisher and Self Publishing Information provided by S&D book publishers and christian book publishers as a courtesy.

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2. Exploring ISBN Book Publishing Issues Through The Federalist Papers

Our Constitution was finished in September of 1787. But it had to be ratified by the individual states through popular conventions. The people of the states, rather than the state governments, had to approve the new document. Supporters of the Constitution had to appeal directly to the American people. It was not easy as the Colonists were reluctant to give more power to a central government controlled by an established political elite.

The Revolution promised power is in the local community and the hands of the common folk. Now the writers of the Constitution wanted to change all that. James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay used the widespread and widely read newspapers of the day to distribute a series of short essays known as the Federalist Papers to influence America to accept and ratify a Constitution.

The essays covered a broad range of topics, including presidential authority, taxation and representation, and the division of power between the national and state governments.In the end, the newspaper plan worked. The Liberty Bell rang so long, it finally cracked. Americans were persuaded to support the Constitution, but the Liberty Bell could not ring in the Bill of Rights, which guaranteed the sought after freedom and individual liberty for all.

The Federalist Papers are now considered the first – and most important internationally – discussions of federal government.

The Federalist Papers serve as a model of political reasoning, and so can readily be ascribed to the reason the Colonists were influenced and prepared to ratify a Constitution for the United States of America.

No other set of essays created such an international clamor for independence and a new kind of power in that eighteenth century. No man could believe or envision that Power actually emanates from the bottom up. Power is by the will of the people and is granted by Providence. That is what happened. The Natural law then, would soon be an Organic law in a written Constitution of the United States to protect the rights of all men created equal.

The sentiment swept the nation then and such is the sentiment which was later so historically and strongly expressed by President Lincoln in his Gettysburg Address on November 19, 1863.

That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom – that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.

We are again at that same crossroad where sovereignty and liberty intersect. The basis for our Constitution is inherent in its Federalist Papers. But who knows of them? Our Constitution, after months of work, finished in September 1787 and is a document that cannot by any standard be ratified by the individual state unless their populations wants them to do so.

The Constitution FOR the United States of America is ordained and established in its Preamble by the People OF the United States.

Its Federalist Papers (number 39) established two things:

  • A country to be known as the United States of America (U.S.A.).
  • A national government for that country to be known as the United States (US).

All American citizens are Sovereign citizens OF the United States of America – the Country. They live under the Common Laws of the country (Nation) known as the United States of America (U.S.A.)

The United States, as such, is only a national government (US) representative of the union of all states, known as these United States (U.S.A.); and is not to be confused with the nation (country) known as the United States of America.
The only sovereignty delegated to the national government (US) is that of foreign commerce and treaties.

It is this area where the States granted international powers to the federal government, albeit with the checks and balances accorded the separation of powers among the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial departments.

Book publisher and Self Publishing Information provided by S&D book publishers and christian book publishers as a courtesy.

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3. Writing tips for integrating work regarding the U.S. Constitution into modern prose

It’s not a commonly asked question – just how many times do independent and self-published authors cite the American Constitution in their work; there are no reliable figures or clear guidelines on how to quote from the Constitution to be both legally accurate and grammatically correct. In this new series of posts, Schiel & Denver Book Publishers and Christian Book Publishers will examine the issues and over writing tips and advice. We start with an overview of that oft-cited, Boston Tea Party literature.

The Tea Party of 1773 wasn’t just the dumping of tea in Boston Harbor. It was the signal to the world that man was sovereign, had natural rights protected by laws in common, and that those rights were foremost amongst all nations. The local, Boston issue of taxation without representation only heightened the inalienable, organic rights of man.The chronology leading to the Tea Party of 1773 did not just happen with a bunch of rogues deciding to rebel against the English oppressors in a spur of the moment. There were many abuses of power leading to the Boston Tea Party; however, it is most important to historically note that it was not the Americans who signaled the first rebellion. It was Pontiac, Chief of the Ottawa Indians. And Benjamin Franklin, in 1754 then published the “Join or Die” cartoon.

Although the rough picture of a snake separated into eight pieces marked with the initials of New England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, was first used in an attempt to unite the colonies as early as 1754 as the Albany Plan of Union, it was premature and not supported by the Colonists until revived by Pontiac’s attack upon the British in May, l763, and made a standard by the Tea Party patriots two years later when the British passed the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act, thereby allowing British soldiers to be quartered throughout the colonies.

Alarmed, the Colonists prepared to unite as they struggled to peacefully remain a colony of English rule. It simply did not work. On May 10, l773, England passed the Stamp Act claiming sovereignty over America, and resulting in Patrick Henry’s famous resolutions: the fifth summed it all.

“Resolved, therefore, that the General Assembly of this Colony have the only and sole exclusive right and power to lay taxes upon the inhabitants of this Colony.”

It was now clear: every attempt to vest such power in any…persons…other than the General Assembly would destroy British as well as American freedom. No taxation without representation. America would have to assert its exclusive rights.Suddenly, with this speech, Patrick Henry became a spokesman for the common people, and the two parties: Patriots, or Whigs; and Loyalists – those who remained loyal to England – also called ‘Tories”, were born.

Henry’s words became the general outcry for the Tea Party and was the beginning of the revolutionary movement in the American colonies.

The Patriots were the backbone of the Republic. The Boston Tea Party formulated between 1773 and 1776. Our country is that Nation uniting all of the colonies into one nation: the United States of America embracing a Republican form of government wherein man, the citizen, was to become the ultimate law of the land possessing original ordained rights.The Boston Tea Party was known as the “Destruction of the Tea”; but when the Patriots, as Mohawk Indians marched into town, with axes and tomahawks on their shoulders, a fifer playing by their sides, within a few days, a Boston street ballad called: “The Rallying of the Tea Party” not only identified the two leaders—Warren and Revere—by name, but gave the Tea Party its origin and history in protecting common rights.

It is no wonder, then, that this is the hallmark of liberty and freedom for every man as foreseen and upheld by our forefathers when creating the ninth and tenth Amendments to our Constitution.

“The enumeration In the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”

The people, again, were the ultimate beneficiary of all rights and powers within a Republican form of government. They were protecting their voice and guarding the limited powers to be relinquished to a federal government after granting it federal authority to govern, and to become a nation subservient to the desires and wishes of the sovereign states, ultimately, represented by the people as: sovereign man.

“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, or prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

The Tea Party of yore is very much alive today. All over America the strong desires and morals which our founding fathers clearly laid down in 1776 return for all mankind to re-assert and claim once more.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights; that amount these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed; that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness.”

The expression reverberated in the hearts and minds of all men then, and needs to be restored today. Its effect, as expressed by the concluding paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, is as much alive in meaning and intent for all mankind as when expressed in 1776. The Spirit of ’76, which was so near exhaustion at Valley Forge, was kindled by such resolve.

“We, therefore, the Representatives of the United States of America, in General Congress Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by the Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, that these United colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is and ought to be totally dissolved, and that as Free and Independent States they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things, which Independent States may of right do — and for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.”

Book publisher and Self Publishing Information provided by S&D book publishers and christian book publishers as a courtesy.

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4. Highlights of 2011: The Year In Publishing, By The Numbers – MocoNews


Highlights of 2011: The Year In Publishing, By The Numbers
MocoNews
20: The percentage of book sales that are digital at big-six publishers Random House and Hachette, with other publishers well on their way to reaching that point. It's estimated that e-books made up 6.4 percent of the trade book market in 2010, ...

and more »

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5. 5 great gift books for performing-arts fans – The Seattle Times


5 great gift books for performing-arts fans
The Seattle Times
Diane Keaton's "Then Again" (Random House, $26) is, as you might expect from this cherished Hollywood misfit, an unconventional self-portrait. Actually, it is a dual portrait: of Keaton the Oscar-winning actress (for "Annie Hall"), whose intelligence, ...

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6. Making Dragons: Christopher Paolini has more stories to tell – The Bozeman Daily Chronicle


Making Dragons: Christopher Paolini has more stories to tell
The Bozeman Daily Chronicle
That book, "Eragon," about a young man in the fictional land of Alagaesia who finds a dragon egg, was self-published and promoted, often involving Paolini in Renaissance garb, before it was picked up by Random House in 2003. "Eragon" made the New York ...

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7. RH expands digital team – The Bookseller


The Bookseller

RH expands digital team
The Bookseller
Random House is extending its digital team, and has promoted Dan Franklin, current digital editor, (pictured) to the role of digital publisher, while multi-media editor Jon Salt steps into the role of head of digital product development. ...

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8. A new reaction to U.S. book publishing laws

U.S. book publishers need to respond to the book publishing company crisis, even while expanding its segmented self-publishing economy remains a poor country when its income is cast against its huge human demands. Revenues will always be far too small, and this fact should drive the whole issue of how the government manages its finances, both income and expenditure. The expansion and enrichment of the economy is providing the government with more revenue, and this permits it to make some important decisions about how to capture it and how to spend it. To begin with, the government must first get its hands on the added revenue through changes in how it handles its tax system, and the collection of other revenues. That is the first urgent reform. In some jurisdictions, only about 10% of the population pays income taxes. Then, these publishers revenues must be used to better target public budgets which, in India, are very much a process of the allocation of scarcity. There are two philosophies for the allocation of funds in a government budget – the rational and the “political”. Right now, the Indian government rejects the rational and favors the political, and the second great reform would involve a reversal of these preferences. These great publishing houses and book publishing houses means first that governments at all levels will need to make major changes in the policies that drive their budget allocation decisions in ways that mitigate many current budget costs that are wasteful, ineffective, or simply stupid. If this can be done, then even without increasing taxes, the public budget can be allocated instead to a whole new range of vital priorities that the government now deliberately and shamefully neglects. For India now, the problem is not so much one of deficit, but one of finding the courage to set rational priorities

Book publisher and Self Publishing Information provided by S&D book publishers and christian book publishers as a courtesy.

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9. BEST OF 2011: For your beach bag – Times LIVE


Times LIVE

BEST OF 2011: For your beach bag
Times LIVE
DarkMarket (Random House Struik), the follow-on of McMafia, Glenny's brilliant analysis of post Cold War organised crime in which South Africa has its very own chapter, is an exploration of the murkier realms of the internet and the mindboggling amount ...

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10. Penguin joins push for short ebooks – The Guardian


Penguin joins push for short ebooks
The Guardian
Random House debuted Storycuts, a collection of 200-odd digital short stories by authors including Barnes, Irvine Welsh and Ruth Rendell, last month, calling it a "new era" for the short story form. The pieces are largely pulled out of collections and ...

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11. Ask Amy: Look for conversations when kids clam up – Washington Post


Ask Amy: Look for conversations when kids clam up
Washington Post
A book you'll find helpful is, “Helping Your Kids Cope With Divorce the Sandcastles Way” by M. Gary Neuman and Patricia Romanowski (Random House). Books for the boy would be any in the Harry Potter or Percy Jackson series. He needs to know that every ...

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12. 32 of the year’s best books – The Seattle Times


32 of the year's best books
The Seattle Times
Kimberly Marlowe Hartnett "Open City" by Teju Cole (Random House). This debut novel by the Nigerian-born Cole is, on the surface, the story of a young, foreign psychiatry resident in post-9/11 New York City who searches for the soul of the city by ...

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13. Grilled pork chops a welcome variation – Calgary Herald


Grilled pork chops a welcome variation
Calgary Herald
Variations on the familiar pork chop are always welcome as is this simple recipe from an appropriately named new collection called The Whole Hog Cookbook (Rizzoli/Random House, $30). ...

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14. Best sellers – Kansas City Star


Best sellers
Kansas City Star
"Then Again," by Diane Keaton (Random House: $26) Musings on motherhood, Woody Allen, Warren Beatty and Al Pacino and more. "Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero," by Chris Matthews (S&S: $27.50) The newest bio of JFK reveals another side by those closest to him ...

and more »

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15. Jim Lehrer and his new book about presidential debates, “Tension City” – 89.3 KPCC


89.3 KPCC

Jim Lehrer and his new book about presidential debates, “Tension City”
89.3 KPCC
Award-winning journalist Jim Lehrer's newly published book “Tension City: Inside the Presidential Debates, from Kennedy-Nixon to Obama-McCain” (Random House) takes a witty, behind-the-scenes look at more than 40 years of televised presidential debates. ...

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16. Annie Leibovitz: A pilgrim’s progress – Pittsburgh Post Gazette


Pittsburgh Post Gazette

Annie Leibovitz: A pilgrim's progress
Pittsburgh Post Gazette
(From Annie Leibovitz's "Pilgrimage," Random House, 2011.) Beginning a book of photography with images made from a point and shoot camera is something one would expect of a tourist, not an acclaimed photographer, and especially not from Annie Leibovitz ...

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17. Grilled pork chops a welcome variation – Calgary Herald


Grilled pork chops a welcome variation
Calgary Herald
(HANDOUT PHOTO: Rizzoli/Random House) FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS FOOD PACKAGE, NOV. 24, 2011 Variations on the familiar pork chop are always welcome as is this simple recipe from an appropriately named new collection called The Whole Hog Cookbook ...

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18. THE NEW ERA OF PUBLISHING? Williams Cole Checks in Again with John B. Thompson – Brooklyn Rail


Brooklyn Rail

THE NEW ERA OF PUBLISHING? Williams Cole Checks in Again with John B. Thompson
Brooklyn Rail
... have interacted amicably for years suddenly find themselves locking horns in new conflicts where the rules are no longer clear (as happened, for example, when Random House and Andrew Wylie clashed over Wylie's decision to launch Odyssey Editions). ...

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19. A kid in Annie hall – National Post


National Post

A kid in Annie hall
National Post
10, 2011 5:13 AM ET By Diane Keaton Random House 304 pp; $30 A humble suggestion: skip ahead to Part Two in Diane Keaton's beautiful ramble of a memoir, Then Again. That is to say, buy it for the cover (yes, you can judge this one by the fun black and ...
Books: Keaton's quirky memoir also tells the story of her momWaterloo Record

all 8 news articles »

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20. Gendercrunching by Tim Hanley – DC and Marvel, October 2011 – Bleeding Cool News


Bleeding Cool News

Gendercrunching by Tim Hanley – DC and Marvel, October 2011
Bleeding Cool News
First up was Random House, who boast an impressive SF/fantasy line-up. For example, they put out George RR Martin's A Dance with Dragons, along with Naomi Novik's Temeraire series, Diana Gabaldon's Outlander books, and Terry Brooks' Shannara epic. ...

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21. Licensing Hotline: December 8 – Publishers Weekly


Publishers Weekly

Licensing Hotline: December 8
Publishers Weekly
Random House is adding three new properties to its Nickelodeon publishing program, with books for each debuting in January 2012. They include the preschool shows Team Umizoomi and Bubble Guppies, as well as the tween mystery series ...

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22. Win Xanthe White Organic Vegetable Gardening – Marlborough Express


Win Xanthe White Organic Vegetable Gardening
Marlborough Express
Random House has two copies of gardening guru Xanthe White's new book to give away this week. Organic Vegetable Gardening ($49.99) takes readers by the hand and shows them how to transform their backyard bombsites into organic Gardens of Eden in just ...

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23. When it comes to e-readers, do customers still judge books by their covers? – Winnipeg Free Press


When it comes to e-readers, do customers still judge books by their covers?
Winnipeg Free Press
See, in addition to being a published author, Richardson is also the vice-president and creative director of Canadian publishing for Random House Canada. He has designed more than 1500 books over the course of his career, including works by Ann-Marie ...

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24. Best Books: Writers in Diverse Genres Produced Many Worthy Titles, If Few … – PopMatters


PopMatters

Best Books: Writers in Diverse Genres Produced Many Worthy Titles, If Few ...
PopMatters
Two children who were struck mute by the vicious murder of their mother are pursued by the killer — their stepfather — in Charles Frazier's gripping “Nightwoods” (Random House). Frazier masterfully evokes the interaction between man and nature as the ...

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25. Do readers judge ebooks by their covers? – MetroNews Canada


Do readers judge ebooks by their covers?
MetroNews Canada
See, in addition to being a published author, Richardson is also the vice-president and creative director of Canadian publishing for Random House Canada. He has designed more than 1500 books over the course of his career, including works by Ann-Marie ...

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