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Writers' News

Literary conference coming to North Vancouver brings authors and publishers together

nsnews.com – Thursday May 22, 2025

A major literary gathering with a focus on connecting authors with the publishing world is coming to North Vancouver in June.

The Vancouver International Publishing Conference (VIPC) will be held at the Wallace Venue at The Shipyards in North Van on June 8, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

With panellists from major publishing houses, literary agents and authors from across North America, this is an event to be on the calendars of both publishing professionals and aspiring authors.

Megan Williams, North Shore based CEO and founder of the Self Publishing Agency, Inc., is organizing the event with members of her team. She’s hoping to provide information and expertise not typically accessible in the Vancouver area.

[Read the full article]

Little Door Books: the Scottish independent publisher looks to new horizons

thebookseller.com – Friday May 9, 2025

Alan Windram was a part-time theatre nurse with a passion for musical theatre when he began working with a children’s theatre company travelling to nurseries and schools in Scotland and the north of England. “I’d never worked with kids before, so it was scary times,” he jokes. However, he “loved it” and when it wound down, he decided to turn to writing for children himself, self-publishing a series called Mac and Bob. After he reached out to children’s author and lecturer Vivian French to find an illustrator, the two became friendly and French was so impressed by the production quality of his books that she decided to publish her next title with him. So began Little Door Books.

French’s picture book, Captain Crankie and Seadog Steve, illustrated by Alison Bartlett, was published in 2016. Following advice from literary agents, Alan and his wife Susan decided to continue working with established writers. “We were really keen to bring new illustrators into the publishing world, so we went round degree shows, we found people online and at Bologna on the illustrators’ wall, and built up a database of these amazing illustrators that we wanted to bring up by putting them with known authors,” says Alan. He continues: “It’s finding the right person for the right story, and it’s worked really well.”

[Read the full article]

Emerald Publishing acquires now publishers

researchinformation.info – Wednesday May 7, 2025

Academic publisher Emerald Publishing has acquired now publishers.

Founded in 2004, now publishers is a source of academic content, publishing research monographs, journals and Foundations and Trends, with strengths in the areas of business, economics, computer science and engineering.

The sale comprises over 50 books, 14 peer-reviewed journals and 28 Foundations and Trends serials. The Foundations and Trends collection includes some of the top-ranked journals in their respective fields including FnT Machine Learning (the top-ranked journal in computer science in Scimago). The research journal collection complements Emerald’s existing journals collection in business and economics.  

Zac Rolnik, President and CEO, now publishers, said: “We started now publishers with the intention of creating a unique publishing concept focusing on quality and author service. I believe we have lived up to that goal. But with time and changing technology, we saw the need to be part of a larger organisation to deal with the myriads of changes in the marketplace.

[Read the full article]

US fiction writing school launches US$100k prize

booksandpublishing.com.au – Monday May 5, 2025

New York-based online fiction writing school The Novelry has launched a US$100,000 (A$155,276) competition, called The Next Big Story.

Open to unrepresented adult writers residing in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, the competition is calling for submissions of the opening three pages (1500 words) of an unpublished English-language novel-length fiction project, which may be targeted at audiences of any age.

A judging panel comprised of Tayari Jones, Emma Roberts, Julia Quinn, Zosia Mamet, Zibby Owens, Kimmy Nwokorie, Jackie Oshry, Yann Martel, Brady Lockerby and Carley Fortune will review the shortlist and select a winner, guided by a public vote that will run from 28 September through to 5 October 2025. Shortlisted writers will receive a place in the organisation’s Finished Novel Course.

[Read the full article]

Richard Benson to edit new literary magazine for working-class writers

thebookseller.com – Monday May 5, 2025

Richard Benson, the former editor of the Face magazine, has been announced as the editor of a new literary magazine and platform for working-class writers, titled the Bee.

Supported by Faber and actor Michael Sheen, the Bee aims to "fight the increasing marginalisation of working-class writers, and of working-class people in publishing".

Its channels include a website, a podcast and a literary magazine publishing both fiction and non-fiction. The organisers will also run an outreach programme, seeking out new writers from working class backgrounds and supporting their professional development.

"Justice and fairness demands that people from the less well-off sections of society have the chance to tell their stories, and to get them heard," Benson said. "But it’s also about common sense. Much of the important writing being done today, and so many of the best-loved stories come from ordinary working people. So often, it’s stories from the working classes that express what’s really happening in the world."

[Read the full article]

New book prize to award aspiring writer £75,000 for first three pages of novel

theguardian.com – Thursday May 1, 2025

The Next Big Story competition, run by writing school The Novelry, is encouraging entries from would-be authors ‘historically overlooked by the publishing industry’

A new competition is offering £75,000 to an aspiring writer based on just three pages of their novel.

Actor Emma Roberts, Bridgerton author Julia Quinn and Booker-winning Life of Pi author Yann Martel are among the judges for The Next Big Story competition, run by online fiction writing school The Novelry.

Roberts, who co-founded the book club Belletrist, said: “There’s nothing more euphoric than being immersed in the world of a good book and to get lost in the words of a brilliant author. This is a groundbreaking new writing prize and I’m thrilled to be included on this panel of esteemed luminaries.”

Martel said: “We all need stories to make the world new, and I’m looking forward to seeing what’s out there.”

Along with the cash prize, The Novelry will support the winner for a year to develop their idea into a full book. The competition is open to “all aspiring writers”, including “occasional readers who need encouragement to begin, individuals with limited time or financial means, and those who have been historically overlooked by the publishing industry”, said the organisers.

[Read the full article]

New independent press to focus on male writers

theguardian.com – Monday April 28, 2025

Conduit Books will not ‘seek an adversarial stance … but the emphasis at first will be on ambitious, funny, political and cerebral fiction by men that is being passed by’

A writer and critic has launched a new independent press that will focus on publishing books by male writers.

Conduit Books, founded by Jude Cook, will publish literary fiction and memoir, “focusing initially on male authors”.

Cook said the publishing landscape has changed “dramatically” over the past 15 years as a reaction to the “prevailing toxic male-dominated literary scene of the 80s, 90s and noughties”. Now, “excitement and energy around new and adventurous fiction is around female authors – and this is only right as a timely corrective”.

“This new breed of young female authors, spearheaded by Sally Rooney et al, ushered in a renaissance for literary fiction by women, giving rise to a situation where stories by new male authors are often overlooked, with a perception that the male voice is problematic,” he said.

[Read the full article]

Novelist Keshava Guha to become Aevitas UK's first literary agent in India

thebookseller.com – Friday April 25, 2025

Novelist, journalist and publisher Keshava Guha is joining Aevitas Creative Management UK (ACM UK) as a literary agent, effective immediately. Guha will be based in India, where he will build an international list of clients, primarily in non-fiction – across history, biography, social science, psychology, music and sport – but with select fiction projects.

He was previously a senior editor at Juggernaut Books and is the author of Accidental Magic (HarperCollins Publishers India) and The Tiger’s Share (John Murray). As a journalist and essayist, he writes about politics, culture and sport.

[Read the full article]

Top literary agent and businessman Esmond Harmsworth dies at 57

dailymail.co.uk – Tuesday April 15, 2025

Esmond Harmsworth, one of North America's leading literary agents for business, entrepreneurship and management books, has died while on holiday in Mauritius. He was 57.

A half uncle of the 4th Viscount Rothermere, chairman of Daily Mail and General Trust plc, Esmond lived in Boston in the US, where he had a hugely successful business representing authors from across the publishing spectrum.

His clients included the New York Times bestseller and the number one Wall Street Journal business bestseller Breakthrough: Secrets of America's Fastest Growing Companies by Keith McFarland; Amanda Ripley's New York Times bestseller The Smartest Kids in the World – And How They Got That Way; and Michelle Hoover's acclaimed 2016 literary novel Bottomland.

[Read the full article]

New £10k writing prize launched at Sherborne Travel Writing Festival

thebookseller.com – Monday April 14, 2025

A new £10,000 prize for travel writing was unveiled at the Sherborne Travel Writing Festival on Sunday 13th April.

The annual prize will be awarded to a published British or European author whose work “encourages understanding between peoples and across societies, countering the division and isolation of the present day”.

Moreover, “as well as the boldness of the author’s ambition and the quality of writing, emphasis will be placed on books that enable readers to cross borders and so to draw together – on the page at least – our divided worlds”.

Any full-length, non-fiction (including creative non-fiction) travel book written by a British or EU national and published in English in 2024 or 2025 is eligible for the award; entries must be made by the author’s publisher or literary agent.

[Read the full article]

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