I learned about this neat project from the Arts East blog and was thus inspired to offer up some publishing/bibliophile related titles as reading suggestions. I’ve even included a couple murder mysteries just for fun.
I encourage you to checkout Erinne’s blog, but to also read the Arts East article, as it contains additional details about Erinne’s visit to Nova Scotia.
Book: a futurist’s manifesto : essays from the bleeding edge of publishing(M)
edited by Hugh McGuire and Brian O’Leary
Yet this is only a transitional phase. Book: A Futurist’s Manifesto is your guide to what comes next, when all books are truly digital, connected, and ubiquitous. Through this collection of essays from thought leaders and practitioners, you’ll become familiar with a wide range of developments occurring in the wake of this digital book shakeup.”
Golden Legacy : how Golden Books won children’s hearts, changed publishing forever, and became an American icon along the way (M)
by Leonard S. Marcus
Marcus traces the books’ development from the years leading up to their first appearance (selling 1.5 million copies in their first five months on the market) through their roster of acclaimed artists (including Margaret Wise Brown, Mary Blair and Richard Scarry, to name a scant few) and the titles that continue to be treasured to this day (The Poky Little Puppy and The Golden Egg Book among them). William Joyce, Harry Bliss, Avi and others reflect on the influence of the books, and readers of all ages will thrill to the decades’ worth of archival illustrations. Stately and comprehensive, this hardcover volume stands in lush contrast to the tiny cardboard-backed titles themselves, but it pays handsome tribute to a publishing phenomenon.” -Publisher Weekly
Women Who Love Books Too Much: bibliophiles, bluestockings & prolific pens from the Algonquin Hotel to the Ya-Ya sisterhood(M)
by Brenda Knight
“More about writing than book lovers, this book consists of short (mostly 500- to 1000-word) essays on over 70 women writers as diverse as Sappho, Danielle Steele, and Zora Neale Hurston, as well as many lesser-known writers. Knight, author of the American Book Award-winning Women of the Beat Generation, divides the book into well-known women writers, famous writing families, spiritual authors, banned writers, prolific writers, style-setters, and “adored” authors.
Material on most of these authors will already be a part of library collections that support women’s studies curricula. However, the volume’s easily understandable and inspiring style, augmented by concise entries, an appendix on book groups, and a resource guide, make it an entertaining introduction to women writers.” – Library Journal
~fiction~
Foul Matter (M)
by Martha Grimes
Desert Shadows: publishing can be murder (M)
by Betty Webb
This third in Webb’s series makes good use of both tony Scottsdale and the small-press publishing scene. Lena makes a refreshing heroine; being raised by nine different foster families gives her unusual depth. Solid series fare.” Booklist