books
Perez Hilton Probably Didn't Write His Terrible New Book
Richard Lawson · 12/19/08 10:24AMMadoff Book Commissioned Within Week of Bust
Ryan Tate · 12/18/08 08:51PMIn James Frey's Next Book, Jesus Loves Abortion and Gay Marriage
Sheila · 12/16/08 07:22PMMacMillan Laying Off 4% after Announcing Pay Freeze
Sheila · 12/15/08 04:50PM
A few weeks ago, MacMillan CEO John Sargent sent out a memo to the publisher's employees saying, basically, "no raises for anyone this year—but Merry Christmas!" Now, they're laying people off as we speak. (But Merry Christmas!) It's 4% of the company, including imprints such as Farrar, Strauss & Giroux and the children's division; the the Publishers Weekly says it's 64 people.
New Yorker Editor David Remnick Joins the Obama Book Flood
Sheila · 12/15/08 12:58PM
New Yorker editor David Remnick recently wrote a piece for the his magazine called "The Joshua Generation: Race and the Campaign of Barack Obama." The ideas behind that essay will be turned—eventually—into a book about much of the same, Politico reports. (He had a Knopf contract to finish out, anyway.) When Remnick hired Ryan Lizza to cover the Obama campaign for the magazine, he had to talk him out of writing a book. But Lizza ended up getting a book deal about Obama's first year out of it anyway. Now his boss is writing a book that's competitive with his own!
Judith Regan Vs. Michael Wolff In Sad Gossip Feud
Hamilton Nolan · 12/15/08 12:14PMFacebook Movie, Book Deals Confirmed By Fabricating Boston Author
Ryan Tate · 12/14/08 08:41PMSarah Silverman Wins Beauty Contest
Sheila · 12/12/08 12:20PM
A "beauty contest," in the publishing world, is when multiple editors within a publisher have to present themselves to an author, who then decides the best one for their project. It's seen as a nerve-wracking, slightly degrading process. Sarah Silverman, of course, just sold her book—rather, her idea of a book of "humorous essays," which are all the rage these days, from Nora Ephron to Sloane Crosley to Tina Fey—for $2.5 million to HarperCollins. As the Observer reports, David Hirshey won out as her editor. Yay! Now he—whoops, she—just has to write the book, which was supposedly pitched without so much as a proposal.
If We Had a Book, We'd Read It Everywhere, Too
Sheila · 12/11/08 05:32PMHunter S. Thompson Left Us a Literary Canon and His Sperm
Sheila · 12/11/08 02:42PMWho's Afraid of Jonathan Safran Foer?
Sheila · 12/11/08 01:14PMFarewell, Intern James Frey
Sheila · 12/10/08 04:00PMJames Frey's internship has ended, and we're happy to report that he did a decent job and took the work very seriously. Watch as James goes on a beer run for the ad sales team, buys the writers coffee, and reflects on his internship experience. (Yeah, I look weird in this video and I don't want to hear another word about it.) On his way home, he took my package to the post office. [Video by Richard Blakeley]
Enough With the 'Semen Cookbook' Already
Richard Lawson · 12/10/08 01:52PM
So we've gotten an aggravating amount of tips about some kind of hell book called Natural Harvest that is comprised entirely of recipes for meals involving semen. Like, human ejaculate. It's nothing short of horrifying. It's been covered in a bunch of other places already, but still everyone wants us to know about it. Except us! We don't want to know anything! So here, in the hopes of shooing you people away, is a brief acknowledgment:
James Frey Answers Your Gawker Internship Questions
Sheila · 12/10/08 12:45PM
Yes, the Million Little Pieces and Bright Shiny Morning author really is here interning for the morning! Earlier, we prompted you to ask him questions. In the comments, I'll moderate by asking him the best ones, and he'll answer. [Photo by Terry Richardson] Read on... BTW, his handle is bigjimdorito in the first few answers, and then James Frey later on.
Judith Regan Was a Very Expensive Mistake
Sheila · 12/10/08 10:43AM
Remember Judith Regan? She was famous for publishing anything at her Newscorp/HarperCollins imprint, Regan books—as long as it was trashy, salacious, and celeb-autobiography oriented, like O.J. Simpson's If I Did It (which Newscorp killed.) She was like the National Enquirer of book publishers. In 2006, she was fired for saying something about the Jews, and she filed a $100 million lawsuit. It was settled out of court for an undisclosed amount, but, as the Observer brought to our attention, we now know the figure that NewsCorp paid out to shut her up—$10.75 mil. Damn—that's a lot of lawyering. Update: When called for comment by our intern James Frey, Jonathan Burnham, publisher of HarperCollins, said "no comment."
Meet Today's Intern: James Frey!
Sheila · 12/10/08 09:50AM
A while ago, in an attempt to get Ryan Adams as my intern instead of him interning at Blackbook (nice catch, Mohney!), I received a one-line e-mail from somebody calling himself James Frey. "I'll come intern for a day," it read. He thought it would be interesting to intern for people who "hated" him (a strong word!) and was especially eager to do menial tasks. So Vogue gets celebrity intern Sean Avery, Blackbook gets Adams, and we get James Frey. He has written books such as A Million Little Pieces, Bright Shiny Morning, and once he went on Oprah and she yelled at him! He'll be helping me pack my things into boxes for my imminent departure and factchecking, among other things. He's out on a coffee run right now, but after the jump, let's play "Ask the Intern," in which you can ask James about what it's like to intern for Gawker. You can find James' answers over here.
No Raises Next Year at Macmillan... and Merry Christmas!
Sheila · 12/09/08 02:55PM
Macmillan, the publishing giant that's been around since 1843 and includes imprints like Farrar, Strauss & Giroux (home to Thomas Friedman), Picador (Naomi Klein) and St. Martin's (South Beach Diet), gave its employees what passes as a Christmas bonus this year: he didn't lay off anyone but did announce a pay freeze for 2009 "for everyone making over $50,000." That's not as bad as getting laid off, however, which is what happened at Simon & Schuster, Doubleday, and maybe Random House. Lovely! Full memo after the jump.
Precocious Children Only Ones Getting Book Deals, Film Rights
Sheila · 12/09/08 11:26AM
The nine-year-old who self-published, then actually published, a 46-page book about how to talk to girls (he compared us to cars that need lots of oil, and we hope he isn't talking about what we think he is) just sold the movie rights to Fox, who thought it would make a fine movie. Maybe starring Robin Williams as the nine-year-old? Then there's the twelve-year-old, who was mouthing baby food only a few years earlier, who fancies himself a food critic (“Softish jazz music. Seem to enjoy kids but not overly") whose film rights were acquired by SNL's Lorne Michaels. Well, goody for them! Brats. Trend alert: only precocious kids need apply for book-to-movie success for the next few months. And yes, we would be happy to show you an excerpt!
Sinatra's Humiliating Godfather Tell-Off, Retold In $700 Book
Ryan Tate · 12/08/08 03:30AM
Photographer Steve Schapiro needs a hook to sell his $700 special edition book about the Godfather movie. The behind-the-scenes pictures (including James Caan wired up with explosive squibs, left), 1,000-copy print run and author signatures might not be enough, and lord knows the economy isn't going to help matters. So he struck a deal to excerpt Mario Puzo's 1972 book on the making of the film. This excerpt was, in turn, excerpted in the Daily Mail this weekend, and the part where the late crooner Frank Sinatra screams at Puzo in a restaurant is the talk of the blogs, 35 years after it surfaced in Time. It's a worthy tale.