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Book Expo America BEA

June 02, 2008

Interview with Eli Horowitz, Editor at McSweeney's


BOOK EXPO: Interview with McSweeney's Publishing from Dalmatianjaws on Vimeo. We discussed McSweeney standards such as the DVD quarterly Wholphin and the 826 writing centers, but also the glories of a bathroom book that lists all known of heavy metal bands, the benefits of having a tent at Book Expo, and the problem with McSweeney's bashers.

Video Interview with Kelly Link


BOOK EXPO: Interview with Kelly Link from Doublefaced J on Vimeo.
There are a few more videos I'll be posting during the week, so check in periodically for more BEA action.

June 01, 2008

Net Galley at Book Expo


BOOK EXPO America: Interview with NET GALLEY from James Roland on Vimeo. Interviewer: John Fox
Videographer: Joel Champagne
Video Editor: James Roland

All Things BookExpo


BOOK EXPO America: Day 1, Friday May 30th from RedFence on Vimeo. Interviewer: John Fox
Videographer: Joel Champagne
Video Editor: James Roland

May 31, 2008

Video Intro to Book Expo 2008


BOOK EXPO America: Intro - Friday, May 30th from RedFence on Vimeo. Interviewer: John Fox
Videographer: Joel Champagne
Video Editor: James Roland

May 30, 2008

BookExpo 2008

So the first day of BookExpo was a flurry of suits and contracts and seminars and banners and free books and guys dressed up like pirates playing live music. As for the pirates, they were promoting a L. Ron Hubbard children/teen series. Don't worry - I got video.

Oh, and my shoulders ache. Free books, especially advance review copies, get heavy so quickly when you start snatching everything you'd like to read (I know, I know, just throw me a pity party for getting free books). But I'm especially excited to have "Home" by Marilynne Robinson, and although everyone else seems to already have a copy, I landed the Roberto Bolano's tome "2666." As far as upcoming short story collections, which I requested wherever I went, from Grove Press I scored a copy of Anne Enright's "Yesterday's Weather," which has been mentioned before in these pages, and Akashic Books is releasing "Demons in the Spring" by Joe Meno (author of "Hairstyles of the Damned") with full-color illustrations.

Mrs. BookFox gasped when she saw all the books. Yes, they sort of obscured our couch.

I was also happy to meet Scott Esposito for the first time. He was handing out cards for The Quarterly Conversation. He told me I didn't look at all like what he had imagined. Which is okay, because I felt the same about him. Isn't that weird? Meeting someone you've been reading and emailing for years. But it was great talking with him. Other bloggers and authors are lurking about, and I just need to run into them (Laila Lalami! and Dan Wickett! And Carolyn Kellogg, and Mark Sarvas, and Ron Hogan, and I know there are more of you out there)

I also had quite a long talk with Jeanne Leiby, the new editor of the Southern Review, so probably later on in the week, after a few time sensitive posts, I'll offer up that interview.

I only attended one seminar, rather late in the day, from four to five. It was given by Anita Fore, who titled her seminar, "The Dime: Ten Trends to Avoid in Book Contracts." Fore is a lawyer who specializes in helping authors avoid getting ripped off (that's the blunt description). There are a ridiculous number of loopholes, and apparantly a large number of rather unscrupulous publishers who attempt to exploit them. It was all rather lawyerish stuff, and not the most exciting material, but an eye-opener into the difficulties of negotiating book contracts. I'll give you the truncated version of the seminar:

  • Reserve your multimedia rights.
  • Don't let the publisher forestall a payment until the book's publication date.
  • Negotiate for bonus advances if your book earns back its advance within a year.
  • Don't let the publisher combine accounts for multiple books (or else a successful book will be used to pay off the losses from a book that didn't earn its advance).
  • Insert the "1st Proceeds Clause," which says you can shop your novel around if the contracted publisher decide to pass.
  • Get royalties off the retail price, not net sales.
  • Add an "Out of Print" clause so you can wrestle your book's rights back once the publisher stops promoting it.
  • Include the phrase: "An unearned advance shall not be deemed an overpayment."

Many other helpful tidbits, but those were some of the best ones. The lesson: get a great agent. And maybe run the contract past an additional lawyer or two.

My video editor is currently hard at work on all the footage we nabbed, so I should be getting some video up on Saturday and Sunday and probably have enough pieces left over for posts during the week as well.

May 26, 2008

From Puerto Vallarta to BookExpo

Hello from Puerto Vallarta! I will be here until Wednesday, so please amuse yourself with some of the lovely links in my left hand column, not only my fellow bloggers but the LA lit scene. Also, starting Thursday I will be covering BookExpo, so look back for some video and blog posts.

May 19, 2008

Book Expo America (In Los Angeles!)

I'm lucky enough to have Book Expo America right here in Los Angeles this year, so I'm taking full advantage. I'll be living in the Los Angeles Convention Center for about four days, eating up all the lovely literary goodness. And, of course, in true BookFox fashion, passing all that lovely information on to you. I'll be doing some regular blogging, as well as vlogging, partially in the format in which I covered the Festival of Books, and maybe throwing in some extra goodies as well.

If you're going, please post in my comments or drop me an email to let me know. That way we could get together, talk shop, books, or just enjoy the frenzy of the event. Or if you see me lugging my cameraman around at the event, please don't be shy. I know BEA is in a week and a half, but the week beforehand I'll be gone in Puerto Vallarta for a friend's destination wedding, so it's coming up pretty quickly for me.

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