Libraries

365 Thank Yous, American Library Association, Book Buzz, Book Clubs, Books, CBS Evening News, Collection Development, Family, Happiness, HarperCollins Publishers, Hyperion, Inspiration, John Kralik, Katie Couric, Libraries, Memoir, Relationships, Thank You

365 Thank Yous

Kralik We at HarperLibrary are very excited about the buzz surrounding an extremely fascinating book entitled, 365 Thank Yous by John Kralik.  Kralik's book, published by Hyperion (on sale now), is an amazing story of how John turned his life around simply by learning the importance of two simple words…Thank you.

John Kralik tells how his life was on a downward spiral, and by simply writing thank you notes to those he interacted with changed his perspective and his life overall.  John was recently featured on the CBS Evening News.  If you missed the interview, you can watch it here!

If you haven't picked up 365 Thank Yous, what are you waiting for?  I know you'll be glad you did…and you can say "thank you" later (hahaha!).

Enjoy!

-Bobby

Book Buzz, Book Clubs, Books, Collection Development, Harper Perennial, HarperCollins Publishers, Libraries

Book Club Selections

We at HarperLibrary are always on the lookout to find ways to make life a little easier for you.  We know how important book clubs are to you, so we have created a list of selections we know would be great!  Here is just a sample of what we have to offer:

 

Paperback Originals

Drinking Closer to Home

Born Under a Lucky Moon

Don't Breathe a Word

Hello Goodbye

Jerusalem Maiden

The Book of Lies

Miss Timmins' School For Girls

Paperback Reprints

The Financial Lives of the Poets

Hummingbirds

Wench

Secret Daughter

A Drink Before the War

Mrs. Kimble

The Space Between Us

Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter

The Rebellion of Jane Clarke

Russian Winter

Stiltsville 


Graphic Novels

The Alchemist: A Graphic Novel

Cowboys and Aliens

The Thackery T. Lambshead Cabinet of Curiosities

The Griff

Please visit us often as we will be adding more titles for you to choose from!  Just click the tile ad for the complete and up-to-date list.

Enjoy and happy reading!

-Bobby

 

American Library Association, Books, Collection Development, HarperCollins Publishers, Libraries, Mary Jane Clark, To Have and to Kill

Why We STILL Love Mary Jane Clark

To Have and To Kill hc c We here at HarperLibrary are so excited about Mary Jane Clark's new book, To Have and To Kill.  Her new book, on sale now launches a new series and we couldn't be happier.  If you missed Mary Jane's interview on Good Morning America, check it out right here!

If you haven't picked up To Have and To Kill, what are you waiting for?  You will be so glad you did!

Enjoy!

-Bobby

Just Kids, Lean on Pete, Librarians, Libraries, Patti Smith, Robin Beerbower, Stiltsville, Susan Henderson, Susanna Daniel, Up from the Blue, Willy Vlautin

Robin Beerbower’s ‘Best’ List

Stiltsville hc c Here's a list of top titles you won't find anywhere else! Over in Salem, Oregon, Fiction Selector Robin Beerbower makes it her business to choose the best of the best fiction.  Sometimes, we're just lucky enough to land in her graces and get a shout-out! Here's Robin's full list of fiction favorites for 2010. 

LEAN ON PETE by Willy Vlautin. Set in Portland, 15-year old Charley searches for a home with the help of a broken down race horse named Lean on Pete. Spare in its use of language, this is an amazing novel by an Oregon author.

CRASHERS by Dana Haynes. Wow! You may never want to fly again after reading this thriller about a jetliner that goes down north of Salem and the investigation that follows by the “crashers” who try to determine why it fell out the sky. The gross out factor is a little high at times but it is fascinating.

STILTSVILLE by Susanna Daniel. Absolutely terrific first novel about a long marriage set against the background of Miami and the now defunct summer community of houses in the water of Biscayne Bay known as Stiltstville. Why this novel is so effective is hard to say, but the setting and historical events form an effective background for the story. Keep a tissue handy.

THE GIRL WHO FELL FROM THE SKY by Heidi Durrow. After a tragic accident kills her two siblings and mother Rachel is sent to Oregon to be raised by her grandmother, but as she grows older starts to question her mixed racial heritage and the mystery of the accident. This is a great choice for book groups.

IN THE DARK by Brian Freeman. This is the fourth in the suspense/thriller series that features Jonathan Stride, a homicide detective in Duluth, Minnesota. These are fast-moving and best read in order (IMMORAL, STRIPPED, and STALKED).

PACKING FOR MARS by Mary Roach. This look at the mechanics and biophysics of traveling in space was my favorite nonfiction book of the year. I found myself giggling and chortling while reading various “who knew?” moments such as the description of burping toilets on the space shuttle, what the "vomit comet" plane is like when one is weightless for 20 seconds, and exactly how one eliminates in space. I'll bet you never thought of what could happen if a spacewalker hurled in his helmet (if you read this you will find out, and for the record, you don't want it to happen to you).

UP FROM THE BLUE by Susan Henderson. Told from the viewpoint of Tillie as an 8-year-old girl and also as a grown woman preparing for the birth of her first child, this haunting novel relates her struggle to make sense of her mother’s mental illness. An excellent choice for book groups.

American Library Association, Book Buzz, Books, Collection Development, HarperCollins Publishers, Librarians, Libraries

It is time to get…BUZZED!!!

Bees1 

The HarperCollins Library Marketing Team
cordially invites you to attend our
Summer 2011 Book Buzz
at
The American Library Association's Midwinter Conference

Saturday, January 8, 2011
10:00 AM – 11:15 AM
San Diego Convention Center
Room 26 A/B
San Diego, California
(Please note that we will be presenting adult titles only…no children’s books)

Get the inside track on your favorite authors and discover a few new ones along the way!

Seating is limited, so RSVP your attendance to:
Bobby.Brinson@harpercollins.com

Light refreshments will be served.  We hope to see you in sunny San Diego!

-Bobby

American Library Association, Avon, Books, Collection Development, HarperCollins Publishers, Laura Lippman, Libraries, The Girl in the Green Raincoat

The Girl in the Green Raincoat

GirlintheGreenRainCoat pb c Laura Lippman has done it AGAIN!  I just finished The Girl in the Green Raincoat on sale in January 2011.  The Girl in the Green Raincoat is a new Tess Monaghan novel that first appeared in serial format in the New York Times Magazine. 

In this new novel, we visit Tess Monaghan, who is now seven months pregnant and confined to bed rest.  So instead of being able to track the next case, she spends her time looking out her window watching a girl wearing a green raincoat walking her dog.  Everyday is business as usual until one day Tess notices the dog running loose and the girl in the green raincoat is nowhere to be found.   Using her instincts, Tess believes something has happened to the young woman and the search begins to find her fate.

I found the book to be delightfully entertaining…a real page turner!  I think it's an excellent read for those who are hardcore Laura Lippman fans.  I also think it's great for those who haven't discovered her yet and are dying to add a new author to their reading lists.

I would love to hear your comments.  I will send free advance reader copies of The Girl in the Green Raincoat  to the 10 lucky people who send us a comment or an email at librarylovefest at harpercollins dot com.  If you would be so kind as to send a brief review of the book after you read it, I would greatly appreciate it!

Congratulations Laura on this excellent book.  It's sure to be a winner!

Enjoy!

-Bobby

Books, Collection Development, Ecco, HarperCollins Publishers, Just Kids, Libraries, National Book Award, Patti Smith

Patti Smith, National Book Award Winner!

JustKids hc cCongratulations to Ecco author Patti Smith!  Patti has won the National Book Award for nonfiction for Just Kids.

Check out all the amazing coverage Just Kids has received:

The New York Times
November 18, 2010
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/18/books/18awards.html?_r=1&scp=3&sq=national%20book%20awards&st=cse
 

USA Today
November 18, 2010
http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2010-11-18-NatBookAwards18_ST_N.htm

The Los Angeles Times
November 18, 2010
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-national-book-awards-20101118,0,5196901.story 
 
The Washington Post
November 18, 2010
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/political-bookworm/2010/11/2010_national_book_awards_winn.html

The Huffington Post
November 18, 2010
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/18/smiths-just-kids-is-award_n_785268.html

NPR.org
November 18, 2010
http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2010/11/18/131403634/surprise-jaimy-gordon-wins-the-national-book-award-and-patti-smith-weeps 

AOL.com / Spinner
November 18, 2010
http://www.spinner.com/2010/11/18/patti-smith-just-kids-national-book-award/

Bloomberg.com
November 18, 2010
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-18/patti-smith-punk-legend-wins-national-book-award-for-mapplethorpe-memoir.html
 
 
JustKids pb c Please join us as we wish Patti Smith a hearty and well deserved CONGRATULATIONS!  We are over the moon!  If you haven't picked up Just Kids, please do so ASAP!

Enjoy,

-Bobby

Book Buzz, Books, Collection Development, Dennis Lehane, HarperCollins Publishers, Libraries, Moonlight Mile

Moonlight Mile – Guest Review

Moonlight hc cWe at HarperLibrary are very excited about the new book from Dennis Lehane entitled Moonlight Mile.  Clearly we are not the only ones!  Check out this great review from Lesa Holstine, Library Manager from Arizona:

Lesa's Book Critiques
Books and Authors, with an emphasis on Mysteries.
Moonlight Mile by Dennis Lehane

Twelve years ago, Angela Gennaro walked out on her partner, Patrick Kenzie when he turned four-year-old Amanda McCready over to her mother in Gone, Baby, Gone.  There was one more book in the series, then Dennis Lehane moved on to standalone novels, leaving Kenzie/Gennaro fans begging for more.  We've waited eleven years for Moonlight Mile, but we finally have the novel that concludes the series in a way we can live with.

Twelve years after the events of Gone, Baby, Gone, Patrick Kenzie is still a private investigator.  He's also a desperate man, "Sucking it up doing jobs I don't like for a company I'm not terribly in love with so that eventually I can get hired permanent and we can get insurance and benefits and a paid vacation."  He and Angie are married.  She's close to getting her doctorate, and they have a four-year-old daughter.  But, they're hurting in a bad economy just as everyone else is.  He lost his free office as a consequence of the church reforms in Boston following their failure to deal with bad priests.  Patrick is feeling the same desperation as so many people in the bad economy, worrying about money and mortgage payments.

And, Amanda McCready has disappeared again.  Her aunt never forgave Patrick for giving Amanda back to her lousy mother.  Since Bea blames Patrick for the past, she wants him to find the sixteen-year-old. But, now, she's a sixteen-year-old on the run from her crazy mother and gun-toting husband, with just a few members of the Russian mob after her.  So why wouldn't Patrick look for Amanda when, "A girl disappears again twelve years after her first disappearance brought down a gang of cops and cost the city a few mil during a bad budget year?"  Of course, he'll take the case that drove a wedge between him and Angie twelve years earlier. 

Dennis Lehane has brought us full circle with Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro Kenzie.  And, he is still the master at telling the story of the couple and their community.  They're brought up-to-date in a city suffering from a bad economy; empty houses, unfinished developments, and people desperate to survive.  It's a story of consequences, consequences as a result of events twelve years earlier, and consequences of events the characters have no control over, the economy.   Moonlight Mile allows Patrick and Angie to team up for one more case, while Angie reminds him "Why we got out of the rough stuff business.  It wasn't just because you got shot.  It was because we were junkies to it.  We loved it.  We still love it."  

And, we still love Patrick Kenzie and Angie Gennaro.  So, thank you, Dennis Lehane, for Moonlight Mile.  Here's a fan who accepts Moonlight Mile as a satisfying conclusion to a beloved series.

Dennis Lehane's website is http://www.dennislehanebooks.com/

Moonlight Mile by Dennis Lehane.  HarperCollins, ©2010. ISBN 9780061836923 (hardcover), 336p. 
 
Thank you!
Lesa

Many thanks Lesa!  Pick up your copy of Moonlight Mile  NOW!

Enjoy!

-Bobby

Book Buzz, Books, Civil Rights, Collection Development, HarperCollins Publishers, Libraries, Marshalling Justice, NAACP, Supreme Court, Supreme Court Justice, Thurgood Marshall

Marshalling Justice

Marshallustice hc cI just finished a book entitled Marshalling Justice: The Early Civil Rights Letters of Thurgood Marshall, by Michael G. Long.  Marshalling Justice will be on sale in January 2011. The year 2011 marks the 75th anniversary of Marshall's arrival at the NAACP offices in New York and the 50th anniversary of his move to the Federal bench, and with that we are proud to publish this book.  Many may think that this is just a collection of letters, but I can truly attest to the fact that it is much more than that.  Marshalling Justice really taps into who Thurgood Marshall was how he managed to stay active in the cause of civil rights. 

Marshalling Justice also shows what motivated him to champion certain cases, and what we discover is that it was not always for the greater good.  In some instances, it was personal.  Thurgood Marshall, being a native of Maryland always wanted to attend the University of Maryland Law School.  Unfortunately at the time he wanted to attend, blacks were not allowed admission.  After he graduated from Howard University School of Law, he had the opportunity to take on the case of another young black man craving admission to the University of Maryland Law School.  When the case was won, Marshall took it a step further.  He made it his business to ensure the young man succeeded in every aspect of his studies.  Whether the young man needed a tutor, a mentor and just a shoulder to lean on, Thurgood Marshall was there, so that he could show just how successful this young man could be.

I am SO excited about this book and would love to hear your comments.  I will send free advance reader copies of Marshalling Justice to the 15 lucky people who send us a comment or an email at librarylovefest at harpercollins dot com.  If you would be so kind as to send a brief review of the book after you read it, I would greatly appreciate it!

Marshalling Justice shines a light on an unsung hero in the area of civil and human rights.  I truly hope you enjoy it as much as I have.

Enjoy!

-Bobby

Ebooks, Librarians, Libraries, Library Journal

Library Journal’s Ebook Summit: What I Learned

LJI am the resident 20something, and coincidentally, the youngest member of the Library Marketing team here at Harper.  I worked in a library in high school, and from youth, I’ve been a devotee of stacks, musty books, microfiche, book carts…the classic trappings of the library world.  But there’s so much more to it nowadays.  I’ve been back to my old hometown library, Patchogue Medford Library, and after a mere 7 years, it’s barely recognizable.   

With the increasing digitization of our world, the way we read is changing on a fundamental level.  And it’s left many of us—myself included—with mixed feelings. Kevin Kelly, of Wired Magazine, spoke glowingly of a shift from ownership to access, of sharing increasing the value of the books we love.  Eli Neiburger put a different spin on it, succinctly stating, “Libraries are screwed.”
 
It’s overwhelming sometimes, trying to gain perspective on concrete things, as well as the more ephemeral implications of ebooks, like the way a “read” changes when the format is electronic.   In a wonderful panel on Readers Advisory, Neal Wyatt, Duncan Smith, and Katie Dunneback discussed the changing “appeal” of a book in digital form.  The perks to reading on an ereader  are, when reversed, also its detractions.  For instance, if you interrupt your reading to click on a live link in the text, aren’t you disrupting a pace that was previously determined by the author? Does the experience become less “private,” less “personal,” as it becomes more interactive?  I have a lot of questions, and I know you do too. 

My biggest question: what can we, as publishers, do better when it comes to ebooks and libraries? Where do you stand in the digital divide?

At the end of the day, information matters—in any form, whether it’s an ebook or print.  Suffice it to say, Library Journal’s Ebook Summit was helpful on many levels.  We’d love to hear what you think in the comments.

-Kayleigh

Books, Collection Development, Family, Happiness, HarperCollins Publishers, Librarians, Libraries, Love, Marriage, Relationships, Stiltsville, Susanna Daniel

Stiltsville – Guest Review

Stiltsville hc c We are so happy about the huge response we received for Stiltsville, by Susanna Daniel.  The love for Stiltsville continues! 

We received a great review from Lisa Steckhahn, Reference Librarian from the West Allis Public Library in Wisconsin.  Here is Lisa's review of Stiltsville:

This book is a look at the lifespan of a marriage and a friendship starting at the beginning and checking in at all of the major milestones along the way.  Frances meets Dennis and Marse at the same time.  Marse likes Dennis but he ends up falling for Frances.  Even with this rocky start Marse and Frances become best friends.  This is a testament to the author’s ability to create characters that are likeable but still fully realized with authentic flaws and strengths.  Susanna Daniel manages to avoid clichés and craft a believable story filled with a marriage’s mistakes and triumphs.  The Miami setting is another character in the book that lends an unforgettable setting.  It would be a great book to return to during the coldest days of winter. 

-Lisa Steckhahn
Reference Librarian
West Allis Public Library

Many thanks to Lisa and everyone at the West Allis Public Library.  If you have not added Stiltsville to your reading list, what are you waiting for? I believe you will love Stiltsville as much as we do!

Enjoy,

-Bobby

Booklist, Books, Collection Development, HarperCollins Publishers, Kirkus, Libraries, Man in the Woods, Publishers Weekly, Scott Spencer

Man In The Woods gets the Trifecta!

ManWoods hc c Scott Spencer delivers the goods in his new novel and receives STARRED reviews in Kirkus and Booklist and Publishers Weekly.

The Washington Post says:
“This is a book to savor and read aloud, a book that is variously wise, funny and heartbreaking…The outcome must not be revealed here, except to say that it is as powerful as everything else in the book… ‘MAN IN THE WOODS’  is one of the three best novels I've read this year… and if you pressed me, I'd put it at the top of the list."

Want to read Man in the Woods?
Send an email to librarylovefest at harpercollins dot come and we’ll send a copy your way – with our compliments!

- Virginia

Abraham Lincoln, Bloody Crimes, Books, Collection Development, HarperCollins Publishers, History, James L. Swanson, Jefferson Davis, Libraries, Library Journal

Praise for Bloody Crimes

BloodyCrimes hc c Congratulations are in order for James L. Swanson!  He just received a starred review from Library Journal for his new book, Bloody Crimes

*Swanson, James. Bloody Crimes: The Chase for Jefferson Davis and the Death Pageant for Lincoln's Corpse. Morrow. Oct. 2010. 448p. ISBN 9780061988479. $26.99.

Swanson, Edgar Award–winner for his best-selling Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer, now brilliantly reveals how, when Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis each relinquished executive power in April 1865, one as a result of assassination and the other through military defeat, they set in motion two enduring myths—the legend of the Union's emancipating, secular saint and the South's cult of the Lost Cause. Lincoln's assassination, national mourning, and funeral pageant, and Davis's manhunt, imprisonment, exoneration, release, and long postwar life, insists Swanson, continue to unsettle Civil War and Reconstruction historiography, not to mention American society, to this very day. Despite an artful job of portraying the rebel president of the Confederate States of America in a benign light, Swanson concludes that the 20th and 21st centuries belong to Lincoln, not Davis, whose legacy of favoring sectionalism and slavery has been lost through time, much as his beloved Beauvoir plantation was swept away during the Katrina disaster of 2005.

Verdict: Swanson successfully fuses the strengths of historical integrity, balance, and masterful prose into one compelling work. Bloody Crimes should be required reading for every American.

—John Carver Edwards


Job well done James!  Keep that star shining bright!

-Bobby

computers, Librarians, Libraries

Libraries and Job Seekers: a Match Made in Cyberheaven

Library_stacks "I'm pretty sure librarians can change the world," she said. "Libraries are such resources and librarians make it all happen." This article from the Wisconsin State Journal hit our inbox over the weekend.  If you get a second, read up–it's all about the increased internet usage in libraries over the last year or so.  Thanks for the tip, Melissa!

-Kayleigh 

Karin Slaughter, Librarians, Libraries

Karin Slaughter for libraries!

KSlaughter3 Whether she’s penning her latest suspense novel or outlining in precise detail why libraries are a necessity, Karin Slaughter’s words are perfectly chosen and pack a powerful punch.  Her passion for libraries is as fierce as her novels are thrilling.  Check out this amazing article by this dedicated library champion.

-Virginia

Books, Charlaine Harris, Collection Development, HarperCollins Publishers, Kill the Dead, Libraries, Publishers Weekly, Richard Kadrey, Sandman Slim

Book Giveaway! Kill the Dead by Richard Kadrey

KilltheDead.HC.c Richard Kadrey returns with high-octane follow-up to his addicting SANDMAN SLIM. Publishers Weekly has given it a nice shout-out:

“James Stark, antihero of 2009's Sandman Slim, returns in this gritty, over-the-top tale of supernatural mayhem. Having taken his revenge on the rival magician who got him sent to Hell, Stark settles in sorcery-infested Los Angeles and gets a part-time gig with the Golden Vigil, an angelic hit squad of dubious morality that's somehow allied with Homeland Security. He spends the rest of his time as a freelance slayer of monsters. When Lucifer comes to Earth, supposedly to oversee a Hollywood biopic of his life, he hires Stark to be his bodyguard, but something isn't quite right and soon the city is awash in murderous zombies. Stark has to get to the bottom of the mystery or risk being sent back to Hell, along with everyone he cares about.
Profane, intensely metaphoric language somehow makes self-tortured monster Stark sympathetic and turns a simple story into a powerful noir thriller.”
Publishers Weekly
Eos, $22.99 (448p) ISBN 978-0-06-171431-3; October 2010

SandmanSilmHC_c Richard Kadrey’s series is snarky, sarcastic, dark, twisted, and totally addicting. If you haven’t read this author, you’re in for a treat. 

“If Simon R. Green wrote an episode of Dog the Bounty Hunter, it would read much like Sandman Slim—violent, vivid, non-stop action of the supernatural kind. I couldn’t put it down.”
Charlaine Harris

Send an email to librarylovefest at harpercollins dot com and we’ll get you started with a copy of SANDMAN SLIM.

-Virginia

Abuse, Book Buzz, Books, Collection Development, Conor Grennan, HarperCollins Publishers, Libraries, Little Princes, Nepal, Next Generation Nepal

Little Princes

LittlePrincesHC C
We are so excited about the upcoming release of Little Princes, by Conor Grennan.  Last month, I wrote about this amazing story.  If you missed it, click here.

We received a great review from Lisa Steckhahn, Reference Librarian from the West Allis Public Library in Wisconsin.  Here is Lisa's review of Little Princes:


A three month stint volunteering in an orphanage in Nepal on a trip around the world became a life mission that not only changed Conor Grennan’s life but the lives of many of Nepal’s children forever. Most of these orphans are not really orphans at all.  Their parents were conned by human traffickers who convinced them that they could give their children a better life by allowing them to be taken away.  So inspired by his time volunteering he started a nonprofit foundation called Next Generation Nepal (NDP).  This book recounts his story from his arrival in Nepal to trekking across the Himalayas in search of the children’s parents.  When I started this book I knew next to nothing about Nepal. But this engaging story has educated and touched me about this little know part of the world.  This book is sure to become a hit when it's released in January.

-Lisa Steckhahn
Reference Librarian
West Allis Public Library

Many thanks to Lisa and everyone at the West Allis Public Library.  If you would like a copy of Little Princes and didn't request one previously, please post a comment or email us at librarylovefest at harpercollins dot com and I would be more than happy to send you one.  I'd love to hear your comments!  I truly believe you will love Little Princes as much as we do!

Enjoy,

-Bobby

Books, Librarians, Libraries, Library Journal

LJ’s Fall Book Buzz 2010

On24_fallbookbuzz

I'd venture a guess and say that our department loves Library Journal as much as librarians do.  So I'm thrilled to report that we'll be participating in

LJ's Fall Book Buzz next Tuesday, August 17th (3 pm EST).  Mark your calendars and register now for 60 minutes of read-alikes, fall frontlist, and inside information on your–and your patrons'–favorite authors.  Here's the full invitation:

Fall Book Buzz 2010
 
SPONSORED BY: Greenleaf Book Group, HarperCollins, Random House, Workman/Algonquin, and Library Journal
EVENT DATE: Tuesday, August 17, 2010– 3:00 PM EDT – 60 minutes 
 
 

Everyone loves the September 1 Fall Announcements issue from LJ, but what if those pages could talk to you? Register for the Fall Book Buzz 2010 and you’ll find out about read-alikes and new series titles, get tidbits about new authors and old favorites, and maybe even get the chance to win a galley giveaway or two!

Join our panelists from Greenleaf Book Group, HarperCollins, Random House and Workman/Algonquin and Library Journal Book Review editor Anna Katterjohn for sixty entertaining and informative minutes covering the best in front list and forthcoming titles.

Presenters:

Katelynn Knutson, Marketing Associate, Greenleaf Book Group
Virginia Stanley, Director of Library Marketing, HarperCollins Publishers
Erica Melnichok, Associate Marketing Manager, Random House
Michael Rockliff, Director, Library Sales and Marketing, Workman/Algonquin

Moderator:

Anna Katterjohn, Managing Editor Book Review, Library Journal

If you are not able to make the live webcast, register now and you will get an email reminder from Library Journal post-live event when the webcast is archived and available for on-demand viewing at your convenience!

   

Awards, Books, Collection Development, Julia Quinn, Libraries, RITA, Romance, Romance Writers of America

Julia Quinn is a WINNER!

What happens mm c Congratulations to Julia Quinn! Quinn’s book, What Happens In London, has won the 2010 RITA for Best Regency Historical Romance. The purpose of the RITA contest is to promote excellence in the romance genre by recognizing outstanding published romance novels and novellas. The award itself is a golden statuette named after Romance Writers of America’s first president, Rita Clay Estrada, and has become the symbol for excellence in published romance fiction. 

For more information, including a complete list of winners, please visit: http://www.rwanational.org/cs/2010_RITA_GH_winners

Congratulations to Julia on such an amazing honor!  If you haven't read What Happens in London, add it to your reading list today!

Enjoy,

-Bobby

Scroll to Top