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  • Now, in the 12/1 issue, we have the long-awaited (at least by me) article about the meeting between SK and the "Lost" producers. It's not online yet.
  • Check out the preview at the EW site
  • Stephen King buys lottery tickets!!!!!!! ;D I love it!
  • The best of 2006 lists have started.  First up:  music.



    www.ew.com/ew/king
  • I should have pointed this out days ago :-[, but part 2 of the best of 2006 lists is now out. The link in the previous post (which apparently only is for the most recent column) will take you SK's thoughts on the best 10 books of the year.
  • At the link now 2 posts ago, is now best of 2006 part 3: Movies. "Casino Royale" listed #4--woo hoo! 8-) (Can you tell I'm a Bond fan too?) :)
  • I know BSG, best show on TV BTW, will be on his TV list. I wonder if Venronica Mars will still be there?
  • '24': So Good It's Scary

    Even longtime viewers will be spooked by the new season's surprisingly real take on terrorism
  • Television Impaired

    Flipping around the dial for one hour shows all is not ''Lost''
  • Is this his own comment on Barack Obama or did he just refer to what CBS said about him? :-/
  • It's a passing reference to a recent mistake CNN made where a graphic they presented referred to him as Osama instead of Obama.
  • Bev_Vincent wrote: The Secret Gardiner


    Meg Gardiner, an American crime writer whose books are set in California but published in England, has gotten a boost in the United States from none other than Stephen King. King praised Gardiner's book China Lake in his Entertainment Weekly column on Feb. 9 and said the book "had me from page one…Seven hours and 470 pages later I landed in England, convinced I had found the next suspense superstar."



    Despite not being published in the United States, China Lake, Gardiner's first book in her Evan Delaney series, was the No. 1 bestselling book on Abebooks.com from Feb. 9 to 18, beating out the Oprah-approved The Secret, by Rhonda Bryne. Another of Gardiner's books, Jericho Point, was the No. 6 bestselling book.



    Gardiner currently lives in England and her latest book, Kill Chain, was published in the U.K. in October.



    "This woman is as good as Michael Connelly and far better than Janet Evanovich," King wrote. "[China Lake] had everything. It came complete with an ultra-tough SoCal heroine (think Kinsey Millhone, only punk rock and in combat boots) and a climax which involves defusing a ticking time bomb and a stampeding brush fire."
  • Proper Care and Marketing of Meg Gardiner



    Thanks to Stephen King's lavish praise, both on his website and on the back page of the February 16 issue of Entertainment Weekly, it's pretty damn difficult to find a copy of any of Meg Gardiner's books - which, of course, have to be imported from the UK or Canada. And so the buzz is building, and her agent, Jonny Pegg at Curtis Brown UK, told Publishers Lunch that "some ten publishers are in the frame -- we should have news by end of next week or some time in the following week." With Britt Carlson of Gelfman Schneider handling subrights, no doubt some serious money (of the seven-figure variety) could be thrown around.



    But remember Ron McLarty? He was the last unpublished beneficiary of King's lavish praise, and while THE MEMORY OF RUNNING got him the obligatory mega-deal and did all right, the followup, THE TRAVELER, came out "with the same fanfare as a pillow fart," as one publishing insider commented to us. And since I'd like to see Gardiner really get her American due (as a fan of CHINA LAKE who promised herself ages ago to read the rest of the series, but hadn't gotten around to it) here are a few points to consider for any publisher making the deal:
    • Hardcover vs. paperback. Since Gardner's backlist numbers five books, and the buzz is already building, a traditional book-a-year hard/soft deal seems like a waste of time. Better to get those sales figures up quickly and build her name with paperbacks right away, and if sales go according to plan, break her out in hardcover with the fourth or fifth book that will catch her up to her UK publisher, Hodder & Stoughton.
    • Mass market vs. trade. The former, all the way. While Gardiner's books are heavy on character and have enough flourish that goes way beyond cookie-cutter thriller status, they are plot driven and action packed - and thus a better fit for mass market.
    • Frequency. One trend that's worked to break out Kay Hooper, Alison Brennan and way back in the day, Josie Litton (before her sales started dropping), is to introduce a new author in mass market paperback with three books in succession. Avon is about to try this again with Jordan Dane in April, May and June of 2008. Bantam did so with Morag Joss before going hardcover with HALF-BROKEN THINGS, but the results seem to have been more mixed. Still, it's about name recognition, and with the books already long available in the UK, it seems best to publish fast and build instead of waiting forever - especially with all manners Amazon and Abebooks just a click away.
    • Target market. Gardiner's books appeal to men and women, but the latter gender's going to have to get on board first. They aren't really romantic suspense novels, but they can appeal to that crowd while also appealing to the crime fiction community. Target both, and Gardiner's blog (with its hilarious "Semana Snarka" now completed) will no doubt help.
    • Advances. While I can't go so far as to call Ron McLarty a cautionary tale, it is an example, perhaps, of publishers going overboard to reward an author based on one glowing recommendation. If all five of Gardiner's books are bought at the same time, I could see the advance being quite substantive, but if the terms work out to two successive three-book deals, the dollar value may decrease. Remember, too, that in all likelihood it's just North American rights on the table, which makes the likelihood of earning out that much smaller. A six figure deal on the low end of the spectrum would announce that the publisher is willing to pay out - but that there's also room to grow.
    Of course, we'll see what happens when (if?) the deal closes as Pegg states (he hadn't answered email queries about the deal in progress) and if - as I expect - Gardiner ends up with a decidedly commercial American publishing house...



    >>> Source


  • Meg Gardiner, the American writer whose California-set thrillers are published in the U.K., is coming home to America. Gardiner, who received much-publicized praise from Stephen King earlier this year, announced on her website that Penguin imprint Dutton will publish her books in the U.S.



    Ben Sevier of Dutton bought the rights for the five novels in Gardiner's Evan Delaney series, including China Lake and Jericho Point, as well as the rights for two new books. The backlist will be released in mass market, while the two new books will be published in hardcover.



    "I couldn't be happier," Gardiner wrote on her website. "Evan Delaney is going to hit American bookshelves. And so are some new characters, because the novel I'm currently writing is a non-series book, a thriller set in San Francisco."
  • There's a new column in the 4/6 issue, with SK recommending a book and then complaining about how it's being sold. I can't find it at EW.com yet.
  • Daytona Online:



    Oprah's got a little competition in the book-promotion department. Stephen King, in the April 6 issue of Entertainment Weekly, says it's shameful that worthy books fail to get the attention they deserve, and he places the blame on the publishers. His case in point: Fieldwork by Mischa Berlinski. King says he bought the book based on the words on the flap: fascination, taboo, sexual. (Here're a few more: Thailand, journalist, prison, love, murder.) Great read, King writes, but adds "As of March 26, Fieldwork was No. 24,571 on the Amazon best-seller list, and not apt to go much higher." Oh, Mr. King; false modesty does not become you. Since the essay appeared, Fieldwork has climbed to No. 322 on the Amazon list. It appears the power of King's pen was enough to leapfrog the book up some 24,000 spots. And now that the we're reporting it here in this illustrious space, it may be in for another spike in sales. You're welcome, Mr. Berlinski.
  • The column has finally appeared online.



    How to Bury a Book
  • SK on the Virginia Tech shootings.



    On Predicting Violence
  • please do post an update when you know what issue it is. it doesn't appear to be a "Pop of King" piece, but i'll need to pick up that issue.



    thanks.



    -justin
  • There is a new column in the 4/27-5/4/07 double issue of EW. It is NOT, however, the Virginia Tech piece linked to above. Instead, it's called "No No No Easy Road" and is about rehab, especially SK's own. It is not yet online.
  • willowlove, i picked up the EW issue with the new column, but was there a previous issue with his VA Tech piece?



    thanks!



    -justin
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