 |
| Rebecca Sinclair |
Rebecca Sinclair, chief brand officer at Penguin Random House UK, was named president of the Publishers Association, effective May 6. She succeeds Mandy Hill, managing director of academic at Cambridge University Press & Assessment, who remains an officer of the PA. Steven Inchcoombe, president of Research at Springer Nature, is now the PA's v-p and treasurer.
"The Publishers Association's role is to create the conditions in which writers, creators, researchers and publishers can flourish," Sinclair said.
PA CEO Dan Conway commented: "I'm hugely looking forward to continuing to work with Rebecca over the coming year. Rebecca Sinclair is someone who inspires all around her and she will be a brilliant advocate for the publishing industry at this crucial time."
In addition, the following new appointments to the PA's council were announced: Mary Cannam, CEO at Faber; Kathleen Farrar, managing director of group sales and marketing at Bloomsbury; and Julian Wilson, sales and marketing director at IOP Publishing.
===
Debbie James, the new president of the Booksellers Association of the U.K. & Ireland and owner of Kibworth Books in Leicestershire, spoke with the Bookseller about this "critical moment for bookshops." Among her observations:
"I'm an independent bookseller, but now as the president of the BA I represent all booksellers, not just indies but chains, radical bookshops, specialist bookshops, genre bookshops, children's bookshops, everyone who is a member of the BA. I've heard perspectives from all of those bookshops and booksellers regarding change, and the most live issue and a potential existential threat to high street bookselling is business rates....
"In tandem with that existential threat, it's important to talk about the innovation, which seems to me to be really fecund right now. Take genre bookshops popping up with different specialisms like romantasy, romance, spicy books, manga. That is representative of creative entrepreneurs trend-spotting from the get-go, who are passionate and doing something about it, setting up bricks-and-mortar spaces and making them fly."
Reflecting on outgoing BA president Fleur Sinclair's legacy, James noted that Sinclair's "relationship with specific contacts at publishers has done wonders for the general relationship between booksellers and publishers" and "representation has become baked into the Booksellers Association.... It's a priori; taken as read that it is a trade association that must represent all protected characteristics, and people representing all protected characteristics, in turn, must feel like bookselling is an open-door industry for them."
===
The inaugural Aotearoa New Zealand Children's Book Week will be held August 15-21, Books+Publishing reported. "The goal is to celebrate Aotearoa NZ children's books and increase the amount that kids read," according to Read NZ Te Pou Muramura, which is asking groups who want to be involved to register interest in the event and "submit ideas, make suggestions for resources, and learn about the kinds of things taking place.... Our budgets are modest but our dreams are big--and hey, every event has to start, somewhere, right?"
The Mātātuhi Foundation is an event supporter of the week, while Booksellers Aotearoa New Zealand will publish the Children's Book Week reading guide, a 16-page catalogue, "full to the brim with the very best kids' books currently on the market."
The shortlist for New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults is due to be announced on June 10, with a winner named August 19 during the book-week period.