Friday, September 15, 2006

Anyone who is in the least bit interested in the history of publishing will enjoy Tim Kitchen's brilliant First 25 years of Pan Books website. In particular, the covers are sensational. Here is one. The site has scores - all evocative.

Yesterday I encouraged you to bet on our two Man Booker longlist titles. The shortlist is now out and we are very sorry (and fed up) that Claire Messud has not made the cut. However, delighted that Mother's Milk by Edward St Aubyn is still in the running and his odds are shortening.

At the Global Information Summit yesterday in Amsterdam there was much talk of the competition between India and China for leadership in the 21st century. My trivial observation was that India's population will inevitably exceed China's because of its obsession with cricket where the highest score always wins. China's only hope is to take up cricket with immediate effect (and with great benefits to the Wisden Group).

And meanwhile Macmillan India has completely upgraded its very impressive website. We now employ twice as many people in India as in the UK or the USA.

9/15/2006 10:20:44 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Richard,
Congrats to all on the Booker short list! The MacMillan India site is very impressive and as you once suggested in response to a post I made, the potential of the educated South Asian market seems to be bearing fruit.
I was curious about the views on China and India. was there a body of opinion leaning one way or the other?
Is there some feeling that one is more desirable?
Eoin
9/15/2006 1:25:08 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Eoin, I think sentiment was moving away from China because of the tightening of regulations relating to publishing an dthe ownership of publishing assets. On the other hand in areas such as retailing, software development, and of course manufacturing (including book manufacture)China is still the favourite. R
richard charkin
9/16/2006 1:11:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Thanks for the extra info Richard!
Eoin