Just back in London from the Cairo day trip (where I failed even to glimpse the pyramids) and a few miscellaneous items.
1. Someone will be able to make a lot of money by working out how to have Egyptian hotels, restaurants and cafes serve decent espresso. I'm told that it's something to do with the water but really...
2. An Egyptian author asked how best to get her book sold in the UK given that wholesalers and retailers weren't in the least bit interested in Egyptian Homes and so it is only available through the online bookseller which I'm not allowed to mention. Do have a look at the website - it's very special.
3. And from Egypt back to an excellent interview about our burgeoning medical publishing arm, Nature Clinical Practice.
4. Tracy Hofman has written an interesting piece (apart from the fact that she describes me as silver-haired - accurate but do I need to be reminded?) on blogging. She can't see why I bother to do this blog and sometimes I wonder too. However, the original reason which still stands is that our IT department were getting fed up with my internal email newsletter clogging up the Macmillan servers. The blog solved that issue at least. And if you want to know more about corporate blogging I see that Piatkus publishers are offering a free download chapter from Debbie Weil's new book The corporate Blogging Book (it presumably does what it says on the tin).
5 and finally,phew. I can't resist pasting in the attached press release from Wisden which suggests that A&C Black have done a great sales job, MDL an excellent distribution effort, Matthew Engel a brilliant editorial tour de force and the England team - thank you for the Ashes and the extra sales.
This year’s edition of Wisden Cricketer’s Almanack has seen record sales, and the standard hardback version is to be reprinted for the first time since 1982. The Almanack, which has been published every year since 1864, is an annual bestseller and is described as “the most famous sports book in the world”.
Wisden 2006 records the 2005 Ashes, which it describes as the greatest-ever Test series. The Ashes factor has clearly boosted sales, just as it did 24 years ago when Wisden 1982 featured the series known as “Botham’s Ashes”. Since then Wisden has revamped its format to include more top-class writing, pictures and the quirky facts cricket followers love. Gavyn Davies, in The Guardian, called Wisden 2006 “the best edition ever”, while in The Spectator, Frank Keating described it as “the most compelling must-have for many years”.
This year, for the first time, Wisden published a large-format edition as an alternative to the standard hardback and soft-cover versions. Combined sales of all three has reached 50,000, nearly 20% up on recent years and far ahead of recorded sales for previous editions.
Christopher Lane, Wisden’s managing director, commented “One of the articles in this year’s Wisden asks whether the Ashes boom is real. Sales of Wisden suggest that it certainly is. Our challenge now is to convert those new readers into Wisden collectors. And to achieve that we are striving to make next year’s edition even better.”
October sees the publication of the Wisden Anthology 1978–2006, covering the best of the Almanack from the past three decades. This is a long-awaited sequel to the highly successful Wisden anthologies published in four volumes in the early 1980s.
For further information please contact Christopher Lane on 01420 83415 or e-mail: chris.lane@wisdengroup.com