Thursday, June 14, 2018

LAURA INGALLS WILDER | Her Home in Mansfield, Missouri

Yesterday, going through books after the challenging immersion last week in #BookExpo2018,  I was dipping into "Dear Laura," a collection of letters to Laura Ingalls Wilder from her young fans.

That prompted me to send a letter to the woman in charge of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home and Museum in Mansfield, Missouri, Jean Coday.

I watched an interview with her on YouTube, about the Wilder Home and Museum, and was pleased that the Wilder books and home and the memory of the author are being kept alive so energetically. You can watch the interview here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bl3CWzZACYQ

My mother, Hilda van Stockum Marlin (Newbery Honoree in 1935), was – like Wilder – a Viking Press author and we used to get each "Little House" book from May Massee, the editor, as it came out. 

My sister Olga Marlin was a special fan and she kept up a correspondence with Wilder. I asked Jean Coday whether any of that correspondence survives in the Mansfield home and museum. 

"Dear Laura" was published in 1996 by HarperCollins. 

If fan letters from Olga are not in Mansfield, they could be in the Herbert Hoover Library in West Branch, Iowa. Perhaps there is also another location for storage of these letters.

My sister Olga this year has just had published her second book, released by Scepter, which is located in New York, New York and Princeton, New Jersey. The book is called "Our Lives in His Hands: An Ordinary Couple's Path to Holiness," with a Foreword by Mary Ann Glendon.

Boissevain Books published a second edition of her first book, "To Africa with a Dream," which was initially published by Scepter.


Thursday, May 24, 2018

OXFORD COMMA | Origin

The Comma Queen, at the Players Club,
November 21, 2017.
November 22, 2017 – How did the comma happen?

And then, how did the Oxford Comma happen?

And how does the Oxford Comma differ from the Harvard Comma?

I listened to a report at lunch today at the Players Club, New York City, by Mary Norris, the "Comma Queen". 

She wrote a book called Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen.

(To be continued. Watch this space.)



KERSTI | Rights Trail

Rights are Asserted in the following book by Hilda van Stockum through 2056 or 2076, depending on prevailing copyright law.

1. Kersti and St. Nicholas: COPYRIGHT in name of VIKING PRESS 1940. Originally published by Viking Press. Registration was made October 18, 1940. The book is described as having been published in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on October 11, 1940. Recorded in the Register of Copyrights at the Library of Congress by the Commissioner of Patents, November 4, 1940.

Historical note: Hilda van Stockum was born in Rotterdam, Holland and saw her country invaded on May 10,  1940 and her home city bombed to the ground by the Nazis a few days later.

The shock of this for her and her mother Olga Boissevain van Stockum must have been agonizing.

Her book describes a little Dutch girls who persuades St. Nicholas to give presents to the naughty children as well as the good ones.

An edition of Kersti and St. Nicholas was published by Boissevain Books LLC.

For other books and articles and artwork to which rights are asserted, see
http://boissevainbooksllc.blogspot.com/2018/05/van-stockum-hilda-van-stockum-assertion.html.

2. VIKING REVERSION OF RIGHTS to Author, 1967 (Seven Books including Kersti)



3. APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTOR AND TRUSTEE 2006 (Death of author)



4. TRANSFER OF RIGHTS TO BOISSEVAIN BOOKS UPON DEATH OF EXECUTOR


VAN STOCKUM | Hilda van Stockum, Assertion of Rights

Rights are Asserted and Hereby Documented in the following literary works of Hilda van Stockum a/k/a Hilda Marlin aka Mrs. E. R. Marlin. The executor is John Tepper Marlin, Ph.D., Managing Partner of Boissevain Books LLC, to which rights have been assigned.

Hilda van Stockum died in 2006. Rights are asserted for her literary works until 2056 or 2076, depending on the governing copyright law.

The following list is in formation.

Kersti and St. Nicholas. Originally published by Viking Press. Registration was made October 18, 1940. The book is described as having been published in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on October 11, 1940. Recorded in the Register of Copyrights at the Library of Congress by t he Commissioner of Patents, November 4, 1940.  Historical note: Hilda van Stockum was born in Rotterdam, Holland and saw her home city bombed by the Nazis earlier that year. Her book describes a little Dutch girls who persuades St. Nicholas to give presents to the naughty children as well as the good ones.

Thursday, May 3, 2018

WW2 | Remembering V-E Day

Charlie Miner, Jr. at the Vero Beach, Fla. Veterans
Memorial. Photo by JT Marlin.
Amsterdam, Holland, May 3, 2018 –The East Hampton Star just published my "Guest Words" on the death of Charlie Miner and the ending of the war in Europe, 73 years ago this coming week. 

I plan to attend the May 4 Remembrance Day in Overveen, for the ending of the Nazi Occupation of Holland. 

This Occupation took the lives of many of my Dutch-born mother's relatives, who fought against Hitler in the military or in the Resistance. Her brother Willem was piloting a Halifax III for the RAF when he was shot down over Laval, France during the week of D-Day in June 1944.

Army Major and pediatrician Dr Robert Wack wrote a book focusing on Willem. It is called Time Bomber and it is published by Boissevain Books.

Saturday, June 3, 2017

BOOK BIZ | How to Get an Indie Book Reviewed

At #BookExpo2017 I ran across a media kit for Foreword Reviews. This is a competitor to Kirkus Reviews that only looks at indie books — i.e., books published by anyone except the Big Five of publishing and their imprints:
  • Hachette
  • HarperCollins
  • Macmillan
  • Penguin Random House
  • Simon & Schuster
The faster and cheaper technology for producing books on demand means that more books are being published every year.  There is room for another reviewing company. In fact more competition in this field is on its way.

Kirkus Reviews accepts books for review in its magazine, which is based in New York City. It reviews the best ones for free. It requires books be submitted ahead of their publication date. To be sure of getting a review to quote in advertising, indie publishers send books in with a $425 fee, and Kirkus sends back a review for use by the publisher. It prepares reviews of 10,000 books per year. It also provides editing services, again for a fee, prior to publication, independently of its reviewing service.

Foreword Reviews is based in Michigan. It receives about 1,500 books prior to their publication every two months for review in its magazine and publishes 150 of them. This service costs $499 per title and is called a "Clarion Review" to distinguish it from the unpaid reviews. The paid review belongs to the publisher, but with the publisher's permission it is posted on the Clarion website and is used by book distributors and selling outlets. The books for paid review do not have to be submitted in advance of publication. Books of special merit are given a "Five Star Clarion Review".

Typically the reviewers ask for two printed copies or one pdf file of the book. They take about two months to generate a review, so advance planning is essential.

The lead time for the editorial in Foreword Reviews is awesome. The deadline for editorial for the September-October issue is already past. The deadline for the November-December issue, which covers Health & Fitness, Biography and Historical, is July 15.

For Foreword Reviews consideration, send books and a "tip sheet" to
Book Review Editor, Foreword Reviews
425 Boardman Avenue
Traverse City, MI 49684
Or... better still... send a pdf file, or ebook, to ebooks@forewordreviews.com.

Related Posts: BOOK BIZ | Outsourcing Design, BOOK BIZ | Critical Mass,
BOOK BIZ | Goodman's Plan for Indie Stores

Wednesday, May 31, 2017

BOOK BIZ | Outsourcing Design

Sendil Mourougane,
Lumina Datamatics.
On the first day of the 2016 BookExpo at the Javits Center, I shared the shuttle bus with Sendil Mourougane, who works for Lumina Datamatics, an outsourcing firm for book publication.

We talked about what his company does in the book publication supply chain that stretches from the author to the bookstore.

Typically a book is prepared by the author in Microsoft Word, or is translated into Microsoft Word after being edited in another format. From Word the nascent book is translated by the publisher into a book-design program, the most popular of which seems to be InDesign.

Lumina Datamatics has a team of designers in Edison, N.J. and also a larger team in India. They can have people working on a book around the clock. They do work for large publishers like Houghton Mifflin, Pearson, McGraw-Hill, Macmillan and Wiley. It is up to the publisher to pick the printer, although Courier Printing is a popular one (several printing plants go by that name; the biggest seems to be in Smyrna, Tennessee).

Most recently, as the advantages of print-on-demand publishing are becoming clearer,  some Lumina customers have been taking the design output and sending it to Ingram to generate and distribute print-on-demand books.

I asked about cost and Sendil said that it is usually quoted on a per-page basis, somewhere between $3 and $10 a page. Of course it depends greatly on how much work is required, and special services have their own fees. The following kinds of services are provided:
  • Translation to InDesign.
  • Design of pages, with photographs if required.
  • Composition — changes in type faces.
  • Text layout.
  • Copy editing against one of several style manuals (Chicago, MLA etc.)
  • Permissions for photos etc.
  • Curriculum-resource-package design. (As in McGraw-Hill Education packages.)
Bottom Line

I hadn't considered the benefits of turning a book over to a full-service design company and now I see them. That's the kind of thing BookExpo is for. Sendil can be reached at sendil.mourougane@luminad.com.

Related Posts: A Model Bookstore in the Age of the Indies