Episoder
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If youâre writing and self-publishing a book, where should you start? And who do you need on your team?
This episode, weâre changing up our usual format with a short, practical answer to a common publishing question. In a whirlwind tour through writing, design, publication and promotion, Arthur explains how a writing coach, editor, proofreader, designer, and distributor can help your book do its job â and what it means to be the centre of your fan community.
Links from the show:
Arthurâs list of writing coaches recommended by trusted sourcesElectric Book Works -
The allure of crowdfunding is that you can sell your book before it costs you any money. But thatâs harder than it looks!
To find out what it takes to run a crowdfunding campaign properly, Arthur speaks to Aaron A. Reed, who has successfully crowdfunded several books, including one of the most well-funded non-fiction books on Kickstarter. Aaron is a writer and a game developer, and the author of 50 Years of Text Games. Right now, heâs in the middle of another crowdfunding campaign, for his role-playing-game kit Downcrawl 2e.
Links from the show:
50 Years of Text Games50 Years of Text Games Kickstarter campaignDowncrawl 2E on BackerkitSubcutaneanAaron A. Reedâs websiteElectric Book Works -
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Children's publisher Book Dash makes beautiful books in a single day, then gives them away. And their method is catching on around the world.
Book Dash believes every child should own a hundred books by the age of five. They gather creative professionals who volunteer to create new storybooks that anyone can freely translate, print and distribute. Then they work with partners to get those books to preschool children and their families to own.
In this episode, Arthur wears his Book Dash co-founder hat, and speaks to its outgoing Executive Director Julia Norrish about how and why their ambitious approach to book-making actually works.
Links from the show:
Book DashResearch on the difference that books make in childrenâs homesBook Dashâs latest event in JohannesburgBook Dashâs event in BolognaElectric Book Works -
At the heart of everything book-like is a printer, standing at a hand-powered press, turning paper into pages.
When you hold a book thatâs been typeset in metal, printed by hand on fine paper, bound and sewn with board and cloth, you realise with a visceral whoosh just how much a book can be a work of art.
In this episode, Arthur speaks with Graham Moss, the founder of Incline Press in Oldham, near Manchester in England. Incline Press works with poets and artists to make limited-edition books with hand-set, metal type on vintage machines. This year, Graham was awarded the prestigious Cobden Sanderson Award from the Society of Bookbinders for his work in hand printing and publishing.
Grahamâs deep knowledge and rich story-telling is a joy to learn from, and reminds us that, no matter the technology we use, book-making has always been about people, love, and dedication.
Links from the show:
Incline PressIncline Press on InstagramVideo: Graham Moss on the Arab PressNew Borders: the working life of Elizabeth FriedlĂ€nder in the University of Victoria vault libraryElizabeth FriedlĂ€nderâs âElisabethâ typeface on Bauer TypesVideo: Graham Moss on Memento Mori : Memento VivereVideo: Page-by-page review of Memento Mori : Memento Vivere by Ubiquitous BooksThe launch of Punch & JudyLiverpool Book Art exhibition, October 2024Electric Book Works -
Everything we read is coloured by its typeface. And humans read a lot, so font choices probably affect more people than any other field of design.
In our daily lives, we rarely appreciate how much work goes into good type decisions, and how much energy we spend accommodating bad ones.
Every day, by choice or otherwise, we read messages, posters, menus, documents, web pages, and, of course, books. Not only did someone design their layout, but someone designed the fonts in that layout. Every single letter was painstakingly designed. And every letterform has a personality: itâs trying to make you feel something, just like Comic Sans feels like silliness, and Times New Roman feels like school.
In this episode, Arthur talks to type designer Thomas Jockin. Thomas is the founder of TypeThursday, a worldwide community of type designers, and a lecturer in design and philosophy. They discuss how type decisions are made, how type designers work on new and existing typefaces, how fonts can make it easier for people to understand what they read, and what technological advances mean for type design, for reading, and for society.
Links from the show:
The End of Print: the Graphic Design of David Carson by Lewis BlackwellLexendReadex Pro on Google FontsQuicksand on Google FontsTypeThursdayExploring Hangul with Aaron BellDigital Transformation in Design: Processes and Practices, edited by Laura S. ScherlingElectric Book Works -
There is no place more universally loved than a good bookstore. For its owner, achieving that is not as simple as it seems.
The best book shops are much more than books on shelves and a coffee bar. Behind the tranquillity, its tiny team is buzzing for twelve hours a day, liaising with publishers, distributors, authors, literacy projects, landlords, even local government, trying to build a community of people whoâll buy books and help others to buy books.
No one exemplifies this energy and broad-mindedness better than Griffin Shea, our guest in this episode. Born in Louisiana, USA, and once a journalist with AFP, Griffin now runs Bridge Books in Johannesburg, and the incredible African Book Trust, a non-profit that gives African books to libraries and schools across South Africa. He and Arthur talk about sourcing and pricing books, working across languages, connecting booksellers, the highs and lows of running a business in the inner city, and judging South Africaâs most prestigious non-fiction award.
Links from the show:
Bridge BooksThe Golden Rhino by Griffin SheaBridge Books Underground Booksellers Walking TourThe African Book Trust on forgoodGriffin Shea and Ekow Duker in the Sunday Times, on chairing the judging panels at the 2022 Sunday Times Literary AwardââStar Warsâ locations that actually existâ by Griffin Shea for CNN, annotated by Mark HamillElectric Book Works -
Behind every great author is a host of unsung editors. By convention, they donât get their names on books. What are they doing behind the scenes?
A good book needs hundreds of decisions made and pieces organised. For this there are commissioning editors, development editors, production editors, copy editors, permissions editors, assistant editors, and proofreaders. Many books have ghostwriters, too. Theyâre all focused on making books better.
Arthur speaks to editor and writer Tim Phillips about what editors do, and how they work with authors and publishers. We also get an insiderâs view on the world of ghostwriting, and Timâs advice for making your own writing clear and effective.
Tim Phillipsâ websiteCORE EconThe EconomyEconomics for the Common GoodTalk NormalElectric Book Works
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Creative communities can be a powerful force for good. Online, they grow around tools that let people be creative together. What comes first, the tools or the community?
Two acclaimed book-making platforms with vibrant communities are LibriVox and Pressbooks, both created by Hugh McGuire. On LibriVox, thousands of people have helped to create audiobooks that anyone can download. On Pressbooks, teachers around the world are producing open textbooks for colleges and universities. In this episode, Arthur finds out how they came to be, and what we can learn from Hughâs experience. What does it take to build tools that creative people will gather around?
Links from the show:
PressbooksLibriVoxRebus FoundationRebus CommunityElectric Book Works -
We take for granted that books contain no mistakes, but the absence of mistakes is no small achievement. It takes care, commitment, and very, very good processes.
In publishing, even a small mistake can spell disaster. Luckily, there are people who spend careers helping us avoid those disasters, by giving us the words and the tools to care about the details. Their work is not glamorous, but it is fascinating. Much of that work is about metadata: the information about books that makes up the circulatory system of the book industry.
In this episode, Arthur talks to one of the smartest people in the field: Emma Barnes, the founder of the publishing-management system Consonance, and the managing director of indie publisher Snowbooks. Sheâs also a university lecturer, and the creator of the online platform Make Our Book, which schools use for their kids to make beautiful books from their own stories.
ConsonanceSnowbooksMake Our BookA video of Emma Barnes speaking about publishing a thousand childrenâs stories on Make Our Book, innovation in the publishing industry, and the future of publishing.Book Machineâs interview with Emma Barnes, where she speaks about ânot working for the manâ.Article on Publishing Perspectives about Emmaâs journey in coding and publishing.Electric Book Works
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Would you believe that the entire ebook marketplace â including Kindle, iBooks, and thousands of ebook stores â depends on the volunteer work of about a dozen people?
There are millions of ebooks for sale online, and thousands more every day. How could any human bookseller check that they even work, and that they donât contain malicious code? The ebook marketplace can only exist because there are rules for how an ebook is made, and an official, automatic way to check that it follows them.
The people who create those rules, called standards, are volunteers. Dave Cramer is one of them. Heâs been contributing to web and ebook standards, making books, and designing software that makes books, for over thirty years, mostly at Hachette USA. He talks to Arthur about creating standards, how ebooks are made, using CSS for print layout, and the ongoing push and pull between digital-first and InDesign-based publishing.
Links from the show:
âWiring for Changeâ, Daveâs talk with Brian OâLeary at the BISG in March 2024The EPUB 3.3 specificationEPUBCheckThe W3C CSS Working GroupAce by DAISY, for checking epub accessibilityElectric Book Works -
Why are book clubs so transformative, and can they change the world?
When we read a book we love, no matter how outlandish or challenging it is, we recognise in it the way we believe the world works. And that is profoundly affirming. It reassures you that your life has a place, no matter what mangled shape itâs in. And if you can share that with others, and talk about what that book means for each of you, you step back into the real world a little renewed, a little stronger, and a little more equipped to change it.
Arthurâs guest in this episode has seen this often, first-hand, as bibliotherapy: Dr Anderson P. Smith works with book clubs and writers who are in or have been in prison, and has studied the profound effect that reading circles can have on people who are rebuilding their lives. And his insights on reading, reflection, and action extend to anyone in the business of making books or changing minds.
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Good agents are the fairy grandparents of page and screen. They get writers; and they get writers paid.
Most jobs in publishing are done by humans flying solo â writers and freelancers working from home, running their own show. That can be lonely work. Especially as a writer, it's just not possible, on your own, to know everything and everyone you need to know to turn your talent into a viable business. For that, most writers need an agent. What does an agent do? And how do you get one?
Aoife Lennon-Ritchie is the founder of the Lennon-Ritchie Agency, which works in commercial book publishing, and the managing director of Torchwood, which represents writers in film and TV. She joins Arthur to talk about being and getting an agent, negotiating contracts, and writing for TV and film.
Links from the show:
The Lennon-Ritchie AgencyTorchwood Literary & Scouting AgencyScreen Daily article about the launch of Torchwood.Publisherâs Weekly article on the 2022 Sharjah Book Fair, quoting Aoife.Sharjah International Book FairâBehind the Scenes: African Filmmakers and Writers on Interplay and Adaptationâ â a panel discussion including Aoife. -
Open-access publishing models are so ubiquitous today that we forget they had to be invented first â by bold, generous publishers.
In this episode, Arthur talks to one of those inventors: Frances Pinter has been pioneering for decades, running her own academic publishing company for over twenty years, and then leading publishing programmes in Eastern Europe for the Open Society Institute. Sheâs been the founding publisher at Bloomsbury Academic, the CEO of Manchester University Press, a fellow at the LSE and the University of London, and founded the groundbreaking organisation Knowledge Unlatched. Today, sheâs the Executive Chair of the Central European University Press.
Frances and Arthur talk about Knowledge Unlatched, her work in Eastern Europe, maintaining quality in publishing, the impact of open-access publishing on COVID research, and what it takes to start a new publishing business today.
Links from the show:
TOC 2010: Frances Pinter, "Rethinking the Role and Funding of Academic Book Publishing"Knowledge UnlatchedOpen Society FoundationsCentral European University PressOpen Climate CampaignPaperight -
There are so many interesting people in book-making; people who cross boundaries and live for the thrill of making art with other people. People like Andrés Barragån: rock guitarist, engineer, writer, agent, and founder of Colombian publishing company Puntoaparte Editores.
For nearly 20 years, AndrĂ©s has been creating beautiful, infographic books for many of the worldâs leading brands and organisations, winning multiple awards, and publishing his own books too. Before starting Puntoaparte, he was the lead guitarist for the influential hardcore band Ultrageno, and studied literature and industrial engineering. He has co-founded a literary agency, and is the author of Biblioperrito, a childrenâs book about a dog who loves books.
In this in-depth conversation, Andrés talks about his journey from musician to publisher, how his team makes infographic books, and what is changing about the way books are written and distributed.
Links from the show:
Puntoaparte EditoresWEF BiodiverCities reportPuntoaparteâs BiodiverCities book (free PDF download)Palaeontology book Hace Tiempo (free PDF download)Handbook for tourism guides in ColombiaBiblioperrito, the childrenâs bookRolling Stone, â50 great Colombian albums of the 21st centuryâRolling Stone Colombiaâs â25 great national albumsâ republished by Polen RecordsUltrageno - La juega (music video on YouTube) -
The biggest decision in publishing is âwho gets published?â Whose ideas, world views, and idioms get added to the great library?
Anasuya Sengupta is the Co-founder and Co-Director of Whose Knowledge?, a global campaign to center the knowledge of marginalized communities on the Internet. Before that, she was Chief Grantmaking Officer at the Wikimedia Foundation, and a program director at the Global Fund for Women. She is a thoughtful, pragmatic leader whose work continually inspires and effects change â not least at Wikipedia, one of the worldâs most prominent publications.
In this in-depth conversation, Arthur and Anasuya discuss the bigger picture: where book publishing fits into the universe of human knowledge, and what that means for our decisions as book-makers.Links from the show:
Whose Knowledge?Whose Voices?, the Whose Knowledge podcastAkka MahadeviBraiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants by Robin Wall KimmererPeople are Knowledge, a film by Achal Prabhala#visiblewikiwomen on Whose Knowledge -
When we create machines to handle the drudgery of book-making, we free up our brains for more creative work.
Fiction publisher Canelo has just been shortlisted for Independent Publisher of the Year at the British Book Awards. They have a small, thriving team and sell millions of copies a year. They have repeatedly shown that sensible innovations in how you commission, make, and market books, and how you pay authors, can completely change the publishing game. Nick Barreto is Canelo's co-founder and Operations Director, and a self-taught book-making automator. In this episode, we hear how he built Caneloâs hyper-efficient workflow, and what it has helped them achieve.
Nick on LinkedInNick on TwitterCaneloSnow BooksConsonancePandocAtavistLaTeX
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Few people have helped to publish as many childrenâs books, in as many different ways, as Alisha Niehaus Berger.
Her career has spanned New York publishing, the Girl Scouts of America, and publishing programmes in over a dozen countries. As we find out in this conversation, sheâs seen that there are many, many ways to make a childrenâs book. And many ways to define âqualityâ. What matters most is that each book has a purpose; and that, as book-makers, our jobs get richer and more rewarding when we know and love what our books will do in the world.
Links from the show:
Alisha on LinkedInRoom to ReadThe Peace and Equality CollectionLiteracy CloudSavvy by Ingrid LawThe Vast Fields of Ordinary by Nick BurdAlishaâs âA Small Miracleâ postAlisha on the power of globally diverse childrenâs booksWe Need Diverse BooksPeople of Color in PublishingBetter World BooksPete the Cat -
The pandemic has accelerated digitization in publishing to warp speed, and every book-maker in the world is wondering what that means for their business.
Some innovative publishers were going digital long ago, of course. Even three-generation family businesses like EBC (formerly the Eastern Book Company). As we hear in this episode with its director Raghunandan Malik, theyâve stayed ahead of the curve because they prioritise constant learning and an entrepreneurial mindset, and also because theyâve long known that âbooksâ are not the reason they exist. Rather, they provide information, and books are one smart way to do that.
Raghunandan Malik on LinkedInEBCEBC ReaderEBC Learning
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When we really need to get a book written and published quickly, and can rally a dedicated team around it, how fast can we move?
Book Sprints are the leaders in rapid book production. Their CEO and Lead Facilitator, Barbara RĂŒhling, regularly leads her clientsâ teams from zero to book in just five days. Arthur and Barbara talk about how she and her team work, and what other book-makers can learn from it.
Links from the show:
Barbara RĂŒhlingBook SprintsEditoriaThe Construction of Authorship edited by Martha WoodmanseeTen Years of Book Sprints, a post on its origins by Adam Hyde -
We all love libraries, but maybe we could love them a little more. Some money-minded publishing folk even wonder: what effect do libraries have on book sales? Luckily, Guy LeCharles Gonzalez can help answer that question, and many others.
Guy is Chief Content Officer at LibraryPass, and till recently ran the Panorama Project, which measures the impact that public libraries have on reading and on book sales. Before that, he worked in a range of senior publishing and marketing roles, and ran a wonderful book-making conference called Digital Book World. He has a sharp eye for lazy thinking, and that rare ability to grasp both the big picture and the tiny details that make it up.
Links from the show:
Guy LeCharles Gonzalez on LinkedInLibraryPassPanorama ProjectAbout the Library Marketing Valuation ToolkitGuyâs talk at DBW in 2010 after the iPad announcementOpen Road Media and Jane FriedmanPrinceâs memoir, The Beautiful OnesParasite: A Graphic Novel in Storyboards - Vis mere