Notes: Successions, Partnerships

Michael Powell, owner of Powell's Books in Portland, Ore., is "preparing to hand over the business" to his daughter, Emily, according to the Oregonian. Emily Powell, who has been working for the last two years at the company, will soon become director of the used book division. Over the next four to six years, she will gain experience in all of the company's divisions and then take charge of the business.

Coincidentally just last week Neal Coonerty announced that he is giving over day-to-day management of Bookshop Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, Calif., to his daughter, Casey Coonerty Protti (Shelf Awareness, March 24).

After attending Haverford College, Emily Powell, 27, worked as a pasty chef and a real estate market analyst. "I always knew that I wanted to come back," she told the paper. "If I had spent my entire life at Powell's, I'd have a very narrow view of the world."

---

One of the giants of science fiction in the 20th century, Stanislaw Lem died yesterday in Krakow, Poland. He was 84.

Among the themes he addressed, as the New York Times put it, "the meaning of human life among superintelligent machines, the frustrations of communicating with aliens, the likelihood that mankind could understand a universe in which it was but a speck."

His books have sold 27 million copies.

---

Summary of Wall Street Journal story today. Online book summaries hot. Readers just so busy. Some services free, some not. Most sent via e-mail. Business books biggest focus. (500,000 subscribers for Business Book Review, e.g.) Also politics. Publishers work with summarizers but are wary: do book digests sell books? One digester says yes; a happy subscriber says he buys fewer books.

---

In another program begun since reopening last fall, Kepler's Books & Magazines, Menlo Park, Calif., is launching a travel series in partnership with a local travel agency, Town and Country KB [Karen Brown] Travel. Called Journey the World with Kepler's, the program includes regular events--at least monthly--featuring travel authors, Kepler's staff members and travel agents who will focus on travel, culture, cuisine, art history and more. This coming Saturday the series begins with an appearance by Frances Mayes, whose new book is A Year in the World.

Other authors who will journey to Kepler's to appear as part of the program are:

  • Travel writer and novelist Tony Cohan, whose new title is On Mexican Days: Journeys into the Heart of Mexico, appearing May 2.
  • Twice a Lowell Thomas Award winner, Maxine Rose Schur, whose latest book is Places in Time, an autobiographical travel narrative about her unusual honeymoon, May 16.
  • Stevie Smith, who in Pedaling to Hawaii: A Human Powered Odyssey chronicled a trip with a friend using pedal-power--bicycles, skates, pedal boats--from Europe to the 50th State. June 14.
  • Jason Roberts, whose A Sense of the World explores the life of the 19th century blind explorer James Holman. June 21.
---

Dr. Paul M. Lerner, an owner of the Owl & Turtle Bookshop, Camden, Me., died last Wednesday at the age of 68. Lerner was an authority on the Rorschach Test, a professor at several medicine schools and had a thriving private practice.

Lerner's family has owned the store since 1998.

---

Beginning this Saturday, Chronicle Books will begin offering podcasts downloadable from its Web site and iTunes. Designed by two former NPR producers, the podcasts will include title features, author interviews, "man-on-the-street commentary" and short features. The first program will feature Craig Ferguson, talk show host and author of Between the Bridge and the River; an ongoing feature from the Worst Case Scenario series; and an interview with the authors of The Meatclub Cookbook: For Girls Who Love Their Meat. A new show will be broadcast every two weeks.

---

Penguin Young Readers Group and Walden Media, the film and educational services company, are creating a publishing, film and TV joint venture under which film and TV properties will be made from new and old titles for which movie rights are available and Penguin will co-publish books adapted from Walden Media screenplays and related tie-in titles.

Walden will have a "presence" in Penguin's New York office. The companies will together promote and publicize their joint projects to the education, library and trade markets.

---

David Taylor, managing director of Lightning Source UK, has added the position of senior v-p of global sales of Lightning Source, Ingram's print on demand subsidiary. Taylor will have offices in both the U.S. and the U.K.

"We need to engage ever more closely with our publishers to ensure that we understand their needs and are fitting our offer to meet to meet those needs," Taylor said. "This increasingly means that we need a single approach rather than a separate U.S. and U.K. approach."

Taylor joined Lightning Source UK in 2003 as business development director and earlier co-founded Swotbooks.com, which sells books and e-books to the academic community, and was a director of Blackwell's Book Services, among other positions.

Powered by: Xtenit