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Paying for Exposure on Social Media: What Not to Do

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There’s no magic shortcut for marketing books, and anyone who tells you otherwise is definitely selling something.
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Teach Your Book: Designing a Class Around Your Memoir

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By teaching one’s own work, a writer discovers not only what they do well, but how others might use such insights to unlock their own drafts.
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Links of Interest: April 8, 2026

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The latest in traditional publishing, AI, and culture & politics.
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New translation imprint: Avocado House

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Yen Press is launching a new imprint, Avocado House, dedicated to fiction and nonfiction in translation, about 12 titles per year.
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Beventi adds ticket ordering for bookstores

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The new feature enables readers to purchase event tickets and pre-order books in a single transaction.
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The Bifurcation of Rights: What’s Old Is New Again

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How self-publishing authors strategically split print, audio, and ebook rights across multiple publishers—and what bifurcated dealmaking means for author control and income.
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Readers respond

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Responses to stories about plagiarism checks in the media, steering AI toward a happy future, and school visits for children’s authors.
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US book sales update: first quarter 2026

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Compared to the first three months of 2025, print book sales this year are down by 3.1 percent, according to Circana BookScan.
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Copyright law professor files blistering objection in Anthropic case

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The objection argues that the settlement, while fair in amount, would funnel most of the money away from authors and toward publishers.
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Another AI animation partnership for HarperCollins

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HarperCollins-owned Harlequin announced a partnership with Dashverse to produce animated microdramas inspired by their romance titles.
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Editors and publishers using AI for manuscript summaries

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Based on conversations at London Book Fair, some editors are using AI to generate summaries of manuscripts—which raises numerous questions.
Image: against a backdrop that's pink on one half and blue on the other half, five injection-molded rubber stars are lined up in a row: three of the stars are yellow, and the remaining two are gray.

What Three-Star Reviews Really Mean for Authors

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Readers who give three stars are often responding to the intersection between their expectations and the book—not the book’s inherent worth.
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The Memoir Playbook I Wish More Writers Knew

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Three practices separate successful memoirists from those who underestimate the writing craft.
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Why ADHD Writers’ Brains Are Like Lions (and How to Harness Their Power)

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By learning to embrace the nonlinear nature of the ADHD brain, you can learn to write with more ease and less frustration.
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Links of Interest: April 1, 2026

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The latest in traditional publishing, culture & politics, and AI.
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New publisher: One Book Publishing

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What started as a way to publish Alexei Navalny’s memoir is now branching out into other publications for Russian speakers worldwide.
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New series of translated novels

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New World Editions is introducing a series of translated novels by authors from one country for every letter of the alphabet.
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New translation prize from a literary agency

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The David Bellos Translation Prize, championing global literary voices, will be awarded to translations of fiction into English.
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New children’s imprint: Curiosity Unlocked Books

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The new imprint from educational publisher Teacher Created Materials will publish fiction and nonfiction for young readers up to age 12.
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TokyoPop launches new imprint for young readers

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Manga publisher TokyoPop has launched TokyoPop Learning, focusing on books and learning materials for young readers ages 10 and up.
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New agent at P.S. Literary Agency

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Gemma Paynter, formerly a product manager at Harlequin, has joined P.S. Literary Agency as associate literary agent.
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AI enters the New York Times book review section

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After being alerted by a reader, the Times severed its relationship with the reviewer, Alex Preston, and added a notice to the review.
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New York Times adds two new bestseller lists and removes one

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Added to their audio lists: Children’s, and Advice, How-To and Miscellaneous. They will stop publishing a mass market bestseller list.
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Harlequin partners with AI company on shortform video

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Authors were not consulted and likely don’t have much say over the matter, but they will receive royalties from the videos.
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On the List: Beatrix and the Unicorn by Lita Judge

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While Judge had plenty of success with the 30 books prior to Beatrix and the Unicorn, this was her first bestseller.