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Nathan Bransford | Writing, Book Editing, Publishing

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The publishing process in GIF form

August 27, 2012 by Nathan Bransford 290 Comments

At first you’re thinking of writing a novel and you’re all…

But then you have an idea!

And you go…

But then you hit page 50 and you’re all….

And then you hit page 75 and you’re all…

But you power through!!

And then you’re finished!!! You have finished a novel!!

Only then find out you have to start querying agents.

So you write your query letter…

You obsess over it…

And then you send it out to agents and you’re all…

Then a couple of days go by and you’re all…

But then you hear from your first agent!! And you’re all…

And it’s a rejection. But it’s just your first one so you’re all…

Then you get a few more and it’s more like…

But then! An agent calls! And they love your work! They want to represent you! And inside you’re like…

But you don’t want your agent to think you’re crazy so instead you’re like…

And you love your agent! When you say “yes” you want to…

But instead you go…

And then it’s time to submit to publishers. You are back on submission, and you’re like…

Then the editors start saying….

And your inbox starts looking like…

And you’re all…

But then your phone says your agent is calling. And you want to be like…

But instead it’s more like…

And it’s an offer! You have an offer! And you feel like…

And then you go celebrate with your friends and they’re all…

And on the car ride home you’re still like…

But it’s time for revisions. And you pretend you know what you’re doing…

And it’s back to…

But then you’re done! You’re really really done! Only your book doesn’t come out for another year. And so you’re like…

You get your cover and you’re all…

But then publication day approaches! And your reviews start coming out and it kind of feels like…

But some of them are good! And you’re like…

And then your book is out there! People are reading your book!

And it feels pretty good!

And there’s only one thing to do. Start the whole thing over again.

Need help with your book? I’m available for manuscript edits, query critiques, and coaching ! For my best advice, check out my online classes , my guide to writing a novel and my guide to publishing a book . And if you like this post: subscribe to my newsletter !

Reader Interactions

January 9, 2013 at 9:06 pm

That was awesome! Know just about every one of those emotions. So is this a good place to blog my recent book release? Dream Wedding Secrets: The All Important G.S.F by Eric Gulbrandson. It's the guest's perspective of the perfect wedding. It contains quotes from over 200 guests about what makes a wedding great or no so great for them as guests.

April 27, 2022 at 1:27 am

January 16, 2013 at 6:34 pm

This is so brilliant! I love this!

January 22, 2013 at 12:50 pm

So good I had to comment.

January 22, 2013 at 8:52 pm

this is perfect for people who are NOT writers, so f*** you and the c*** you rode in on

January 25, 2013 at 5:25 pm

Love the humorous twist on reality! Brilliant!

January 27, 2013 at 11:10 pm

Terrific Nathan, and speaking as someone who received a lovely rejection from you, (honestly you were quite kind) and who has published many times, I think you've nailed it. I am particularly fond of Bert.

January 28, 2013 at 8:39 am

This really makes me entertained. thank you

January 30, 2013 at 5:56 pm

Nathan, you should be honoured with a Ticker Tape Parade. Save the shredded paper:P

January 31, 2013 at 3:24 pm

Beautiful.Thank you!

February 16, 2013 at 4:48 pm

lovely……..

February 18, 2013 at 5:43 pm

You nailed it! Too funny

March 6, 2013 at 11:14 pm

The display of brilliance, in blogger format.

March 8, 2013 at 11:47 pm

Very cool and creative..thanks for insight and the laugh

March 29, 2013 at 2:11 am

I haven't laughed so hard, so long, and until I nearly threw up for years! Finally, someone who understands!

April 6, 2013 at 8:06 pm

Awesome!!! story as gif series… I enjoyed the GIF Story… But not just a story, every one who starts some thing goes through this..

April 8, 2013 at 9:27 pm

This was so fun and I especially laughed at the "come at me bro" owl. Great stuff! I haven't even gotten to the elf losing his mind stage yet. Can't wait for that stage!

April 12, 2013 at 11:32 am

OMG–thank you for this. It made my day!!

June 7, 2013 at 5:45 pm

Very funny, Nathan!

June 11, 2013 at 4:45 pm

Absolutely made my day! Thanks!

July 21, 2013 at 1:08 am

Unfortunately, your animations only reinforces that writing in today's publishing environment guarantees that the author will be treated like the lowest form of life in ancient feudal systems.

What can we do to revolutionize creative writing so that the true writers, no matter how small they are, can get their work out for regular people to see?

And, yes, I do mean that publishers, editors, agents, and even the creators of this web page seem to have lost touch with regular people…

November 13, 2013 at 10:06 pm

Ha! Brilliant.

September 4, 2014 at 7:36 pm

Oh the feels.

My life exactly…at least looking at it from this perspective I have something to laugh about.

September 13, 2014 at 12:49 pm

Really funny & clever! "MY Emotions!"

December 30, 2014 at 8:16 pm

Best synopsis of writing a book I've ever seen haha! Too funny….

May 24, 2020 at 10:45 am

Nathan, you are so uniquely creative!

July 22, 2020 at 12:00 am

I love this! Made me laugh out loud.

August 4, 2020 at 3:31 am

Hilarious! I was LOLing while reading this. 😀 Thank you!

June 30, 2021 at 11:31 am

Wow. You nailed it.

September 12, 2021 at 4:19 am

Love it! I have lived through some of these GIF moments and see a few more in my future. Thank you, Nathan! Truly hilarious.

February 21, 2022 at 4:51 pm

Thank Nathan Branford, for this GIF publishing process I am out to embark, perfect timing. Yes, love the words, images, blends into one. Big punch…😃

February 21, 2022 at 5:00 pm

Nathan Bransford, tried to cancel earlier reply, went out too fast. But do love your publishing GIF.

July 25, 2022 at 10:28 am

With your brilliant montage in mind, I feel that I can face what lies ahead. At least I’ll know the appropriate expression to wear at each stage. You empower me!

February 27, 2023 at 7:15 pm

I love your publishing GIF!

August 8, 2023 at 12:06 am

Blooming hilarious!

December 19, 2023 at 1:33 pm

Very cute! Kind of scary though. I haven’t even begun the process yet! 😜

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Designing GIFs for a Publisher’s Social Media

  • Esa Grigsby
  • February 15, 2019

Last year, the GIF turned thirty . GIF, the file format that helps people express their deepest emotions. Those blips of pure rage , elation , and calm peacefulness — those little loops always there for you, just waiting to be linked. They express your emotions better than you do.

GIF stands for Graphics Interchange Format, which supports both static and moving images. It’s a lossless format, which basically means that once compressed, the original image can be reconstructed perfectly, much like a zipped file. It was created independently of any specific software and originally mainly used for sharing and online storage of visual information by CompuServe and its customers.

Then the internet got ahold of it and we had the very first viral GIF: the ’90s variations of the “under construction” gif. Luckily, Jason Scott, a historian at the Internet Archive , compiled them all into one twinkling page for our viewing pleasure and adoration. Nowadays, there are thousands of GIFs that can be used to finesse any and all online communications.

Luckily for us in book publishing, marketing is included in the umbrella term “online communications” and we get to use GIFs on social media. Even better, we get to make GIFs for social media. Personalized GIFs of books or events that catch followers’ eyes and get them to stop scrolling and maybe even nurture an interest in reading the wise words of our authors.

The GIF could be of the book’s cover, like this one of Half Gods published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, or something related to the book, like our very own Flights and my personal favorite, the book GIF that inspired me to book GIF, the one made for Spineless . Speaking of my own book GIFing, here are a few I did for indie DIY press Civil Coping Mechanisms’ Instagram page, one for Coldwater Canyon , and one for Tom Sawyer .

These last two gifs are part shameless plug, and part proof that GIFing can be easy. There are a ton of online resources that can help you get started. I learned from this HubSpot tutorial . It teaches you to make GIFs with photoshop, using a series of still images to create a stop-motion looping effect.

But before getting started, consider these three design tips that affect GIF design the most. First, it’s always best to get the best-quality raw materials as possible. This will automatically make your GIF more visually pleasing and likely to stop a scroller’s mindless feed consumption. Whether it’s a photograph or an illustration, make sure it’s good quality.

The other thing to consider is the number of colors. GIF files can only support up to 256 colors , so the simpler the image, the better quality it will be. If more than 256 colors are used, the file will compensate in certain areas and replace pixels with the most similar color to reduce the color information contained in the file. This can lead to a “grainy” look which I quite like (here’s an example of a GIFed CCM author that exhibits this “grainyness”), but if your branding is cleaner than this, staying under 256 colors will allow for your aesthetic.

Another tip is from GIF-maker Andy Orsow at InVision. Basically, he tells us to be lazy because “people don’t need to see everything to get the picture.” He also suggests focusing on smaller, more subtle animations that will cut down on file size and time spent making them. This will also avoid overwhelming our viewers and confusing their perception of the GIF’s message.

There you have it, a drive-by GIF tutorial. Hopefully this inspires even more book GIFs to be birthed onto social media and the internet at large. Someday, I hope to follow in Jason Scott’s footsteps and make my own twinkling, blinking web page of book GIFs. What a day. But, until then, all I really want to say is happy thirty-first, GIF .

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A List of Funny Book Memes For Authors to Use

POSTED ON Jul 24, 2023

Bella Rose Pope

Written by Bella Rose Pope

If there's one thing users of the internet everywhere can relate to, it's memes. When it comes to the author and book-loving community, funny book memes are even more useful for connecting writers and readers. They're easy to find, often easier to create than a book trailer or other marketing content, highly shareable and are instantly recognizable on virtually every social channel (especially #BookTok).

Not only can you convey your novel's mood and tone through funny book memes, but you also get to share your personality as as author. If you take your creativity up a notch and create funny book memes based on your own cast and plot, it's also a strong way to generate interest in your story and characters. That is if you know how to use them effectively.

We're about to make it much more fun to document your author journey and market your book. And yes, we're including memes (scroll to the end if you're only here for those).

Are you ready?

What Is A Funny Book Meme?

Funny Book Meme About New Book Ideas

A funny book meme is any meme (images, gif) created with a book, its characters, or even an author as the main subject. It could also be more loosely around the theme of reading, such the feeling we all feel when a beloved character dies or does something we don't agree with, an unexpected love interest is introduced, or a juicy plot twist. All book lovers have been there.

And a funny book meme is usually an inside joke about that thing or moment that makes us laugh.

How Funny Book Memes Can Help Authors Market Books

Funny Book Memes - Frozen Fangirl Moment

Making money self-publishing a book via a successful launch, book reviews, and mastering Amazon ads and Facebook ads for your books is already a huge feat. Thinking about creating an author website and continually growing your official author social media channels may feel like a time-consuming afterthought.

But they aren't. In fact, they are very important to your continued success.

And funny book memes are just one way to make content creation faster and easier.

You may not want to post only memes on your accounts, but having a healthy mix of them can help you reach a wider audience due to their natural shareability and virality. And it's no secret that the millions of people on #BookTok are a passionate bunch. Book memes are an instant scroll-stopping attention-getter. Funny book memes are worth a follow.

Funny Book Meme About Becoming A Better Writer Over Time

Aside from capturing the attention of thousands of potential readers, memes are also great for authors because:

  • They instantly signal to readers and book lovers that you are one of them, you understand them
  • They're a more acceptable form of book marketing—they don't look like book promotion, but they are
  • They're a great way to show people your sense of humor as an author and a person
  • They increase engagement, which helps social media apps share more of your posts with other users (aka: new potential readers)
  • You can use them across many mediums: all social media platforms, email, blog posts, etc.
  • They're quick and easy to find and make, which means you're more likely to create them
  • Inspiration is everywhere
  • Meme culture is wide and transcends cultures, languages, and borders – expanding your reach!

Ultimately, funny book memes are just one way an author can market themselves online, but it's not the only way. Remember that a variety of book advertising tactics will be useful for long-term, consistent platform growth.

45 Types of Funny Book Memes to Create as an Author

Funny Book Meme With Grumpy Cat Reading

There are 100's – maybe 1000's – of different types of memes you could create as an author, but these are just five ideas that will help get the creative juices flowing.

1. Funny book memes about reading books in general:

Attracting readers as a whole will help you as an author. While not everyone who relates to reading memes will connect with your books and the genre you write in, it can still help you attract the audience who will.

These types of book memes showcase the lifestyle of avid readers and are great for getting engagement through shares, comments, and likes. That engagement can help boost your own book-specific content.

Funny Book Memes About Plot Twists - Big Bang Theory

Here are some prompts to help you start:

  • How readers feel about characters they love
  • How readers feel after finishing a long book
  • How readers feel about specific types of characters
  • The act of searching for the perfect book
  • Memes about shows, movies, or other books within your genre (example below)
  • The realities of a “book hangover”
  • Expressions of what certain relationship tropes or common plot updates feel like

There is truly an endless amount of fodder for creating memes about the life of an avid reader.

2. Funny book memes about writing books :

Funny Book Memes About Imposter Syndrome As An Author

This is a bit more niche. But here's one truth: fellow writers are readers (perhaps some of the best)!

By targeting the writing community, you're not only connecting with other current or authors-to-be, but you're reaching a reader base through a different medium they're already consuming: writing content.

Funny Book Meme About Writing A Book

These memes will be really similar to the ones about reading listed above; you'll just update all of the text and content to be about writing, publishing a book, and being an author instead.

3. Funny book memes about your book :

Funny Book Memes - That Moment Of Suspense

With these types of book memes (they don't necessarily have to be funny), you'll be hand-crafting the images or using already-famous still frames to make them fit your book. These will take a bit more creativity to showcase what your book is about, but are still pretty simple.

Remember that these book memes will likely have less engagement because they're meant to stir interest in a book that others may not know about yet. You likely won't get as much initial traction on these until you have a larger fan base that knows your books well, but using current trends and adapting them to your own book or series can help.

Funny Book Writing Meme About Writer'S Block

Here's what you can use from your book to create a meme:

  • Character dynamics: plenty of memes are out there featuring people set up in funny situations. One of the most popular is the example I used in the last picture – the one with two women and a man, in which the man looks back at a woman as she walks by and his (assumed) girlfriend watches him with disgust. There are countless ways you can use this as an author, just by adding text over each various part.
  • Plot conflict: Similarly, you can use book memes to describe the plot types that exist in your story. The Spiderman meme below with different versions of him pointing at one another is great to showcase a mystery plot or similar scenarios.
  • Settings: When creating memes to market your book setting, the first that comes to mind is the “this is fine” meme with a cartoon character sitting in a room that's on fire. This could describe the literal setting of hell, or something that feels like it.
  • Lore / Mythology: If your world is based on real mythology, you can even look up memes depicting instances of this and reshare to your account.

Funny Book Memes And Writing Memes - Difference Between Two, Too, To

The key with marketing yourself as an author with funny book memes is to work on the captions and make it clear—especially if they're recycled memes—how it applies to your story or world. You can easily bulk create these and schedule them with a social media management app.

4. Funny book memes about the editing and production process:

Much to the dismay of authors everywhere, writing the first rough draft is still very much the beginning of the writing and publishing process. There's still editing – ooooh so much editing – to be done.

Funny Book Memes About Editing Your Manuscript

Then there's the formatting, book cover design, Amazon account setup, ISBN numbers to get , book launch planning and so so much more.

Why not share this part of the process with your followers? It's a creative (and funny) way to document the author's journey and continue to build excitement about your upcoming launch.

Funny Book Meme About Working With A Professional Editor

5. Funny book memes about self-publishing:

Readers and fans love following the writing and publishing journey. Even more so if you're an author who's weighed the traditional publishing vs self-publishing pros and cons and opted for the latter. People love supporting indie creatives and small businesses they discover online!

Funny Book Meme For Self-Published Authors

So whether you're sharing your experience via an email list or on BookTok (or both!), having some, even during difficult times, can help you connect with more readers.

Funny Book Meme About Finally Publishing Your Book

Examples of Funny Book Memes You Can Replicate & Use On Your Platform

If you're a visual learner (or just someone that loves a good laugh), then examples of some of the best funny book memes is what you need. You can even save these to your computer and alter to fit your book and world.

TIP: If you need to replace the text on some of these because it doesn't work, you can find the original meme images simply by Googling the meme's description. For the first example below, that would mean typing in “this is fine meme” to the Google search bar and downloading the plain image.

If you choose to grow your author account with the first type of funny book meme – ones about reading – focus on using pictures and themes that align with your genre. General reading memes still work to draw in avid readers, but genre-specific ones will increase the chances that the new followers you get stick around – because you know they are already interested in the types of books you write.

For when the favorite characters keep dying

We've all been there. And we love to hate it.

Reader Book Meme Example Favorite Characters Keep Dying

Somehow, it feels like a new offense every. single. time.

Reader Book Meme Example Favorite Character Dies

For those moments when you can't help daydreaming about your book boyfriend

Unfortunately, the boyfriend that exists only in books – not the one who likes reading books too.

Reader Book Meme Example Book Boyfriend

For avid readers who've been told they read too much

Firstly, there's no such thing. Secondly….see the first thing.

Reader Book Meme Example Being Your Own Librarian

For fiction lovers returning to reality after reading a great book

That plot just pulls you right in, doesn't it?

Reader Book Meme Example Returning To Reality After Reading A Book

For a bit of emotional support when you need it

This is the real betrayal.

Reader Book Meme Example When A Book Ending Sucks

For anyone who's favorite sport is “reading”

Not all avid readers are introverts, but all introverted readers will love this funny book meme.

Reader Book Meme Example Stay Inside And Read

And then there's this one, that speaks to introverts and extroverts alike…

Reader Book Meme Example Just Trying To Read

For lovers of a specific genre

This type of funny book meme is meant to unite people around the classic characters, plot points, tropes, mythical creatures , and other things that normally appear in a specific genre.

Funny Book Meme For Fantasy Authors

It's less about the lifestyle of reading and more to find a fanbase of readers of the genre you write in.

Book Memes For Readers Author Account Example

For when the reality of being an author hits

Because we know writers read books, funny book memes about the process of writing are not only relevant to you as the author, but also to other writer-readers you can connect with. These are some examples of how to create memes about writing.

Writer Book Meme Example Expectations Vs Reality

For the every author who has found their inner evil genius

Writer Book Meme Example Plot Twists

For remembering your first draft

You'll only get it once you've completed that first rough draft and become one of the wise.

Writer Book Meme Example Editing Your First Draft

For writer's block

Enough said.

Writer Book Meme Example Your Writer Brain

For the emotional journey of editing

Your book is your baby. Perfect in its imperfections. Your brain logically understand the need for copy editing and line editing , but your heart can't bare the idea of parting with the word you've written.

Writer Book Meme Example Revising Your Story

For defining the relationship with your editor

We know the importance of hiring a book editor, but that doesn't mean we have to like it.

Writer Book Meme Example Editors Vs The Author Edited

For funny book memes about your own book

Funny Book Memes - Hobbit Going On An Adventure

If you want to make memes specifically for your own book, here are some examples from authors who have done it well. These are memes of very popular books (often referencing other popular books, movies, and series) so you can get an idea of how to create your own from your books. In these cases, people are using TV or movie stills to create the tone and mood they're aiming for.

Fans can also create funny book memes about your work. This is awesome! It's something that you can share to your profile and use as a way of engaging your fan base. Just remember that it's good online etiquette to then give them credit by tagging their profile in the caption or naming them appropriately.

For The Hating Game

This is about as to the point as it gets.

But this one creates a bit more intrigue and interest in the storyline…

Author Book Meme Example The Hating Game 2 1

For A Court of Thorns and Roses

Sharing a bit of dialogue from your characters is the perfect way to generate a funny book meme people will conenct with – even if they've never picked up your book.

Author Book Meme Example A Court Of Thorns And Roses

Make it look like a Tweet (as above) or a text message. Or, use a screenshot from a popular show to get across the concept or idea of your book.

Author Book Meme Example A Court Of Thorns And Roses 2

For An Ember in the Ashes

Another famous funny meme, adapted to a specific book and character.

Author Book Meme Example An Ember In The Ashes

See how easy it is to have your readers get invested in your characters before reading your book?

Author Book Meme Example An Ember In The Ashes 2

For the Plated Prisoner series

The last (but certainly not least) funny book meme for today:

Author Book Meme Example Plated Prisoner Series

The best funny book memes can take a little while to think up, but when you find or make the right one to convey your world and characters, share it!

Make sure to update the caption so people know it's from your book and add a bit more context that will really hook your future readers.

Once again, remember this is just one way to market your book, if you need more ways to increase your book sales, we can help!

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Nonfiction book publishing is dominated by men. A new prize hopes to help change that

FILE - Naomi Klein arrives for a news conference at the Vatican on July 1, 2015. Klein is among 16 contenders announced Thursday for the first Women’s Prize for Nonfiction. The winner will be announced June 13 and will receive 30,000 pounds ($38,000). (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, File)

FILE - Naomi Klein arrives for a news conference at the Vatican on July 1, 2015. Klein is among 16 contenders announced Thursday for the first Women’s Prize for Nonfiction. The winner will be announced June 13 and will receive 30,000 pounds ($38,000). (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, File)

Jill Lawless reporter the Associated Press posed photo at AP Europe in London, Friday, Jan. 22, 2016. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

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LONDON (AP) — Go into many bookstores, and the nonfiction shelves will be dominated by men.

The Women’s Prize for Nonfiction hopes to change that.

“Nonfiction is still perceived to some extent as a man’s game,” said British historian Suzannah Lipscomb, who is chairing the judging panel for the inaugural edition of the U.K.-based prize. The judges announced a list of 16 contenders for the 30,000 pound ($38,000) award on Thursday.

An offshoot of the 28-year-old Women’s Prize for Fiction , whose past winners include Zadie Smith, Tayari Jones and Barbara Kingsolver , the new prize is open to female English-language writers from any country in any nonfiction genre.

This combination of photos shows "The Glass Constellation" by Arthur Sze, left, "The Bathysphere Book" by Brad Fox, center, and "Digging Stars" by Novuyo Rosa Tshuma. (Copper Canyon Press/Astra House/W. W. Norton & Co. via AP)

Lipscomb noted that in 2022, only 26.5% of nonfiction books reviewed in Britain’s newspapers were by women, and male writers dominated established nonfiction writing prizes.

“In all the ways that we recognize expertise and authority — giving it exposure, giving it attention, sales, money earned by the authors — women were not featuring as highly as their male counterparts,” she said. “So I think that we do still need to close what (journalist) Mary Ann Sieghart called the authority gap. And that’s why this prize is needed.”

The company Nielsen Book Research found in 2019 that women bought 59% of all the books sold in the U.K., but men accounted for just over half of adult nonfiction purchases.

Authors from the United States, Australia, Canada, India, Jamaica, the Philippines and the U.K. are on the prize longlist, chosen from 120 books submitted by publishers.

They include author-activist Naomi Klein ’s plunge into online misinformation, “Doppleganger,” and journalist Patricia Evangelista’s “Some People Need Killing,” a searing investigation of the Philippines’ drug war.

There are works by leading academics and books on science and technology, including Cat Bohannon’s “Eve: How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution” and Madhumita Murgia’s “Code-Dependent: Living in the Shadow of AI.”

The list spans genres including travelogue (Alice Albinia’s “The Britannias: An Island Quest”), history (Leah Redmond Chang’s Renaissance study “Young Queens”), biography (Anna Funder’s “Wifedom: Mrs. Orwell’s Invisible Life”) and autobiography (Safiya Sinclair’s “How to Say Babylon: A Jamaican Memoir”).

Asked what unites the disparate roster, Lipscomb quotes a line from Funder’s book: “The project of good writing is to reveal to us the world we thought we knew.”

“There is a trend towards redressing wrongs, telling untold stories, exposing truths, revealing hypocrisies,” she said. “That sense of making good comes out of them.”

Six finalists for the nonfiction award will be announced on March 27, and the winner will be unveiled at a ceremony in London on June 13.

JILL LAWLESS

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Garten, the Food Network star and best-selling cookbook author, has moved her highly anticipated fall autobiography from Celadon to Crown.

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Ina Garten stands in a long dark jacked with a red lanyard and a medal around her neck. She’s smiling at the camera.

By Alexandra Alter and Elizabeth A. Harris

In 2019, the celebrity chef Ina Garten set off a flurry of excitement among her millions of fans: Garten, a Food Network star, best-selling cookbook author and social media sensation, was writing a memoir.

The publisher behind the book, Celadon, celebrated the acquisition of what was sure to be a best seller in a news release. “Ina Garten is beloved by all, a national treasure who has become iconic beyond the food world,” Deb Futter, now the president and publisher of Celadon Books, an imprint of Macmillan, said in the release. “Her memoir will cement her legacy in the cultural landscape.”

When Garten recently updated her Instagram bio to note the book’s October release date, the revelation once again led to online chatter and a cascade of news articles.

One crucial detail was missing: The book was no longer coming from Macmillan. Instead, it will be published by Crown, an imprint of Penguin Random House.

There’s little information about the memoir online, and the change in publisher — which has not been publicly announced — will likely make little difference to readers and fans of Garten, whose cookbooks have more than 14 million copies in print. But for Macmillan, losing a blockbuster fall book — the season when most publishers release their big name authors — to a rival could be a blow.

It’s unusual, though not unheard-of, for a major author to change publishers after a contract is signed. Typically such breakups happen when a writer and publisher have irreconcilable creative differences, or sometimes when an author gets poached with a more enticing advance from a rival company. Authors usually return their advance to sever a contract.

In an interview, Futter said that there hadn’t been any disagreement about the direction of the book, but that Garten had a long history with Crown, which released 13 of her cookbooks through their Clarkson Potter imprint.

“Ina and I worked really well together, and I’m really proud of the work I did on the book,” Futter said. “I want it to get a great reception.”

In a statement, David Drake, the president of Crown Publishing Group, declined to comment on the memoir moving from Celadon to Crown, but said the company was “thrilled to be reunited with her for the publication of her entertaining and revealing memoir,” which he described as her “inspiring and instructive life story.”

Garten did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The market for celebrity memoirs — which have long been reliable best sellers for publishers — has gotten even more heated in recent years, with publishers offering multimillion dollar advances. Some of last year’s top-selling books were tell-alls by big names like Prince Harry and Britney Spears.

Garten, one of the food world’s biggest stars, has built a massive social media following. She has 4.3 million followers on Instagram, where she endears herself to fans with her down-to-earth demeanor, forgiving attitude toward novice home cooks (“store bought is fine!” is one of her catchphrases) and her love of indulgences like giant daytime cocktails.

She also had an unusual path to stardom. She worked for Presidents Ford and Carter as a budget analyst for nuclear policy at the Office of Management and Budget before pivoting to food and opening her store in the Hamptons, Barefoot Contessa. From there, she created a food empire, with best-selling cookbooks that she released at a steady clip, and a popular, long-running show on the Food Network.

So far, she has revealed little about the content of her memoir, but that hasn’t stopped her passionate followers from speculating that it will be dishy: “Spill the tea, Ina!” one of her fans wrote on Instagram.

Julia Moskin contributed reporting.

Alexandra Alter writes about books, publishing and the literary world for The Times. More about Alexandra Alter

  More about Elizabeth A. Harris

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Each week, top authors and critics join the Book Review’s podcast to talk about the latest news in the literary world. Listen here .

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Taipei Book Exhibition 2024: Professional Programming

In Feature Articles by Porter Anderson February 14, 2024

Again this year, Taipei International Book Exhibition both produces professional programming and hosts more from Frankfurt.

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By Porter Anderson, Editor-in-Chief | @Porter_Anderson

See also:  The Netherlands in Taiwan: 400 Years of Shared History Taipei International Book Exhibition 2024: A Market Profile

Programming by TiBE and Frankfurt Book Fair

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Scheduled for February 21, 22, and 23, here are highlights as planned, in the order in which they occur. In the first program, on the morning of February 21, this year’s Guest of Honor Netherlands delegation is featured  at several points.

February 21

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Your Brands, Your IP, and Your Presence in the World Market

Programming: Michelle Tu, Cecilia Chien, TiBE 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Taipei World Trade Center, Hall 1, 2F, Conference Room R3 In English and Chinese

Catch the Reading Wave, Part 1

Programming: Claudia Kaiser, Katherina Rapp, Frankfurter Buchmesse with TiBE 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Taipei World Trade Center, Hall 1, 2F, Conference Room R3 In English and Chinese

February 22

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Catch the Reading Wave, Part 2

Children’s Book Forum: The Creativity Continues

This event is described as an opportunity to meet the creators of bestselling and enduring children’s books in Asia. Japanese author Tatsuya Miyanishi, known for his picturebook series I Am a Tyrannosaurus , and Chih-Yuan Chen, whose work GujiGuji series has been translated into nearly 20 languages, will share their work experiences, and the branding strategies that have brought success to their works.

Programming: Michelle Tu, Cecilia Chien, TiBE 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Taipei World Trade Center, Hall 1, 2F, Conference Room R3 In Japanese and Chinese

February 23

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Master Class: Suzy Lee

Suzy Lee, a winner of the 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Award, has made a lasting impression on the publishing industry and the readers alike with her innovative picture books.

Programming: Michelle Tu, Cecilia Chien, TiBE 9 to 11:45 a.m. Taipei World Trade Center, Hall 1, 2F, Conference Room R3 In Korean and Chinese Moderator: Rex How, chairman of Locus Publishing Company, Taiwan

For those reading from Taiwan, here are some logistical specifics about this year’s Taipei International Book Exhibition.

  • Hours on February 20, 21, and 22: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
  • On February 23 and 24: 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
  • On February 2/25: 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

There are special local promotions offered by the ministry of culture:

  • All ticket purchasers will receive a full ticket discount of 150 New Taiwan Dollars (US$4.78), which can be redeemed for purchases at the book fair.
  • Free admission for those under 22 years old. (Terms and conditions apply.)
  • To encourage young people to engage in the arts and cultural activities, the ministry provides young adults aged 16 to 22 with 1,200 “culture points,” one point being equal to one New Taiwan Dollar. Making purchases at the book fair with the culture points entitles the consumer to a 50-percent discount.
  • Travel allowances are provided to schools in rural and remote areas to assist students in commuting between their hometowns and Taipei, to facilitate access. The schools use these fare allowances to organize book fair trips for the students.

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More from us on Taiwan and its market is  here , and more on the Taipei International Book Exhibition is  here , and more on the Netherlands is  here .  More from us on international trade shows and book fairs is  here . 

About the Author

Porter anderson.

Porter Anderson has been named International Trade Press Journalist of the Year in London Book Fair's International Excellence Awards. He is Editor-in-Chief of Publishing Perspectives. He formerly was Associate Editor for The FutureBook at London's The Bookseller. Anderson was for more than a decade a senior producer and anchor with CNN.com, CNN International, and CNN USA. As an arts critic (Fellow, National Critics Institute), he was with The Village Voice, the Dallas Times Herald, and the Tampa Tribune, now the Tampa Bay Times. He co-founded The Hot Sheet, a newsletter for authors, which now is owned and operated by Jane Friedman.

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Microsoft Publisher will no longer be supported after October 2026

At Microsoft, we are dedicated to providing our customers with the tools they need to achieve what matters, in their work and life. In order to focus on new benefits, we occasionally remove features and products. 

In October 2026, Microsoft Publisher will reach its end of life. After that time, it will no longer be included in Microsoft 365 and existing on-premises suites will no longer be supported. Until then, support for Publisher will continue and users can expect the same experience as today. 

Many common Publisher scenarios including the creation of professionally branded templates, envelope and label printing, and producing customized calendars, business cards, and programs are already available in other Microsoft 365 apps such as Word and PowerPoint. You can find a wide array of customizable templates at Microsoft Create . 

As we look ahead to the retirement of Microsoft Publisher, we are exploring modern ways to achieve common Publisher scenarios across applications like Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Designer.  We will update as we have more to share.   

How will this affect you:

You can continue to use Publisher with its current functionality until October 2026.

Support for the perpetual version of Publisher will end in October 2026, when Office LTSC 2021 reaches end of support. Microsoft 365 customers will not be able to access Publisher from that date forward. 

We will provide updates as the date approaches.  

What you need to do to prepare:

No action is required.  This information is to allow you sufficient time to plan and we will share additional updates as the date approaches.

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Reproductive rights in America

Research at the heart of a federal case against the abortion pill has been retracted.

Selena Simmons-Duffin

Selena Simmons-Duffin

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The Supreme Court will hear the case against the abortion pill mifepristone on March 26. It's part of a two-drug regimen with misoprostol for abortions in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images hide caption

The Supreme Court will hear the case against the abortion pill mifepristone on March 26. It's part of a two-drug regimen with misoprostol for abortions in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy.

A scientific paper that raised concerns about the safety of the abortion pill mifepristone was retracted by its publisher this week. The study was cited three times by a federal judge who ruled against mifepristone last spring. That case, which could limit access to mifepristone throughout the country, will soon be heard in the Supreme Court.

The now retracted study used Medicaid claims data to track E.R. visits by patients in the month after having an abortion. The study found a much higher rate of complications than similar studies that have examined abortion safety.

Sage, the publisher of the journal, retracted the study on Monday along with two other papers, explaining in a statement that "expert reviewers found that the studies demonstrate a lack of scientific rigor that invalidates or renders unreliable the authors' conclusions."

It also noted that most of the authors on the paper worked for the Charlotte Lozier Institute, the research arm of anti-abortion lobbying group Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, and that one of the original peer reviewers had also worked for the Lozier Institute.

The Sage journal, Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology , published all three research articles, which are still available online along with the retraction notice. In an email to NPR, a spokesperson for Sage wrote that the process leading to the retractions "was thorough, fair, and careful."

The lead author on the paper, James Studnicki, fiercely defends his work. "Sage is targeting us because we have been successful for a long period of time," he says on a video posted online this week . He asserts that the retraction has "nothing to do with real science and has everything to do with a political assassination of science."

He says that because the study's findings have been cited in legal cases like the one challenging the abortion pill, "we have become visible – people are quoting us. And for that reason, we are dangerous, and for that reason, they want to cancel our work," Studnicki says in the video.

In an email to NPR, a spokesperson for the Charlotte Lozier Institute said that they "will be taking appropriate legal action."

Role in abortion pill legal case

Anti-abortion rights groups, including a group of doctors, sued the federal Food and Drug Administration in 2022 over the approval of mifepristone, which is part of a two-drug regimen used in most medication abortions. The pill has been on the market for over 20 years, and is used in more than half abortions nationally. The FDA stands by its research that finds adverse events from mifepristone are extremely rare.

Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, the district court judge who initially ruled on the case, pointed to the now-retracted study to support the idea that the anti-abortion rights physicians suing the FDA had the right to do so. "The associations' members have standing because they allege adverse events from chemical abortion drugs can overwhelm the medical system and place 'enormous pressure and stress' on doctors during emergencies and complications," he wrote in his decision, citing Studnicki. He ruled that mifepristone should be pulled from the market nationwide, although his decision never took effect.

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Matthew Kacsmaryk at his confirmation hearing for the federal bench in 2017. AP hide caption

Matthew Kacsmaryk at his confirmation hearing for the federal bench in 2017.

Kacsmaryk is a Trump appointee who was a vocal abortion opponent before becoming a federal judge.

"I don't think he would view the retraction as delegitimizing the research," says Mary Ziegler , a law professor and expert on the legal history of abortion at U.C. Davis. "There's been so much polarization about what the reality of abortion is on the right that I'm not sure how much a retraction would affect his reasoning."

Ziegler also doubts the retractions will alter much in the Supreme Court case, given its conservative majority. "We've already seen, when it comes to abortion, that the court has a propensity to look at the views of experts that support the results it wants," she says. The decision that overturned Roe v. Wade is an example, she says. "The majority [opinion] relied pretty much exclusively on scholars with some ties to pro-life activism and didn't really cite anybody else even or really even acknowledge that there was a majority scholarly position or even that there was meaningful disagreement on the subject."

In the mifepristone case, "there's a lot of supposition and speculation" in the argument about who has standing to sue, she explains. "There's a probability that people will take mifepristone and then there's a probability that they'll get complications and then there's a probability that they'll get treatment in the E.R. and then there's a probability that they'll encounter physicians with certain objections to mifepristone. So the question is, if this [retraction] knocks out one leg of the stool, does that somehow affect how the court is going to view standing? I imagine not."

It's impossible to know who will win the Supreme Court case, but Ziegler thinks that this retraction probably won't sway the outcome either way. "If the court is skeptical of standing because of all these aforementioned weaknesses, this is just more fuel to that fire," she says. "It's not as if this were an airtight case for standing and this was a potentially game-changing development."

Oral arguments for the case, Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA , are scheduled for March 26 at the Supreme Court. A decision is expected by summer. Mifepristone remains available while the legal process continues.

  • Abortion policy
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Book Writing GIFs: How to Write a Novel

This is the first section of a multi-part blog post on the book publishing process as seen through a series of seven GIFs.

At first you think of writing a novel and you’re all, oh well…

But then you have a great idea!

And you go rapidly to work.

But then you hit page 50 and you’re all zombie-like…

And then you hit page 75 and the pain becomes too much!

But you power through! And you finish despite everything.

You have finished your novel!!

And then you discover . . .

For the second part of this book publishing story via GIFs, click here: http://bookmarketingbestsellers.com/book-writing-gifs-finding-a-literary-agent .

Adapted from an old blog post created by Nathan Bransford, author of How to Write a Novel .

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John Kremer is author of 1001 Ways to Market Your Books, the Relationships Matter Marketing program, and many other books and reports on book marketing, Internet marketing, social media, and book publicity. -- John Kremer on Book Marketing .

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Food & Function

Screening and molecular dynamics simulation of ace inhibitory tripeptides derived from milk fermented with lactobacillus delbrueckii qs306.

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* Corresponding authors

a Department of College of Food Science and Engineering, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University, Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, People's Republic of China E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +86-10-4305350 Tel: +15849166155

b Experimental center, Inner Mongolia Traditional Chinese & Mongolian Medical Research Institute, Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, People's Republic of China E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +86-10-4961482 Tel: +18047119596

Peptides in milk fermented with Lactobacillus delbrueckii QS306 before and after ultrahigh pressure treatment were identified using proteomics. Subsequently, 16 stable tripeptides were screened out based on activity score prediction, PeptideCutter analysis, and hydrophobicity calculations. Among them, WRP, WSR, and YRP showed the best angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory activity, and their semi-inhibitory concentrations were 46.707, 300.121, and 89.555 μM, respectively. WRP and WSR were competitive inhibitors, whereas YRP was non-competitive. Gastrointestinal simulation revealed that WRP and YRP had better gastrointestinal stability. The values of RMSD, Δ G bind , Δ G pol , and RSMF obtained from molecular dynamics simulation indicated that the interaction of WRP and ACE was stable. Thus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii QS306-fermented milk can serve as an important source of ACE inhibitory peptides both before and after ultrahigh pressure treatment. The strategy of in silico screening, activity evaluation, and molecular dynamics simulation adopted in this study can be applied to the large-scale screening of novel peptides with high ACE inhibitory activity.

Graphical abstract: Screening and molecular dynamics simulation of ACE inhibitory tripeptides derived from milk fermented with Lactobacillus delbrueckii QS306

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N. Wu, P. Li, Q. Shuang and Wuhanqimuge, Food Funct. , 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D3FO03320A

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  24. Microsoft Publisher will no longer be supported after October 2026

    Until then, support for Publisher will continue and users can expect the same experience as today. Many common Publisher scenarios including the creation of professionally branded templates, envelope and label printing, and producing customized calendars, business cards, and programs are already available in other Microsoft 365 apps such as ...

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    Peptides in milk fermented with Lactobacillus delbrueckii QS306 before and after ultrahigh pressure treatment were identified using proteomics. Subsequently, 16 stable tripeptides were screened out based on activity score prediction, PeptideCutter analysis, and hydrophobicity calculations. Among them, WRP, WSR, and