The Wednesday Web Browser: Notable New Sites/Blogs Edition

I received an e-mail a few days ago alerting me to the news that Tin House Books has redesigned its site and launched a blog. (This might be a good time to revisit my comments about some particularly good reads from Tin House books.)
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Here at Practicing Writing, we take Mark Sarvas’s blog posts very seriously, so when he recently recommended two new online destinations, we listened.
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As you may have heard, the National Book Foundation is celebrating the 60th year of the National Book Awards by offering a “book-a-day blog on the Fiction winners from 1950 to 2008.” They’ve only just started, so it’s definitely not too late to check in.
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Finally, the folks at Writer’s Digest have also just launched a blog, Promptly, promising “a writing prompt-driven community” that will be “shelling out prompts to get your pen moving and keep it that way.” I’ll be following its progress.

How to Find Books to Review

Keeping up with a theme from last week, I thought I’d provide some tips on how to locate books you might pitch to editors for reviews before the books have actually been published. Because if you want to publish reviews in magazines, newspapers, and quite a number of Web sites that look for fresh content, you generally need to be working ahead. (Literary journals, which tend to publish less frequently, aren’t necessarily always looking to time their reviews with a book’s release.)

Here are a few ways to find out about forthcoming books:

1) Publishers Weekly’s “announcement” editions. The Fall 2009 announcements issue (for books for adults) was printed last week. Here’s a guide to upcoming hardcovers featured in the magazine. It’s been a couple of years since I’ve seen the print version of this issue, but I recall lots of very informative publishers’ ads tipping me off to review possibilities, too.

2) Publishers’ catalogs. Since I’m partial to university presses, I’ve been looking at the fall/winter 2009 offerings from those publishers. I count on the Association of American University Press’s member directory to get me started each season. You might also want to investigate independent presses and/or the “big” houses.

3) This is a bit complicated, but bear with me. You can also find not-yet-published books by strategically searching a mega-site like amazon.com. By browsing within a “Books” category (say, “Literature & Fiction,” further narrowed to “Short Stories”), you reach a page that allows you to sort results by publication date. The first book to show up will be the one slated for the latest publication date in the system. By reading the listing, you’ll see who is publishing the book, and therefore you’ll know where to go to request a review copy. (Be careful, because paperback releases of books initially published in hardcover will show up as new books, and in my experience, editors tend not to be so interested in publishing reviews of paperbacks that aren’t initially released in that format.)

These are my three “favorite” strategies for finding books to review. What are yours?

A Contest Win

Not long ago I told you (both here and in the Practicing Writer newsletter) about the Revenge-Lit contest. I am happy to tell you that one of our subscribers, Charlie Conley, has won that contest!

I met Charlie five summers ago, when we were in Arnost Lustig‘s Prague Summer Program fiction workshop. He’s a very talented writer, and I am thrilled for his latest success. Congratulations, Charlie!

The Wednesday Web Browser: Book Review Edition

The literary Internet has been abuzz this week with accounts of a well-known author’s (over)reaction to a review of her new novel in the Boston Globe. But for anyone who’s still interested in pursuing/expanding a professional book-reviewing practice (possible criticism of your criticism notwithstanding), today’s “Web Browser” will point you to a few new resources:

1) There are lots of ways to learn about new books well ahead of publication (which you generally need to do because most review editors aren’t interested in publishing reviews of “old” books). One information source I discovered only recently: Library Journal‘s Prepub Alerts.

2) And once you’ve targeted a book for review/obtained an assignment, you need a review copy. Sometimes, review editors do the requesting. But if you’re the one tasked with that job, be sure to check out the super-useful Book Publicity Blog’s advice.

3) Finally, if you’re seeking paying homes for your work, do check out a resource that was mentioned here on Monday: the just-revised The Practicing Writer’s Directory of Paying Markets for Book Reviewers and its free preview with sample listings!

(I’m happy to discuss more about book reviewing here on the blog. Please use the “comments” section to list questions/issues you’d like the blog to tackle in future posts.)

The Wednesday Web Browser: Ask Allison, Tablet Magazine, and Woolf Conference Recap

Author Allison Winn Scotch’s popular “Ask Allison” blog–replete with posts on freelancing and fiction-writing–has a new home online.
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Speaking of changes online: Fans of Nextbook.org (moi included) are settling into a site redesign–and a new name, Tablet Magazine: A New Read on Jewish Life. One of the recently-launched features I’m most happy about: Josh Lambert‘s weekly column on new Jewish books. (Congrats, Josh. I look forward to all your updates!)
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Congrats also to my friend Anne, who recently ran a most successful conference focusing on Virginia Woolf. Do check out Sasha Graybosch’s account of the event on The Rumpus.