Stolen Law Books from Ohio State University netted $20,000 online, authorities and book publishers report

A law student in his second year of the three-year program at Ohio State University is believed to have stolen books from the school.

Not just any books; they were law books. Campus police say he took more than 200, one at a time, from the university law library and sold them online for more than $20,000.

OSU police searched the student’s apartment last week. The Dispatch is not naming the student because he has not been charged. Police say they will seek an indictment soon.

Officers had been tracking the thefts since the beginning of August, when the university got an e-mail from a Brazilian lawyer. She said that she had bought a volume online from the “Orion Bookstore” site on Amazon.com and found a crossed-out OSU ink stamp on its inside front cover, according to court documents.

A quick check confirmed that the title had vanished from the shelves. An investigation led police to the student, who had 1,351 more library books listed for sale.

“I haven’t seen anything like this before,” said OSU police detective Pete Dragonette, who is leading the investigation.

Book thieves usually go after antique volumes, not common titles, said Scott Seaman, dean of Ohio University’s library. An OSU library official said he couldn’t comment because the investigation is continuing.

In 1996, a retired OSU art-history professor was sentenced to 14 months in federal prison for stealing 14th-century documents and other rare manuscripts from the Vatican Library over 30 years. Kenyon College’s library was a target about 10 years ago, when a night librarian and his girlfriend stole more than 200 books and papers dating back centuries and sold them on eBay for thousands of dollars.

New technology, with improved alarms and digital ID tags, helps security, but thefts can be difficult to prevent in collections of several million volumes typical at universities, Seaman said.

It’s more difficult to prove the source of a common book, which can be bought at many regular bookstores and book publisher stores. At Ohio State, police used a sting operation, marked merchandise and a hidden camera.

They found that one of the books listed for sale on the website was still in the law library. They marked an inside page with invisible ink that shows up under ultraviolet light and hid a camera in a nearby wall clock, according to court documents.

Then, one of the investigators had a relative out of state buy the book. The video shows a man they believe to be the student taking the marked book from the shelf. It later turned up at the buyer’s address – complete with the mark.

However, the toughest part is determining that a book is gone, librarians said. As in the OSU case, Kenyon didn’t notice the theft until a collector called to report that a particularly rare volume was for sale.

“Conscientious buyers are the best friends we have when catching stolen books,” said Joseph Murphy, director of information services at Kenyon’s library.

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Massive, worldwide success often remains a bit enigmatic, but this book publishers breakthrough seemed especially unlikely. The first novel begins with the dull thud of a family tree full of foreign names: The book starts slowly — digging into arcane corporate finances — and the ensuing novels get longer, sometimes nearly skidding to a halt while recounting the structure of a government bureau. The books’ politics are radical-feminist and anti-capitalist left, they’re set in a country most Americans have never visited and the prose is translated, at times inelegantly. They’re certainly, in a days of declining attention spans, not taut.

But Stieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy has become the book publishing companies phenomenon of the young century, with international sales exceeding 45 million. Three films have been produced in Larsson’s native Sweden — the trilogy’s conclusion, “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest,” will be released here Friday — and David Fincher has begun shooting a big-budget Hollywood version starring Daniel Craig.

Larsson’s books have managed, in the 25 months since the first novel’s U.S. publication, to go through almost 200 printings here. “That’s crazy!” says Paul Bogaards, spokesman for Alfred A. Knopf. “The category leaders in thrillers or mysteries take years to get there, if they get there at all.”

Financially, Larsson’s success has few parallels in book publishing. Other authors have sold in the millions, but none has sold as many as quickly as Larsson has. His book publisher estimates that by year’s end, they will have sold 15 million copies in 2010, or roughly the equivalent of recent works by John Grisham, Dan Brown, Stephenie Meyer and Stephen King combined.

The books, Bogaards says, “have had a significant impact on our bottom line. The series has exceeded all projections; indeed, it blew all the models to bits.”

And Larsson has managed to do it without a single bookstore signing, author appearance or Charlie Rose interview: He died at 50, in 2004, not long after turning in the manuscripts for the three books. So what’s going on here?

“The truth is, I’m not sure, either,” Knopf Doubleday chairman Sonny Mehta says when asked about the enigma of the novels’ broad popularity. “It raises my spirits to see that people can go crazy about a set of books.”

The series, which was a sensation in Scandinavia — selling several million copies in Sweden alone — years before translation into English, has dominated bestseller lists across much of Europe. With the addition of Mongolia and Georgia, Larsson’s books are now in print in 46 countries, and have begun to make inroads in Taiwan (350,000 copies sold so far), Japan, China and South Korea.

The books had already become huge hits in Sweden when Mehta was handed a rough translation of the first novel at the 2007 Frankfurt Book Fair.

“It was the complexity of the thing,” Mehta, a longtime reader of crime fiction, says of what grabbed him. “Sort of an ambition.”

Complex, ambitious novels don’t always strike a chord with American readers, especially those from Europe. The trilogy’s central installment, “The Girl Who Played With Fire,” became the first translated work to debut at the top of the New York Times bestseller list in more than 25 years.

Knopf has long published Larsson’s fellow Swede Henning Mankell — whose grim police procedurals have an international following — and Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö, the husband-and-wife team that created the modern Scandinavian mystery in the ’60s.

But none of these books — nor the literary noir of Norway’s Karin Fossum, nor Iceland’s Arnaldur Indridason — has a Lisbeth Salander, the “girl” of the book’s English titles.

Salander — the survivor of an abusive childhood who resembles a Goth Pippi Longstocking — is a withdrawn, sometimes violent, sexually kinky computer hacker with a dark charisma. In the novels she collaborates, often warily, with Mikael Blomkvist, a left-wing investigative journalist who in many ways resembles Larsson. (Though a rather ordinary looking middle-aged man, Blomkvist’ sense of mission is catnip to women.)

Sara Nelson, books director of O: The Oprah Magazine, says the heroine’s ambiguity is part of her appeal. “She’s not terribly well defined,” Nelson says, pointing to her complicated sexuality. “Is she lovable? Yes, but she’s not necessarily likable. Lisbeth is a hybrid, but the books are hybrids too — a chronicle of the media business, a comment on society…. It’s not a standard police procedural.”

Otto Penzler, editor, with James Ellroy of “The Best American Noir of the Century,” thinks the books benefit from being less gloomy than most Nordic crime fiction.

But most of their appeal, he says, comes down to Salander being “the most interesting character I’ve read since Hannibal Lecter. Everybody reading is so deeply and seriously captivated — you’re relentlessly fascinated to know what she’ll do next, say next, what stroke of genius will bring her to a solution. To me that series doesn’t exist without her.”

The novels may have entered the market with the perfect set of signifiers: The story of a middle-aged man and young, tech-savvy woman, published in hardback by one of the classiest houses, a populist genre from a country with art-house associations — in other words, novels that are hard to pigeonhole.

It didn’t hurt, Nelson says, that there was a darkly romantic back story about a writer who had died before his books’ publication. The existence of three — and only three — novels was appealing, she says: Readers were reassured that this would not become one of those mystery series that stretches endlessly.

The Swedish films probably didn’t hurt international book publisher sales, and the economic roller coaster of the last few years — politically, Larsson’s anti-corporate, anti-state rage suits anger on the left and the right — may have given the novels a broader resonance.

Still, the bigger impact of these books — besides their enormous sales — is unclear. Nelson fears novelists unleashing a rash of Salander clones; Penzler expects that newer Scandinavian writers (his money is currently on Camilla Läckberg) will benefit.

In November, Knopf will release a boxed set of the three novels as well as a short book of essays on the author that includes a selection of his previously unpublished e-mail correspondence (despite rumors that Larsson left a fragment of another novel or two, Mehta is skeptical that this work will ever appear).

Mehta is still surprised by the whole thing. But he’s pleased to see a rise in the sales of Mankell’s backlist as more Americans wake up to Nordic noir.

“Readers have found that they can feel at home in a Scandinavian landscape,” Mehta says. “If they enjoy Larsson, there’s plenty more for them to discover.”

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Random House Book Publishers has acquired the multi-language rights to publish a memoir by Salman Rushdie in each of its territories across the world.

Markus Dohle, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Random House Book Publishers worldwide, announced the acquisition of hardcover, paperback, audio, and e-book rights for English- German- and Spanish-language editions of the work-in-progress from Andrew Wylie, President of The Wylie Agency, the author’s agent.

Rushdie expects to complete his manuscript by the end of next year for publication by Random House in 2012.

Dohle brought together the book publishing and editorial leadership from each of the company’s international divisions for this acquisition, which is unprecedented in scope for the world’s largest trade book publisher.

Random House is planning a simultaneous publication of the memoir in each of its territories in physical, digital and audio formats.

‘This extraordinary work merits an extraordinary publishing effort on our part,’ said Mr Dohle.

‘It offers Random House, on behalf of one of the world’s great writers, the opportunity to harness our tremendous international creative and logistic capabilities, which will support the focused, customized publishing campaigns each of our publishers will execute locally.’

Random House will publish the memoir in India, the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, in English; Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, in German; and Spain, Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, Chile, Venezuela, and Uruguay, in Spanish.

The Random House and Knopf Canada imprints are the respective US and Canadian publishers.

In the UK, the book will be published by the Random House UK imprint Jonathan Cape; in Germany, by the Verlagsgruppe Random House imprint C Bertelsmann; and in Spain and Latin America, by Random House Mondadori’s Literatura Mondadori.

Salman Rushdie is one of the world’s most revered and honoured writers.

His memoir will be an evocation of his public and personal life: his outsider’s experience at British public school and Cambridge; his evolution as a writer; his relationships as a husband and a father; and his years in hiding following the fatwah issued by the Ayatollah Khomeini after the publication of The Satanic Verses in 1988.

Rushdie currently is working on the film version of his classic novel Midnight’s Children, which won the Booker Prize in 1981.

Chiki Sarkar, editor-in-chief of Random House India, said, ‘I and the entire team at Random House India are delighted to be self-publishing Salman Rushdie’s memoirs and welcoming him to Random House India. We believe it will be a truly important book of a pivotal moment, and one of the great books on the act of writing.’

Rushdie observed, ‘I’m absolutely delighted that Random House, my longtime book publishers, has agreed to publish my memoir in the English-language world, as well as in Spanish, and for the first time in German. I couldn’t wish for a better home for my work. I have waited a long time to write this memoir, until I felt I was ready to do it. I’m ready now.’

Rushdie’s latest work of fiction, Luka and the Fire of Life, has just been released in India on October 15th. Dohle added, ‘It is a privilege for Random House to publish a book of this remarkable memoir by Salman Rushdie, whose courage and commitment to freedom of expression is matched only by his unsurpassed importance as a writer.’

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Book publisher Bloomsbury has hailed “resilient” second half trading as it toasts the success of this week’s Man Booker Prize for Howard Jacobson’s novel The Finkler Question.

Bloomsbury said the win was helping the book gain increasing worldwide fame, while it is also seeing popularity soar for Eat, Love and Pray by Elizabeth Gilbert following the release of the film version featuring Julia Roberts.

The group outlined a strong second half line-up that it expects will help offset a 48% fall in profits during the first six months.

Next month’s relaunch of the Harry Potter series designed to tie in with the keenly-awaited movie of the final book is expected to drive sales, as is an “exceptionally” strong programme for its professional titles amid a raft of Government changes to tax rules.

Bloomsbury said: “Overall, business is performing well for the group.”

However, it stressed the full-year result was “still dependent on the level of consumer and business-to-business demand between now and the end of the financial year”.

The group reported a sharp fall in interim pre-tax profits to £949,000 against £1.8 million a year earlier after a tough second quarter, dominated by uncertainties surrounding the general election and emergency Budget.

Analysts at Numis Securities believe the final six months will counteract the drop, forecasting a 4% rise in annual pre-tax profits to £8 million.

They also put faith in Bloomsbury’s expansion plans, with the book publishers looking to take advantage of the rise in popularity of e-books, as well as further acquisitions in strategically important areas.

Numis analysts said: “We believe that the group is both well positioned to benefit from structural change in digital publishing and, in the short-term, an uplift in sales from film releases of Bloomsbury titles.”

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As the rescued Chilean miners start their long recovery, television producers and book publishers are busy hatching plans to turn the ordeal into entertainment. But the 70-day saga poses many challenges, not least the fact that it has already been covered extensively in the media.

Discovery Channel jumped out of the gate on Thursday with a documentary about the rescue set to air in two weeks. Brooke Runnette, the show’s producer, said she feels the pressure of the wall-to-wall coverage the miners have received. But the Discovery Communications Inc. channel will offer a different take from news channels to publish a book, she said, braiding the science of the rescue with the human drama of men trying to survive a half-mile underground: “We’re going to be focusing on the rescue and keeping the guys alive.”

Discovery is assembling its documentary from months of footage shot by a production company working for the channel’s Latin American sister operation. The footage includes scenes with engineers plotting the rescue and with miners’ families living through the ordeal.

“It’s a great problem-solving story,” Ms. Runnette said. “There are the highest stakes possible.”

Viacom Inc.’s Spike TV also announced a new coal-mining show. Dubbed “Coal,” and set to debut in April, the 10-episode series will follow miners in West Virginia. Its producer, Thom Beers, specializes in shows about people with dangerous jobs, including Discovery Channel’s “Deadliest Catch” and History Channel’s “Ice Road Truckers.”

Spike said “Coal” was in the works well before the miners in Chile became trapped. But it “held back” its announcement of the new series until their fate was known, said Debra Fazio, a spokeswoman for the channel.

The book publisher event has already been widely watched on TV. On Wednesday night, ABC News’s 10 p.m. Eastern time special, “Miracle at the Mine,” averaged 6.2 million viewers, the Walt Disney Co. network said. In the 8 p.m. Eastern hour, as the last miner was hoisted to safety, cable-news channels CNN, MSNBC and Fox News averaged a combined 10.8 million viewers, according to Nielsen—an unusually high figure.

Several TV outlets remain on the ground in Chile, looking to land interviews with the miners, according to an executive at a U.S.-based TV-news operation. “They are big gets right now. But who knows how long they’ll stay big gets,” the executive said.

There were some reports in the Chilean press that the miners had made a pact to sell their story and divide the proceeds. It wasn’t clear if that was true, as some of the miners were already offering tantalizing self-publishing details of their underground ordeal to the hordes of reporters who have descended to the area.

Book publishers are mulling their options. The ultimate coup, publishers said, is landing one of the miners. Failing that, publishers are pursuing journalists and experts for their accounts.

A book about the miners has already been sold in the U.K. Bill Scott-Kerr, publisher of Trans world, a London-based book publisher unit of Bertelsmann AG’s Random House publishing arm, said on Monday he bought a book written by journalist Jonathan Franklin—a freelancer who has been covering the Chilean story for the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper and the Washington Post—after reading a proposal that included a sample chapter. Random House has acquired rights for the U.K., Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, Mr. Scott-Kerr said, declining to say how much it paid.

“It has this extraordinary backdrop of this frontier existence—it’s man against the elements—and then at the heart it’s total human drama,” Mr. Scott-Kerr said Thursday. Calls to the agent representing the book in the U.S. weren’t returned.

David Steinberger, chief executive of Perseus Books Group LLC, said via e-mail that several imprints are reviewing a proposal for Mr. Franklin’s work and are “actively considering whether to put in bids.”

Martha Levin, publisher of the Free Press, an imprint owned by CBS Corp.’s Simon & Schuster book publishing companies, said a book would have to come to market quickly. “We see how often the public’s interest turns elsewhere,” she said.

Jamie Raab, publisher of Grand Central Publishing, a unit of Lagardère SCA’s Hachette Book Group, said that she might be interested in a book along the lines of Jon Krakauer’s account of a disastrous trek on Mt. Everest, “Into Thin Air.” What would interest her, she said, was a work “of substance” that was an “adventure tale” and also inspired.

Christy Fletcher, owner of literary agency Fletcher & Co., suggested that a digital title might do best for such a news-driven topic. “Why wait for print?” she asked.

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The long ordeal of the 33 trapped Chilean miners is finally at an end – and the buzz about book deals and film rights to the men’s dramatic story has already begun.

The miners themselves are reported to have made a pact to collaborate on their own book, but in the UK the first book was signed up on Monday, before the rescue had even begun. Freelance journalist Jonathan Franklin, who has covered the dramatic story for the Guardian from day one, is to pen an account of the saga, provisionally titled 33 Men, for book publisher Transworld.

Franklin, who is an American but has lived in the Chile’s capital Santiago for 15 years, spoke about the book on his mobile phone from Chile, after 48 sleepless hours covering the emotional scenes as the miners emerged.

“This is one of the great rescue stories of all time,” he said, admitting he himself had wept as the first miners were released on Tuesday night. “It’s the reason we all want to be reporters: a remarkable story of the world coming together for a good reason. It taps into human altruism, the desire to work together, perseverance, faith that good things happen, never giving up.” The early chapters of the book, he said, were already written.

As a journalist, Franklin had had “a backstage pass to the whole thing. I was allowed to tape record the psychologist talking to the [trapped] men, I spent last night in the hospital talking to the [newly freed] miners.” He intends his book to reveal the characters of the miners themselves (“You could probably do a book on every one of them”) and reflect their black humour: one of the men played dead, for a joke, during the first 17 days spent in the collapsed mine without food, while another attempted phone sex with the nurse who was attending to him 700m above.

Transworld book publishers, a division of Random House, which bought 33 Men at last week’s Frankfurt Book Fair, said: “As far as I’m aware, Franklin is the only print and publishers journalist in the inner circle at the mine, party to a lot of the strategy and to the stories of the relatives at the top, the wives and girlfriends.” He added: “What I think is really interesting, apart from the drama of the story itself, is the miners’ lives in this isolated outpost in Chile, which is a bit like the Wild West. People seem to live by their own rules, and it’s a very rugged existence – tough people living in a tough place.”

The publication date for the book is still to be confirmed. “It’ll be sooner rather than later, but I don’t want Franklin to compromise the depth and breadth of the story by making it a rush job,” Scott-Kerr said.

Literary agent Annabel Merullo at Peters, Fraser and Dunlop, who is handling the book, said it had also sold to France and Germany, with self publishing film interest from the US.

“It’s happened so quickly,” she said. “When the story broke, we talked about it at the agency and said, ‘Is there a book in it?’ We decided there only was if we could get someone really good to write it. Jonathan’s coverage was so much better than everyone else’s. He has incredible access at the mines and he’s covered the story from day one.”

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The nights are drawing in and it’s book prize season – Nobel, Man Booker et al. This is the moment in the year, as the Flat draws to a close and as the National Hunt book publishing season gets into full swing, when literature becomes a horse race. That just might be the good news. John Steinbeck once observed that “the profession of book publishing makes horse racing seem like a solid, stable business”.

Many people who care about books are not so blithe. They worry that the turf accountants of our culture (tipsters who know the price of everything but the value of nothing) are reducing art to a crude cash value to publish a book. That’s one consequence of the credit crunch.

Every bookie is quoting literary odds now: Ladbrokes, William Hill, Paddy Power and Unibet are all at it. I can see some sense in giving the betting on Peter Carey or Howard Jacobson – they’re on a book publishers shortlist – but the whole point of the Nobel prize is that its shortlist is confidential. It beats me how anyone could come up with starting prices for it. According to its website, the Swedish academy makes its choice based on submissions from “professors of literature, book publishers and language, former Nobel laureates” and members of similar bodies, the Académie Française for example. The Swedes usually get about 350 nominations, all secret. How on earth can any bookie make sense of that?

Yet, such is the power of the market, and the importance of the prize, in a prize-conscious culture, that before the announcement of the great Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa as the long-overdue winner for 2010, both Ladbrokes and Unibet were quoting odds of Les Murray (8/1), AS Byatt (18/1), Vaclav Havel (35/1) and even Bob Dylan (150/1).

Mad as this seems, it is no more improbable than the founding of an important literary prize by a would-be poet who happened to invent dynamite. Alfred Nobel published a verse tragedy, Nemesis, inspired by Shelley’s The Cenci, just before his death in 1896.

Man Booker also has its roots in trade. Britain’s premier book prize was initially sponsored by a food conglomerate and is now backed by a hedge fund, the Man Group.

At this year’s Booker banquet in the Guildhall, there will be an awkward moment when a middle-aged bloke in a suit rehearses the trading achievements of his company to the assembled literati, makes a segue to his commitment to the arts and sits down to polite, slightly mystified, applause.

At such moments, it is hard not to recall Dr Johnson’s definition of the patron: “Commonly a wretch who supports with insolence and is paid with flattery.”

Under the coalition, it’s back to the 18th century. According to some, this is the worst crisis in books since Paternoster Row was destroyed in the Blitz in 1940. To paraphrase Macaulay, contemporary writers sometimes know luxury, and often face penury, but they never know comfort. Writers and self-publishing artists in austerity Britain will be grateful to sponsors such as Man and Costa.

The future may be Orange, but it’s hardly bright. The Arts Council, the British Council and the BBC, to name three traditional patrons, all face outright government hostility or death by a thousand cuts.

In this climate, writers may have to take their lead from George Gissing’s indigent hero Jasper Milvain who, more than 100 years ago, declared in New Grub Street: “I am the literary man (of 1882)… I am learning my business. Literature nowadays is a trade for publishers. Putting aside men of genius, who may succeed by mere cosmic force, your successful man of letters is your successful tradesman. He thinks first and foremost of the markets; when one kind of good begins to go off slackly, he is ready with something new and appetising.”

Paradoxically, the good news in this harsh new world is that the IT revolution, which so exercises the minds of book publishers, may turn out to be the saving of the individual writer. Never before has it been so easy or cheap to get your work in front of an international audience. And that, of course, is another kind of literary lottery, as fickle as those glittering book publishing prizes. No one in their right mind would willingly choose a life in the world of books.

Some novelists get all the lucky breaks

The Canadian book publisher McClelland and Stewart has announced that it will publish Indian writer David Davidar’s new novel, Ithaca, which it describes as “his most ambitious novel to date”. His editor says: “We’re thrilled to be publishing Ithaca.” Astounded might be a better word. Until last summer Davidar was president of McClelland and Stewart, but was forced out by allegations of sexual harassment. All the more piquant, then, that Ithaca should be described as “honest, witty and edgy, the book’s message is ultimately hopeful, about the power of great storytelling and how it has endured and, despite the cataclysmic changes of the last several years, will continue to endure”. It’s hard to imagine a more passionate or redemptive tale than Davidar’s, a publicist’s dream.

A diary Taylor-made for art lovers

In a hostile, dumbed-down marketplace, who would dare to publish a book that celebrated Magritte, Matisse, Braque, Klee, Fontana and Frida Kahlo and then, even more outre, to publish this scrapbook as a diary? The answer is the pioneering Redstone Press, which has just launched its 23rd iconic diary, for 2011, entitled “The Artist’s World”. One of the book trade’s best-kept secrets, this new almanac also contains a rare photograph, from 1947, of Elizabeth Taylor painting a landscape, plus an extraordinary photograph of the young Rodin. Exquisitely designed and printed, and highly collectible, this is the kind of diary you’d expect to find on the desk of WG Sebald, were he still alive.

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An Australian book publishers claim that he debuted the world’s biggest book at a German book fair are inaccurate, according to self-publishing information from Guinness World Records sent to TODAYshow.com Thursday.

The largest book in the world measures 13.71 by 12.36 feet and weighs more than 1.2 tons, spokesperson Sara Wilcox said. The only copy was completed in Hungary on March 21, 2010.

Gordon Cheers, the managing director of the Australian book publishing company, Millennium House, told the AFP that his 6-by-9 foot atlas, titled “Earth, Platinum edition,” was the world’s largest. “This is the first time a book this size has ever been seen,” he said, adding that his company would only print 31 copies, each going for about $100,000.

“It’s all about creating a legacy,” he told the AFP. “Today, everything is digital and it’s gone in a second. This will still be around in 500 years.”

In a statement to TODAYshow.com, Suzanne Gross, an official from Millennium House, indirectly questioned Guinness’ definition of “book.”

“When is a book a book? If there is only one copy produced is it a ‘book’? … Anyone can grab two huge planks of wood, hinge them together and paste in some paper and call it a book,” Gross wrote, noting that there will be 31 copies of “EARTH, platinum edition.”

“Platinum is not big because it can be. Platinum is big because it needs to be. That’s a book,” she said.

An image of the book that currently holds the title is visible on the right.

“EARTH” may still nab a Guinness World Record. It likely could receive the award for world’s largest atlas.

The current record-holder belongs to the Klencke atlas, which was made in 1660 as a royal gift. Wilcox said it measures just smaller than 6-by-3.5 feet, belongs to the British Library and was measured on Feb. 2, 2010.

Guinness World Records hasn’t yet received a request to verify the book publisher’s claim, Wilcox said Wednesday.

Further Info:

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Is it a book? Is it a film? Is it a game? Or all three? Publishers and authors at the world’s biggest book fair are battling to entice a new generation of readers with the latest multimedia products.

That the electronic book reader has turned the book publishers industry on its head is well known. Younger readers are no longer content to thumb through a printed book. The 21st century iPad generation wants interaction and variety.

But talk of the “ebook” that has dominated the Frankfurt Book Fair in recent years has given way in 2010 to excited chatter about the so-called “enhanced ebook”, a mixture of the traditional book, audio, video and game.

“In five years, books will be more often crossmedia products: with embedded sound, animated pictures, Internet links and … possible a gaming component, like alternative reality games,” said Juliane Schulze, from peacefulfish, a consultancy.

Some of the book world’s most celebrated names are already embracing the new format.

Ken Follett, one of the industry’s hottest authors, is expected to present a “multimedia-enhanced” version of his bestseller “The Pillars of the Earth” at this year’s fair.

At the touch of a screen, iPad readers of the “book” can see excerpts from the TV series based on the book, watch interviews with the author and actors and track interactions between characters on an “interactive character tree.”

This year’s fair has a special section devoted to digital, which Gottfried Honnefelder, president of the German book publishers and booksellers association, said could soon account for 10 percent of the market, from one percent today.

Qbend, a firm that helps publishers develop their digital offering, expects 42 percent annual growth for the ebook market between 2010 and 2012.

The enhanced ebook is mainly sold in the United States and Britain at the moment, but it is about to go global, said Andrew Weinstein, vice-president of US book wholesaler and distributor Ingram.

“While ebooks have not finished growing in the United States, they are set to explode in the global marketplace,” he said.

Cornelia Funke, one of Germany’s best-known authors of books for children, put it this way: “It all starts with a book. The love of reading starts, probably around the age of three, when you first pick up that favourite book.”

“In ten years time, that book may well be a screen.”

But the counter-revolution is already starting, with advocates of the traditional format saying that people like to have bound books as a keepsake, in the same way they print out and frame favourite photos from their cameras.

“Take the digital watch,” said Gordon Cheers, an Australian book publishers who presented what he said was the world’s biggest book at the fair — as far from a mobile multimedia offering as could be.

“In the 1980s, everyone said the digital watch would be the end of the traditional watchmaker. Sure, some did go out of business but then analogue watches came back and everyone these days wears one.

“The same will happen with the book. Leave it five or 10 years and books are bound to come back into fashion.”

Funke said: “I speak to loads of 16-year-olds who say they only read things on their electronic readers.”

“But then they tell me that, for the ones they really love, they go out and buy the book.”

Rumours of the death of the book have perhaps been greatly exaggerated.

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Michael Serbinis likes to think of himself as a David, but on this recent evening he looks more like a Steve — Steve Jobs to be exact.

It’s a rainy night in Toronto and about two dozen members of the city’s book publishing companies and media circles have gathered in a basement theatre at a swanky Yorkville hotel to hear from Mr. Serbinis, chief executive of Canada’s e-publishing startup, Kobo Inc.

As he stands at the front of the darkened theatre clutching a can of Red Bull, Mr. Serbinis is trying to do his best impression of the Apple Inc. CEO. There’s even an Applelike air of secrecy to the event, with everyone in attendance being asked to sign a non-disclosure agreement on the way down in the elevator.

In typical Steve Jobs fashion, at a methodical pace he walks the audience through a series of eye-popping stats to illustrate Kobo’s growth over its nine-month history before taking a few subtle digs at his competitors.

Finally, he tops it all off with the unveiling of a new product: Kobo’s new wireless eReader, the latest addition to the company’s arsenal in the battle for control over the exploding market for electronic books.

“I know what you’re thinking, ‘Now I have to sign an NDA to go to a Kobo event? What is this, Fight Club?’ ” he says with a laugh. “Well, when you’re David and you’re fighting Goliath, every day feels like Fight Club.”

The Goliaths of which Mr. Serbinis speaks are indeed the titans of the technology industry and present a formidable challenge for the young company. Kobo’s eReaders and digital bookstore compete with Amazon.comInc.’s Kindle reader, digital offerings from Google Inc. and, of course, the iPad and iBookstore operated by Apple. But so far, Kobo is holding its own. Since launching in December, Kobo has attracted more than a million users to its service. Each week, its applications, which run across multiple smartphones, on book publisher websites and various e-readers and tablets, are accessed from more than 200 countries. There are now more than 2.2 million digital books available in the Kobo store. Its eReaders are sold in bookstores across North America and around the world.

When the company, which is privately run and does not publish financial details, launched it had just 20 employees; by the end of this year, Kobo’s head count will be close to 200, said Mr. Serbinis, who allows that net revenue is growing at between 300% and 500% per quarter.

What separates Kobo, whose parent company, Indigo Books & Music Inc., owns 60% of the Toronto startup, from its competitors is its singular focus on digital books and digital books alone, Mr. Serbinis said in an interview.

Unlike Amazon, the company doesn’t sell physical products — except its eReaders — and its devices aren’t multi-purpose machines such as Apple iPads.

“We’re the only pure play that’s in this game and from the very beginning we’ve focused on being global, being open and being the best partner for all the device manufacturers for booksellers,” he said. “Those three things combined with the fact that the market has just exploded, that’s a recipe for massive growth and scale.”

Digital books aren’t a new business, but the increasingly popularity of smartphones, tablet devices and Web-enabled e-readers such as Sony Corp.’s Reader — all of which support Kobo’s e-book store– is beginning to prompt book lovers to think about going paperless.

Sales of electronic books are rising at such a breakneck pace that they’re beginning to take a significant bite out of traditional and self publishing revenues. Mr. Serbinis said that when the company launched, it anticipated that digital books sales would account for about 3% to 5% of publishing industry revenues by 2014. Today, he expects that number could reach as high as 50% in the United States by 2014, based on data from the International Digital Publishing Forum.

In the United States, sales of digital books grew from about US$50-million to $170-million between 2008 and 2009, according to Dmitriy Molchanov, an analyst who tracks the market for research firm The Yankee Group.

However, in the first quarter of 2010 alone, sales of digital books topped US$90-million. It’s difficult to gauge the overall size of the market for digital books in the United States since Amazon still accounts for between 41% and 43% of sales and hasn’t released any revenue figures for its digital business, Mr. Molchanov said.

“It’s a substantial market, but to put this in perspective, revenue from e-reader device sales in 2013 will be roughly US$2.5-billion,” he said.

As the market for e-readers bifurcates between low-cost reading-only devices and high-end devices capable of supporting video and other functions, Kobo’s challenge will be to decide which path to follow and then how to scale quickly enough to keep up with competitors such as Amazon and Sony, Mr. Molchanov said.

Last week, Kobo made an appearance at Research In Motion Ltd.’s annual developer conference at which the BlackBerry maker unveiled its tablet, the PlayBook.

Kobo announced its e-book store will come pre-loaded onto every PlayBook RIM sells and that the new book publishers application will integrate with RIM’s BlackBerry Messenger service in an attempt to make e-books more social.

Until now, publishers and digital book retailers have been working on the foundations of the e-book market: digitizing content, making the books easy to buy and figuring out business models.

Now that the market is beginning to establish itself, Mr. Serbinis said, it’s time for companies like Kobo to take the next step. As part of the BBM integration, the new PlayBook Kobo app will allow users to start book clubs over the service, shop for books with friends and share favourite passages.

“Bringing the culture of the book and the culture of reading to the digital realm is really open territory at this point,” he said.

“If you think about it, books are topics of conversation at the dinner table or when you’re out with friends, they’re used to celebrate milestones, they’re given as gifts … none of that happens yet in digital.

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