Read, Eat, Drink — Weekend Roundup

A weekly round-up of books, news, thoughts, recipes, and miscellany for the weekend. 

Read: The Great Contraction.

Tuesday brought the announcement that Hachette Book Group (one of the Big Five publishers) will be buying the Perseus Books Group imprints, while the distribution arm of Perseus will be sold to Ingram. This follows news that broke in May that HarperCollins (another Big Five publisher) will buy Harlequin (most known for its series romance, but which also publishes fiction and nonfiction for women) from Torstar, the Canadian media company.

I think Dennis Johnson, co-founder of indie press Melville House, sums up the big picture best here:

“…It’s just another consolidation story, one that’s been predicted all along: More of American publishing is going to consolidate, not necessarily to fight Amazon but simply to survive in a marketplace that dictates consolidation, and has since before Amazon existed. American publishing, after all, has been consolidating slowly since the 1960s. It’s only accelerated recently, and now the other shoe will drop soon enough — HarperCollins merging with Simon and Schuster is the one most are predicting.”

For agents, consolidation means less places to sell books, since imprints within one house often won’t bid against each other in an auction. For writers, this means less competition for your book, which is never a good thing. This is especially important in the nonfiction realm, since Perseus is primarily made up of fantastic nonfiction imprints like Running Press, Basic Books, Da Capo, and others that will now come under the Hachette Book Group umbrella.

Of all the coverage since the news broke on Tuesday, this article is my favorite. It manages to capture that particular feeling and mood that washes over publishing people when news like this breaks. It’s one of quiet concern, contemplation, and increasingly shaky optimism.

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Eat: Elk.

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Anyone who knows me knows that I get a great kick out of trying wild game. It was only a few years ago that I’d never even had a taste of venison, but now I’ve grown to love it in all its forms—steaks, pastrami, jerky, whole roasted loins, sausage.

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Read, Eat, Drink — Weekend Roundup

A weekly round-up of books, news, thoughts, recipes, and miscellany for the weekend. 

NY-times-2
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The New York Times Innovation Report: I’ve been blathering to anyone who will listen about the Innovation Report for a few weeks, and I’m not quite done being evangelical about it. Neither is the Nieman Journalism Lab (a project of the Nieman Foundation at Harvard), which called it “one of the key documents of this media age.” The Innovation Report was intended only for internal use at the Times, but when it was leaked it offered the entire journalism and media world a candid and surprising look at how one of our greatest media organizations is struggling in the digital age.

There are lots of incredibly valuable takeaways in the report, (here are six of the top takeaways, according to Mashable), but I think the broader picture that the report paints of the Times is just as valuable. The New York Times is struggling to stay relevant, and it’s falling woefully behind in the areas of digital innovation that have become pillars of success in this Internet age. Even in the past five years, the media game has changed drastically, and at an alarmingly fast rate–the type of rate that inevitably favors start-ups and leaner, digital-first organizations. That’s why media organizations that have only been around for a few years–sites like Buzzfeed and the Huffington Post–have already surpassed the Times in traffic and are successfully poaching talent from their newsroom.

The Times still operates with the expectation that readers will come to them, rather than realizing that they have to find readers where they already are. The report cites the classic Kodak case study of how that company swiftly lost market dominance when new technology changed the photography industry. The takeaway from that study is that Kodak thought they were in the business of film, but really they were in the business of memories. The Times still operates like they are in the business of newspapers, when really they are in the business of information. People adapt swiftly to new methods for reaching a goal (whether the goal is preserving memories or staying informed), and so companies should focus on the goal itself, and not try to hem customers into existing pathways simply because they are already established. For the Times that means adapting to a world where people increasingly want to read their news online, and for traditional book publishers, editors, and agents that means remembering that we are first and foremost in the business of stories and information, and only secondarily in the business of books, ebooks, apps, or any format-specific product.

This is exciting, important stuff, especially for anyone who works in traditional media like I do! If you read anything about the future of media this year, read this. The full leaked report can be found here.

Soccer, Sausages, and Beer: In case talking about the future of media has you all wound up (…just me?), go ahead and wind down with a World Cup game, a sausage, and a beer. What’s better to start the weekend than some futbol, cased meat, and brewed happiness? Bon Appétit did a great round up of The World Cup of Sausage, where you can find sausages from every country participating in the World Cup. And then pick out a beer to match from this list, which lists the most popular beer for each World Cup country.

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And if you’re a Brazil fan like me and want to start the weekend off with a big smile, watch this New York Times video collage of Brazilians reacting to their first World Cup goal. It’s kind of hilarious and adorable and infectiously exciting!

Read, Eat, Drink — Weekend Roundup

A weekly round-up of books, news, thoughts, recipes, and miscellany for the weekend. 

Colbert Salutes Amazon: Well, interesting times call for interesting commentary, and my favorite bit of punditry to result from the Amazon/Hachette dispute is Stephen Colbert’s lovely little skit, which you can find here. (And here’s the simple, step-by-step breakdown of the dispute by the LA Times.) The Colbert clip is all over everywhere right now (because who doesn’t need some levity in the middle of a potentially industry-changing standoff?), but the exciting part about it, to me, is that it’s boosted sales of Edan Lepucki’s debut, California, through the roof. It’s nice to see two already famous and successful authors like Stephen Colbert and Sherman Alexie use their influence to help new authors, especially when either of them could have easily used the opportunity to plug one of their own books.

And I think it’s a little ray of sunshine in the storm cloud that’s hanging over the industry these days. It’s a reminder that books are still sold most effectively by people–by one person recommending a great read to another–not by impenetrable algorithms and data mining.

Oh, and it also made me laugh that Salon has already dubbed Colbert the next Oprah.

Daring Greatly:

Daring Greatly

I’m a little late to the game on this one, but I finally finished reading Brené Brown’s Daring Greatly. And I think it’s a life changing book. Books like this are the reason why I work in publishing and why I believe that books will always matter.

It’s been on the New York Times bestseller list for 42 weeks, and I think that’s because it hits a nerve in our changing culture. Brené Brown spent decades researching what holds people back from living what she calls “wholehearted” lives–that is, lives driven by authenticity, worthiness, and meaning–and she found, again and again, from thousands of research participants across all demographics, that daring to be vulnerable was the gateway to wholehearted living. It’s a beautiful book, and I couldn’t possibly do it justice in a few paragraphs, but it’s a book that at times made me cry, at times made me smile, and often made me pause to re-read and linger over sentences. Brown included a quote by Martin Buber in the book that, to me, encapsulated many of the themes of the book, as well as the evolving zeitgeist in our culture:

“When two people relate to each other authentically and humanly, God is the electricity that surges between them.” –Martin Buber 

It’s a book that really captures the essence of what makes us all tick as humans and what holds us back from living our best lives. I think that, in some ways, Daring Greatly explores the personal side of many of the business ideas in Daniel Pink’s To Sell is Human (another great read). Pink analyzes how accessibility and authenticity are beginning to have more value in our culture, while exclusivity and obfuscation are losing power in a world where everyone often has equal access to information.

But that is a whole other rabbit hole of theory that I could rant about for days. I also want to read Brené Brown’s The Gifts of Imperfection, which is supposed to be just as incredible.

Next up on the reading list is The Upside of Down by Megan McArdle, a columnist for Bloomberg View. Jarrett and I started our own book club (membership: 2) for the summer, and we’re reading one chapter a week and (ideally) discussing over Friday dinner. He got to pick this first one since I’ve spent the last few years bullying him into reading a whole slew of my recommendations (including Lean In!). It should be interesting (and hopefully inspiring) to follow along as McArdle tries to prove her thesis that failure is the most important part of success.

Morel Risotto:

Morel Risotto
Photo by Holly A. Heyser via Hank Shaw.

Oh my. This recipe is fantastic. Jarrett went morel hunting on his farm in Michigan and found us a huge bounty of these little delights. I’d go so far as to say that we’re morellionaires this year (ba-bum-ching).

Morels

The one and only place I turn to when we get something special and wild is Hank Shaw’s blog, Hunter Angler Gardener Cook. His blog won a James Beard award in 2013, and I think it’s just the best online resource out there today for wild, foraged, straight-from-the-earth cooking. His new-ish book Duck, Duck, Goose is a must if you can regularly get your hands on wild waterfowl.

Jarrett dehydrated the morels to get them from Michigan out to the East Coast, but I think it’s always worth dehydrating morels. That way you can enjoy them over several months, rather than a few days, and the morel stock that results when they’re rehydrated is just yum! We used the morel stock for the risotto, and I think it adds such a wonderful, deep flavor that you couldn’t get from just chicken or veggie stock.

Next morel recipe to try? These almost-too-beautiful-to-eat tortellini:

Morel TortelliniPhoto by Holly A. Heyser via Hank Shaw.

Tequila Mockingbird: Tequila MockingbirdI’m also late to this one, but I came home from a business trip to find that some of our friends had sent us a package with Tequila Mockingbird: Cocktails with a Literary Twist by Tim Federle. I mean, this just HAS to be the perfect gift for the literary nerd, the downtrodden aspiring writer, the overworked editor, and the harried literary agent. I want to make every single bookish cocktail, but I’ve narrowed the options down to three for a dinner we’re hosting on Saturday for an editor friend:

1. The Last of the Mojitos
2. Love in the Time of Kahlua
3. Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margarita.

So I should probably make all of them, right?

Happy reading, eating, and drinking this weekend!