In Publishing News this week,
Publishers Weekly has an interesting article on Booksellers in Minneapolis and how their visibility in the recent protests have affected their sales. The picture of a 70 year old bookseller standing in clouds of teargas went viral. For my American readers – the world is watching and appalled on your behalf at what is happening in your cities by your own government.
In happier news, The Babysitters Club is 40 years old and Scholastic are celebrating with new projects. It is amazing how this series kept going, girls, and clubs a winning combination. Meanwhilie, the American Library Association celebrated their Carnegie and Newbury medal winners today.
Bologna Children’s Book Fair has a sizable exhibition section devoted to the illustrators and every year they host a competition of submitted work from illustrators. Thousands enter but only 75 get honoured at the children’s book fair. Looking down the list- only one from the Southern hemisphere and one each from USA and UK.
Mark Williams reports on Amazon coding changes that were rolled out slowly in 2025. A10 is now fully implemented across the ecosystem and Mark explains how this has changed the way books are ranked and hopefully cut off the AI book surge.
Dale Evans reports that Ingram Spark is dropping the Update fee from February 1st. When Ingram first started Print on Demand publishing it used to cost to upload a title and then a further cost to update it. With all the Print on Demand competition they dropped the upload fee a few years ago and now the update fee is no more. Expect a wait as thousands of authors take the opportunity to refresh their books in the first half of this year.
Selling Direct was the catch phrase in 2025 and everybody seemed to be experimenting with different online shops. Just coming to the party are publishers who have caught on to the benefits of knowing who might be buying their books. The Independent Publishers Group has partnered with Norwegian Beat Technology to offer sales platforms to their members.
Joanna Penn recently interviewed Adam Beswick on his selling direct adventures with live streaming on TikTok. As I read through the transcript I was constantly marveling at how bookselling is changing. If you want a glimpse of the future check out what Adam is doing. Mind blowing stuff for 2026.
Written Word Media have a comprehensive article on author trends for 2026. They start off with the statement Trust is the new currency. This is one of those articles that you need to read without distractions. There is a lot to think about.
Jenny Hansen has an interesting article on Writers In The Storm on writing goals and how they suffer in January. You start the year with great intentions then flail around after a few weeks doubting yourself. Writing Goals: Going From Aargh to Aha!
Kristin Hacken South writes on Writer Unboxed about the dilemma of the writer. Who Are You? This is not a navel gazing exercise in what type of writer you are, it is a look at the profound understanding of choosing the identity of writer.
In The Craft Section,
How to craft accurate fight scenes- Dr Alex Jemetta
Writing without trying to manage the reader- Excellent essay -Harper Ross
Character Journey as Structure- Lisa Poisso- Bookmark
5 ways to hide your villain- Jill Boehme- Bookmark
Writing for change- Nina Amir- Excellent
In the Marketing Section,
The author formula workbook- Book Review- Sandra Beckwith
2 great posts from Penny Sansevieri-9 Proven strategies for Amazon sales and
What drives success- Bookmark
Substack made simple- Rachel Thompson
Planning a branding focus- Ines Johnson- Bookmark
To Finish
Katie Weiland is not afraid to go deep into the writer’s psyche and study how we think and express ourselves. As we start a new year there are challenges in the world that have us feeling unsure and unsettled about our place as writers and how our work is influenced by the events around us. Her essay on Why Writers Need A Sense of Wonder in Fiction More Than Ever speaks to the unease many of us are feeling. Our own lives can be seen in the context of stories. It is a great essay, and I hope you will read it.
Maureen
@craicer
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pic Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash

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