Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Spanish writers snub invite to Frankfurt Book Fair in spat over Catalan nationalism

BARCELONA, Spain: When the Frankfurt Book Fair took the rare step of inviting a region rather than a country to showcase its literary talent, Catalonia picked writers who publish only in Catalan — the language of this proud patch of northeast Spain that considers itself a nation within a nation.

Spain's literary world cried foul and Catalonia backtracked, inviting topflight Spanish-language writers as well to Frankfurt in October. But many are refusing to go, calling the gesture an insulting afterthought prompted by political interference and serving up a nasty dispute for the normally genteel confines of the world's largest book fair.

One of the Spanish-language writers boycotting the fair is Barcelona-born Carlos Ruiz-Zafon, author of the international best-seller "The Shadow of the Wind."

He blamed "political commissars who eagerly took over and handled this affair and who decided what kind of image of Catalonia they wanted to project, mostly to their own Catalan constituents, who are the real audience of this whole sideshow, not those attending the fair or the international media."

Organizers insist that, in the end, a wide range of Catalan culture will be represented in Frankfurt.

The issue is politically charged because the Catalan language is a potent cultural symbol. It has been aggressively promoted by successive Catalan nationalist regional governments since democracy returned to Spain in 1978.

During the dictatorship of General Francisco Franco, Catalan and other regional languages were banned as Franco believed they could foster opposition to his regime.

Anyone caught speaking a regional language faced jail. Children were secretly sent for Catalan language classes at summer camps across the border in France, where the language is spoken in the southwest. After the death of Franco in 1975, Catalonia like other parts of Spain was granted substantial autonomy and its language restored.

Now, Catalan is one of three regional tongues that enjoy co-official status along with Spanish. Companies can be fined for not printing signs in both languages.

The Catalan organizers preparing their part of the Frankfurt fair had hoped to use the event, which attracts nearly 300,000 visitors, as a window for the region's prose and poetry. They also cite commercial reasons for ultimately deciding to include Spanish-language authors.

But the boycott by top authors has led one German newspaper, the Frankfurter Allgemeine, to suggest Catalonia would be forced to field a "second team" of writers whose work is little known outside Spain.

Ruiz-Zafon told The Associated Press that Catalonia's handling of the fair was "an unfortunate mixture of ignorance about the very nature of the fair and its purpose. Misguided political ambition and bigotry coming from all sides has provoked this discussion."

Another writer who will not be attending is Javier Cercas, author of "Soldiers of Salamis," a hugely successful novel which has been made into a film.

Cercas told the Spanish daily La Vanguardia he saw no point in going unless "the politicians responsible make it clear that in the Catalan culture includes two languages" — Spanish and Catalan.

Ildefonso Falcones, author of "The Cathedral of the Sea," last years No. 1 best-seller in Spain, said authorities had decided what the 'official' Catalan culture consisted of without consulting others.

The Spanish government and regional authorities have spent €12 million ($16.5 million) promoting the Catalan section — the biggest budget ever spent by any country at the book fair.

The Ramon Llull Institute, which promotes Catalan culture throughout the world, has organized Catalonia's contribution. Its director Josep Bargallo, who is an author, was unavailable for comment.

Jose Montilla, president of the Catalan regional government, denied writers who published only in Catalan had been favored. "We have done everything that we could. Invitations have been sent to all authors who were important," he said.

Source : http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/08/08/arts/EU-A-E-BKS-Spain-Book-Spat.php

Starbucks to Sell Oral History Book, CD


SEATTLE -

Starbucks Corp. said Tuesday it will start selling its third book, a collection of 50 stories in an oral history project compiled on book and CD.

Edited by Peabody Award winner Dave Isay, "Listening Is An Act of Love: A Celebration of American Lives from the StoryCorps Project" will go on sale at Starbucks (nasdaq: SBUX - news - people )' company-operated U.S. stores beginning Nov. 8, the company said.

First-person accounts of daily life from StoryCorps contributors are broadcast every Friday on National Public Radio's Morning Edition program. The collection is archived at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress.

"There are so many genuine stories, spoken with such passion and character, that it was difficult to narrow the selection," Isay said in a statement released by Starbucks.

Starbucks started selling books last fall with Mitch Albom's "For One More Day," followed by "A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier" by Sierra Leone native Ishmael Beah earlier this year.

Source : http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/08/07/ap3995851.html

Austria kidnap woman makes changes in mother's book

VIENNA (Reuters) - The mother of Austrian kidnap victim Natascha Kampusch launched a book on Tuesday about her own 8-year ordeal -- after her daughter, said to be unhappy about the new publicity, made changes in the text.

"We have no differences over the book. This is a book about my story. Her story is something else," Brigitta Sirny-Kampusch told a news conference.

She said her daughter had spent 11 hours at the publisher's house reading the book and had made unspecified amendments.

Kampusch, 19, made a surprise appearance at the news conference but said nothing and hid her face behind large sunglasses and a fan to fend off jostling photographers.

Kampusch languished in a cell beneath a house garage from 1998 until her dramatic escape a year ago which made her an international media sensation, a rarity in Austria.

Her captor, a 44-year-old man, committed suicide by throwing himself under a train hours after she dashed to freedom.

Sirny-Kampusch, divorced from Kampusch's father, said the book, "Desperate Years -- My Life Without Natascha", was a cathartic effort to put the abduction years behind her.

She said earlier that she also desperately needed money after a long period without work.

"Natascha angry about book," was the headline in Tuesday's mass-circulation daily Oesterreich, which noted she had said she should be the one to write any book about her kidnapping.

Sirny-Kampusch denied any rift. "We go swimming and shopping together, we visit grandmother and Natascha's sisters..."

Kampusch has avoided the spotlight for much of the time since her escape, moving into her own apartment, trying to catch up on lost schooling and readjust to normal life.

A photo of Kampusch and her lawyer's son in a disco was splashed on page 1 of Germany's Bild tabloid last month.

Source : http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSL0787169820070807?pageNumber=2


Harry Potter Book Ending Gives Bookmaker Headache (Update1)

By Mark Herlihy

Enlarge Image
William Hill Bookmakers on Curzon Street, Piccadilly

Aug. 8 (Bloomberg) -- William Hill Plc, a London-based bookmaker, will pay out on a number of bets on the fate of Harry Potter because of an ``ambiguous ending'' to the seventh and final novel about the boy wizard.

The bookmaker repaid 50,000 pounds ($101,060) in wagers and a further 40,000 pounds to fans who either bet that he died, killed himself or was killed by his nemesis Lord Voldemort.

``It was a fairly ambiguous ending, open to various interpretations, and so whatever way we settled the bets would have annoyed some people,'' said Rupert Adams, a William Hill spokesman. ``So we paid out on all the bets.''

The bets on the outcome of ``Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'' were the first William Hill had ever taken on the ending of a book. Three employees at the bookmaker read the novel by J.K. Rowling and failed to agree on the ending of the novel, Adams said.

``Now we have to hope that Rowling doesn't bring out another Harry Potter book in the next two years,'' said Adams. ``We have already taken 12,500 pounds on that bet.''

Record Sales

The novel became the fastest-selling book in U.K. history last month after selling 2.65 million copies in the first 24 hours after its release.

Sales were 32 percent higher than for ``Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,'' the previous book in the series, which sold two million copies in the first 24 hours, according to figures of Nielsen BookScan, an independent book trade monitoring service.

In the U.S., the book sold a record 8.3 million copies on its first day, publisher Scholastic Corp. said. First-day sales surpassed the U.S. record of 6.9 million copies set by Rowling's sixth book in the series in 2005, New York-based Scholastic said.

Customers at Borders Group Inc., the second-largest U.S. bookseller, bought 1.2 million copies of the book, the highest single-day sales of any title in the company's history. Barnes & Noble Inc., the world's largest bookseller, sold a record 1.8 million copies of the book in the first 48 hours of its release. In the first hour, the retailer sold 156 copies a second.

Lucrative Franchise

Rowling, 42, marked the release of the book at 12:01 a.m. on July 21 with a midnight signing session at London's Natural History Museum, where she signed 1,600 copies. The author said in a BBC interview July 6 that she broke down in tears while writing the final book about the adventures of Potter and his friends at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

The six earlier novels in the series have sold more than 300 million copies, making Rowling wealthier than Queen Elizabeth II with a 545 million-pound ($1.1 billion) fortune, according to the U.K.'s Sunday Times Rich List.

The latest movie in the series, ``Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix,'' which stars British actor Daniel Radcliffe as the bespectacled teenager, earned $77.4 million in the U.S. for Time Warner Inc. in its first weekend, making it the fourth-best film opening this year behind ``Spider-Man 3.''

The first four movies grossed more than $3.5 billion in box office receipts, according to Web site Boxofficemojo.com. The first book in the series, ``Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone,'' called ``Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone'' in the U.S., was published in 1997.

The books are published by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc in the U.K. and Scholastic Corp. in the U.S.

Source : http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=ajaEU3Kn4RKE&refer=japan

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