Episodes
The biggest decision in publishing is ‘who gets published?’ Whose ideas, world views, and idioms get added to the great library?
Published 03/28/21
When we create machines to handle the drudgery of book-making, we free up our brains for more creative work.
Published 03/21/21
Few people have helped to publish as many children’s books, in as many different ways, as Alisha Niehaus Berger.
Published 02/17/21
The pandemic has accelerated digitization in publishing to warp speed, and every book-maker in the world is wondering what that means for their business.
Published 02/07/21
When we really need to get a book written and published quickly, and can rally a dedicated team around it, how fast can we move?
Published 12/22/20
We all love libraries, but maybe we could love them a little more. Some money-minded publishing folk even wonder: what effect do libraries have on book sales? Luckily, Guy LeCharles Gonzalez can help answer that question, and many others.
Published 11/19/20
Even in our digital world, despite the insight of editors and the wonders of design, printing is really where the book-making magic culminates. In this episode, Arthur speaks to Mike Jason, a long-time book-printing expert.
Published 11/09/20
Arthur speaks to Andrew Rhomberg, the founder of Jellybooks, about how publishers use smart ebooks to measure what readers think of a new publication, and to figure out whether it could be a bestseller.
Published 11/01/20
Arthur meets up with an old friend, Ramy Habeeb, to share some fascinating, hilarious book-making stories. And he discovers that his friend has a whole other life, and pseudonym, as a successful novelist.
Published 09/28/20
For many of us, the role of ‘The Publisher’ is almost mythical: a distant, unknowable keeper of dreams. Somehow, we grant publishers enormous cultural cachet, but they are just people, and hopefully conversations like this one can help us better understand the kinds of decisions and trade-offs they make.
Published 09/21/20
Books are enormously complex creations, and clearing them of errors takes the immense, repeated effort of editors and proofreaders. Proofreaders are unsung heroes, who often work best with pencil and coloured pens, and a stack of publishing reference books. Today, they’re often asked to mark up corrections on screen in PDF – but is that really best? In this episode, Arthur talks about that with editor and entrepreneur John Pettigrew, the founder of Futureproofs. How can we innovate in this...
Published 09/13/20
Arthur and his colleague Klara Skinner describe the entire book-making process in forty-five minutes. This is an episode especially for process junkies: a whirlwind tour through planning, commissioning, tools, writing and review, manuscript development and editing, design, permissions, typesetting, digitisation, artwork, stylesheets, software development, page refinement, proofreading, indexing, testing, deployment, publication, and those inevitable reprint corrections. Whew!
Published 09/06/20