3M Cloud Library Publishing Partners & Restrictions

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

3M Cloud Library Publishing Partners & Restrictions 3M Cloud Library Publishing Partners & Restrictions Penguin Publishing Group Dorling Kindersley Titles are valid 1 year from date of purchase Titles are valid 1 year from date of purchase Penguin Publishing Group Imprints: Harper Collins Ace Books 26 checkouts per title Alpha Books Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam Harper Collins Imprints: Avery Amistad Berkley Books Avon Romance Blue Rifer Press Broad Side C.A. Press ECCO Current 1817 Harper Dial Books for Young Readers Harper Design Dutton Books Harper Audio Dutton Children's Books HarperCollins e-books Firebird HarperCollins Children's Books Fredrick Warne Harper Perennial Gotham Books HarperOne G.P. Putnam's Sons Harper Luxe G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers Harper Voyager Grosset & Dunlap !t Book HP Books William Morrow Hudson Street Press Thomas Nelson Jove Zondervan Nancy Paulsen Books NAL Pamela Dorman Books Simon & Schuster (Currently only available on a Penguin trial basis with NYPL and BPL) The Penguin Press 26 checkouts per title Perigee Books Philomel Books Plume MacMillian Portfolio 52 checkouts per title or 24 months, whichever Prentice Hall Press comes first, DOES NOT sell to consortiums Price Stern Sloan Puffin Books Other publishers that do NOT sell to consortiums: Razorbill Riverhead Hachette Sentinel John Wiley Speak University of Chicago Press Tarcher The Viking Press Viking Books for Young Readers Random House No restrictions, however pricing model includes newer titles that cost 3X more than traditional pricing January 17, 2014 .
Recommended publications
  • The Nemedian Chroniclers #22 [WS16]
    REHeapa Winter Solstice 2016 By Lee A. Breakiron A WORLDWIDE PHENOMENON Few fiction authors are as a widely published internationally as Robert E. Howard (e.g., in Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, and Yugoslavian). As former REHupan Vern Clark states: Robert E. Howard has long been one of America’s stalwarts of Fantasy Fiction overseas, with extensive translations of his fiction & poetry, and an ever mushrooming distribution via foreign graphic story markets dating back to the original REH paperback boom of the late 1960’s. This steadily increasing presence has followed the growing stylistic and market influence of American fantasy abroad dating from the initial translations of H.P. Lovecraft’s Arkham House collections in Spain, France, and Germany. The growth of the HPL cult abroad has boded well for other American exports of the Weird Tales school, and with the exception of the Lovecraft Mythos, the fantasy fiction of REH has proved the most popular, becoming an international literary phenomenon with translations and critical publications in Spain, Germany, France, Greece, Poland, Japan, and elsewhere. [1] All this shows how appealing REH’s exciting fantasy is across cultures, despite inevitable losses in stylistic impact through translations. Even so, there is sometimes enough enthusiasm among readers to generate fandom activities and publications. We have already covered those in France. [2] Now let’s take a look at some other countries. GERMANY, AUSTRIA, AND SWITZERLAND The first Howard stories published in German were in the fanzines Pioneer #25 and Lands of Wonder ‒ Pioneer #26 (Austratopia, Vienna) in 1968 and Pioneer of Wonder #28 (Follow, Passau, Germany) in 1969.
    [Show full text]
  • Reassessing Journalism 'S Global Future
    Challenge & Change: REASSESSING JOURNALISM’S GLOBAL FUTURE Alan Knight Edited By CHALLENGE AND CHANGE Reassessing Journalism’s Global Future Edited by Alan Knight First published in 2013 by UTS ePRESS University of Technology, Sydney Broadway NSW 2007 Australia http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/ © 2013 Copyright rests with the respective authors of each chapter Challenge and change : reassessing journalism’s global future Edited by Alan Knight ISBN: 978-0-9872369-0-6 The chapters in this book are peer reviewed. Table of Contents Chapter One Journalism re-defined : Alan Knight 1 Chapter Two The rise and fall of newspapers : Paolo Hooke 30 Chapter Three One World? Globalising the Media : Tony Maniaty 53 Chapter Four Reporting a world in conflict : Tony Maniaty 76 Chapter Five Networked journalism in the Arab Spring : Alan Knight 107 Chapter Six Ethics in the age of newsbytes : Sue Joseph 126 Chapter Seven Data Drive Journalism : Maureen Henninger 157 Chapter Eight Information Sources and data discovery: Maureen Henninger 185 Chapter One: Journalism Re-defined Prof. Alan Knight –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– “The future of journalism can and will be better than it’s past. We have never had a more open ecosystem for the expression of information and ideas”. Richard Gingras, Director of news and social products at Google August 9, 2012 in Chicago. (Gingras, 2012)1 Journalists were once defined by where they worked; in newspapers, or radio and television stations. Now, the internet promises everyone, everywhere can be a publisher. But not everyone has the skills or training to be a journalist; defined by their professional practices and codes of ethics.
    [Show full text]
  • E HUT Hutchins, Pat, 1942-. the Doorbell Rang. 1St Ed. New York : Greenwillow Books, C1986
    E HUT Hutchins, Pat, 1942-. The doorbell rang. 1st ed. New York : Greenwillow Books, c1986. FIC HUT Hutton, Clare. Midnight howl. New York : Scholastic, c2011. E HYD Hyde, Judith Jensen, 1947-. Rainy-day music. New York : Children's Press, c2006. 974.9 HYM Hyman, Teresa L. New Jersey. San Diego : Detroit : Kidhaven Press : Thomson/Gale, c2004. TR HYS Hysom, Dennis Joe, 1949-. Wooleycat's musical theater. Santa Rosa, CA : Tortuga Press, c2003. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. The great ghost rescue. 1st American ed. New York : Dutton Children's Books, 2002. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. The haunting of Granite Falls. New York : Puffin, 2005, c1987. FIC IBB Mission Valley Elementary Bibliography Report 12/6/2011 @ 2:55pm Page 326 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Ibbotson, Eva. Island of the aunts. New York : Puffin, 2001. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. Dial-a-ghost. New York : Puffin Books, 2003, c1996. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. The beasts of Clawstone Castle. New York : Puffin Books, 2007. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. The Star of Kazan. New York : Puffin Books, 2006, c2004. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. The dragonfly pool. New York : Puffin Books, 2009, c2008. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. Journey to the river sea. New York : Puffin, 2003. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. Not just a witch. New York : Puffin Books, 2004. FIC IBB Ibbotson, Eva. The Ogre of Oglefort. 1st American ed. New York : Dutton Children's Books, c2011. E ICH Ichikawa, Satomi. My pig Amarillo. 1st American ed. New York : Philomel Books, 2003. 641.597 ICH Ichord, Loretta Frances. Skillet bread, sourdough, and vinegar pie : cooking in pioneer days. Brookfield, Conn. : Millbrook Press, c2003.
    [Show full text]
  • Ethics for Digital Journalists
    ETHICS FOR DIGITAL JOURNALISTS The rapid growth of online media has led to new complications in journalism ethics and practice. While traditional ethical principles may not fundamentally change when information is disseminated online, applying them across platforms has become more challenging as new kinds of interactions develop between jour- nalists and audiences. In Ethics for Digital Journalists , Lawrie Zion and David Craig draw together the international expertise and experience of journalists and scholars who have all been part of the process of shaping best practices in digital journalism. Drawing on contemporary events and controversies like the Boston Marathon bombing and the Arab Spring, the authors examine emerging best practices in everything from transparency and verifi cation to aggregation, collaboration, live blogging, tweet- ing, and the challenges of digital narratives. At a time when questions of ethics and practice are challenged and subject to intense debate, this book is designed to provide students and practitioners with the insights and skills to realize their potential as professionals. Lawrie Zion is an Associate Professor of Journalism at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, and editor-in-chief of the online magazine upstart. He has worked as a broadcaster with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and as a fi lm journalist for a range of print publications. He wrote and researched the 2007 documentary The Sounds of Aus , which tells the story of the Australian accent. David Craig is a Professor of Journalism and Associate Dean at the University of Oklahoma in the United States. A former newspaper copy editor, he is the author of Excellence in Online Journalism: Exploring Current Practices in an Evolving Environ- ment and The Ethics of the Story: Using Narrative Techniques Responsibly in Journalism .
    [Show full text]
  • Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People 2019 Preview
    Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People 2019 Preview Please note that this is a preview of the 2019 Notable Social Studies Trade Books list. The final list will include annotations for each title, as well as connections to the National Standards for Social Studies. The final list will be published by the NCSS in a 16-page illustrated pullout in the May-June 2019 issue of Social Education. KINDERGARTEN TO SECOND GRADE The ABCs of What I Can Be, written and illustrated by Caitlin McDonagh (Holiday House) Alabama Spitfire: The Story of Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird, by Bethany Hegedus; illustrated by Erin McGuire (HarperCollins / Balzer+Bray) Alma and How She Got Her Name, written and illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal (Candlewick Press) Bloom: A Story of Fashion Designer Elsa Schiaparelli, by Kyo Maclear; illustrated by Julie Morstad (HarperCollins) Carmela Full Of Wishes, by Matt De La Peña; illustrated by Christian Robinson (Penguin Young Readers / G.P. Putnam’s Sons BFYR) Counting on Katherine: How Katherine Johnson Saved Apollo 13, by Helaine Becker; illustrated by Dow Phumiruk (Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group / Henry Holt and Co. BYR) Crescent Moons and Pointed Minarets: A Muslim Book of Shapes, by Hena Khan; illustrated by Mehrdokht Amini (Chronicle Books) The Dam, by David Almond; illustrated by Levi Pinfold (Candlewick Press) Diwali, by Hannah Eliot; illustrated by Archana Sreenivasan (Simon & Schuster / Little Simon) Dreamers / Soñadores, written and illustrated by Yuyi Morales (Holiday House / Neal Porter
    [Show full text]
  • Technopopulism: the Emergence of a Discursive Formation
    tripleC 15(2): 441-458, 2017 http://www.triple-c.at Technopopulism: The Emergence of a Discursive Formation Marco Deseriis Northeastern University, Boston, USA, [email protected], http://neu.academia.edu/MarcoDeseriis Abstract: This article contends that technopopulism is a discursive formation that emerges from the convergence of two preexisting discourses: populism and technolibertarianism. Whereas these discourses are historically distinct the 2008 financial crisis and the 2011 wave of struggles precipitated the political conditions for their intersection. Such convergence produces both tensions and possibilities. On the one hand, technopopulism engenders a radically participatory model of democracy, which is ultimately anti-institutional as citizens cooperate and engage in sophisticated decision-making without the mediation of professional politicians. On the other hand, the more electorally successful technopopulist parties are led by charismatic leaders who synthesize the positions that emerge from the netroots to mobi- lize them against the establishment. These two seemingly contradictory aspects precipitate in two variants of technopopulism: a leaderless-technocratic variant, which is derived from the open source mode of governance and from early experiments of the Global Justice Movement in networked self-government; and a leaderist-populist variant, which is more strictly focused on the electoral competition as an intrinsically hegemonic practice. The article concludes with a reflection on the discursive complementarity of these two variants. Keywords: technopopulism, technolibertarianism, populism, electronic democracy, social media activism, Global Justice Movement, Free and Open Source Software, Podemos, Five Star Movement, Occupy Technopopulism is the belief that the “government of the people, by the people, for the people” (Lincoln 1953 [1863]) is achievable by means of information communica- tions technology.
    [Show full text]
  • BIBLIOGRAPHY MASTER Books 1-78 September 2020
    BIBLIOGRAPHY MASTER Books 1-78 September 2020 Abrahamson, E. (2004). Change without pain. Boston: Harvard Business Press. 43 Abrams, Jennifer. (2019). Swimming in the Deep End. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree. 75 Ackerman, D. (1990). A natural history of the senses. New York: Random House. 1 Ackerman, R. (1994). A husband’s little black book. Deerfield Beach, FL: Health Communications, Inc. 14 Ackerman, R.H. & Maslin-Ostrowski, P. (2002) The wounded leader. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass 54 Ackoff, R. (1991). Ackoff’s fables. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 11 Ackoff, R. (1999). Re-creating the corporation. New York: Oxford University Press. 18 Ackoff, R. & Greenberg, D. (2008). Turning learning right side up. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Wharton School Publishing. 44, 47, 77 Adams, James. (2001). Conceptual Blockbusting, 4th ed. New York: Basic Books 75 Adams, M. (2000). Beginning to read. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. 34 Adams, S. (1996). The Dilbert principle. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.23 Albom, M. (1997). Tuesdays with Morrie. New York: Doubleday. 16 Albom, M. (2003). The five people you meet in heaven. New York: Hyperion. 33 Alexie, S. (1993). The Lone Ranger and Tonto fistfight in heaven. New York: The Atlantic Monthly Press. 32 Allen, D. (2001). Getting things done. New York: Penguin Putnam Inc. 21 Amabile, Teresa, & Kramer, Steven. (2011). The Progress Principle. Boston: Harvard Business Review Press. 55 Anchor, Shawn. (2010). The Happiness Advantage. New York: Crown. 58 Arbinger, Institute. (2000). Leadership and self-deception. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler 42 Arden, Paul. (2006). Whatever you think, think the opposite. 77 Argyris, C. (1990).
    [Show full text]
  • Undiscovered Voices 2016 Digital Edition
    The fifth anthology of unpublished children’s fiction and illustration by SCBWI British Isles and Europe members published by The Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators British Isles and Working Partners Ltd 2016 CONTENTS CLICKING ON THE ENTRIES BELOW WILL TAKE YOU TO THE RELEVANT PAGE FROM SALLY GARDNER 3 FROM SCBWI BRITISH ISLES 5 FROM WORKING PARTNERS 7 SPECIAL THANKS FROM THE CO-CREATORS 8 THE ILLUSTRATORS 10 Andrea Ipaktchi 11 Esther Garcia Peces 13 Mary Hays 15 Portia Rosenberg 17 John Morgan 19 Lucy Farfort 21 Bing Wang 23 Katie Weymouth 25 Deborah Partington 27 THE WRITERS 29 OUT OF THE BLUE by Sophie Cameron 30 SPYDERS: FLASH & THE CAGEY BEES by Heather Newton 42 REQUIEM by Patti Buff 53 THE UNWILLING GODDESS by Relly Annett-Baker 64 STEEL TANYA by Anna Bowles 76 SECRET MAGIC: THE THREAD FAIRY ADVENTURES 86 by Kerry Cassidy NUTS by Simon James Green 99 THE EVOLUTION OF YOU AND ME by Rose Margaret Deniz 112 GIRL CHURNS UP TROUBLE by Susan Brownrigg 124 CLOPWYCK RIVER by Georgia Bowers 137 THE CHINATOWN CAT by Emma Dowson 149 THE HUNT IS ON by Catherine Miller 160 HONORARY MENTIONS 172 ISBN: 978-1-326-49832-0 COPYRIGHT NOTICE: All works contained herein are copyrighted by their respective authors. No reproduction of any kind is permitted without the owner’s written permission. FROM SALLY GARDNER, HONORARY CHAIR I wonder what would have happened in today’s world to this young man who had a headful of stories and very little education. Between the ages of nine and eleven he spent about a year at William Giles’s School in Chatham, Kent, and from thirteen to fifteen he attended Wellington House Academy in London.
    [Show full text]
  • Hayao Miyazaki: Exploring the Early Work of Japan’S Greatest Animator
    Greenberg, Raz. "Bibliography." Hayao Miyazaki: Exploring the Early Work of Japan’s Greatest Animator. New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018. 159–164. Animation: Key Films/Filmmakers. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 25 Sep. 2021. <>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 25 September 2021, 20:45 UTC. Copyright © Raz Greenberg 2018. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. B I B L I O G R A P H Y A b d e l R a h i m , L a y l a . Children’s Literature, Domestication and Social Foundation: Narratives of Civilization and Wilderness . New York : Routledge , 2015 . A k a m a t s u , Yo s h i k o . “ J a p a n e s e R e a d i n g s o f A n n e o f G r e e n G a b l e s ,” i n L.M. Montgomery and Canadian Culture , e d i t e d b y I r e n e G a m m e l a n d E l i z a b e t h Epperly , 201–212 . Toronto : University of Toronto Press , 1999 . A k i m o n o , D a i s u k e . “War and Peace” in Studio Ghibli Films: Director Hayao Miyazaki’s Messages for World Peace . S a a r b u c k e n : L a m b e r t A c a d e m i c Publishing , 2014 .
    [Show full text]
  • Information Infrastructures
    The Electronic Global Village (enterprise networking). A key success factor to generation of the civilization infrastructure is enterprise-wide computing is the architectural the set of core, foundational and integrational planning of telematic technology components infrastructures as it is shown in Figure 13-4. as tools supporting a business strategy. Archi- As the latter deteriorates through the processes tectures of information and communications of the material civilization, the soft information across multiple tiers of the enterprise are vital. infrastructure compensates for the losses of the These architectures should provide information urban, rural, and transportation infrastructures. and communication across the enterprise, much The basic components of civilization informa- as a utility provides electricity. tion infrastructure are being developed in the Online government is the empowerment of following layers (Figure 13-4): citizens in participatory governing of public affairs. A strong internetworking among citi- 1. Telecommunication Layer - provides ser- zens and electronic public records is based on vices in the scope of: a graphic user interface (GUI), which supports a menu-driven, user-friendly interactive access. • Access and transmission technology via te- Government workers and officials have to learn lephony, cable TV, satellites, and wireless and exercise power sharing inordertodemocratize • Switching and networking technology via equal access to power and seek service satisfac- local (LATA) and long-distance transmis- tion by customers. Electronic town meetings can sions (IXC, e.g., ATT, Sprint, WorldCom) be one example of online government; this is an as narrow or broad-band service sending introduction of customer online scope-feedback information through packet- or circuit- into the governmental modus operandi.
    [Show full text]
  • View Results Here In
    225 Michigan Ave., Suite 1300 Telephone 312 944 6780 Chicago, Illinois 60601 Fax 312 440 9374 USA Toll Free 800 545 2433 Email: [email protected] http://www.ala.org ALAAmericanLibraryAssociation NEWS For Immediate Release Contact: Macey Morales January 25, 2021 Deputy Director, CMO 312-280-4393 [email protected] ALA announces 2021 Youth Media Awards CHICAGO - The American Library Association (ALA) today announced the top books, digital media, video and audio books for children and young adults – including the Caldecott, Coretta Scott King, Newbery and Printz awards – at its Midwinter Meeting & Exhibits taking place virtually from Chicago, Illinois. A list of all the 2021 award winners follows: John Newbery Medal for the most outstanding contribution to children's literature: “When You Trap a Tiger,” written by Tae Keller, is the 2021 Newbery Medal winner. The book is published by Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House. Five Newbery Honor Books also were named: “All Thirteen: The Incredible Cave Rescue of the Thai Boys’ Soccer Team,” written by Christina Soontornvat and published by Candlewick Press; “BOX: Henry Brown Mails Himself to Freedom,” written by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Michele Wood and published by Candlewick Press; “Fighting Words,” written by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley and published by Dial Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Penguin Random House; “We Dream of Space,” written by Erin Entrada Kelly, illustrated by Erin Entrada Kelly and Celia Krampien and published by Greenwillow Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers; and “A Wish in the Dark,” written by Christina Soontornvat and published by Candlewick Press.
    [Show full text]
  • New Zealand Candidate for the Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writers, 2018
    JOY COWLEY New zealand Candidate for the Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writers, 2018 Nominated by the New Zealand National Section, IBBY NationalIBBY Section, the Zealand New Nominated by s t en t n co Nominated by the New Zealand National Section, IBBY FOREWORD . 2 Dossier prepared by the New Zealand National Section, IBBY 1 BIOGRAPHY . .3 Storylines Children’s Literature Charitable Trust of New Zealand PO Box 96094, Balmoral 1342, Auckland, New Zealand www.storylines.org.nz 2 PHOTOGRAPH . .5 February 2017 Storylines Children’s Literature Charitable Trust acknowledges 3 CONTRIBUTION TO LITERATURE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE . .6 the help of Gecko Press in the production of this document. 4 AWARDS . .8 5 BIBLIOGRAPHY . 12 6 FOREIGN LANGUAGES . 25 7 FIVE MOST IMPORTANT TITLES . 29 8 FIVE SELECTED TITLES . 35 9 ESSAYS, INTERVIEWS, ARTICLES . .36 10 REVIEWS . .40 d Y r H P wo practical book based on the workshops, Writing from In 1978, Joy and other School Journal contributors RA re Joy Cowley has been a Patron of JOY COWLEY, 1936– the Heart. Writing from the Heart, which has sold were invited to a weekend of workshops held by OG fo the Storylines Children’s Literature nationally and internationally, has provided guidance Joy Cowley, the eldest of five children, was born in Learning Media, the publication arm of the Department BI Charitable Trust of New Zealand since and encouragement for many aspiring writers. Levin, a small New Zealand market town, to an ailing of Education, to develop stories for emergent readers, father and a mother struggling with schizophrenia. extending the range of the successful ‘Ready to 1 its inception in 2004 and, prior to that, As a Patron of Storylines Joy has been active in The family moved house several times during her Read’ material.
    [Show full text]