The Shots team were delighted to be invited to a literary
party hosted on the banks of the Thames, overlooking the MI6 building from ‘The
Spying Room’; upstairs at The
Morpeth Arms.
The gathering was organised by Bonnier-Zaffre
Publishing, a new team masterminded by Mark
Smith, the literary entrepreneur who most recently was the CEO and founder of Quercus
Publishing [now an imprint at Hodder and Stoughton]. Mark Smith is well known in the industry thanks in no
part to this book.
We heard about
Bonnier-Zaffre and became rather interested when Mark Smith’s name was associated
with this venture, and has become CEO as reported
from The Bookseller -
Bonnier
Publishing Fiction will house Hot Key Books, Piccadilly Press and Zaffre. Hot
Key Books and Piccadilly will remain focused on children’s fiction, while
Zaffre will build an adult fiction business around women’s fiction, romance,
historical fiction, crime, thrillers, science fiction, fantasy, horror and
fiction in translation.
Zaffre
also has an imprint, Twenty7, which focuses exclusively on debut authors across
all fiction categories.
Richard
Johnson, c.e.o. of Bonnier Publishing said: “The move we are announcing today
completes our strategy of covering all types of publishing by the end of 2014.
Bringing someone of Mark’s reputation and standing in the industry to the group
is a marker of our ambition to be a major player in the fiction market in the
UK, USA and Australia.
“Mark’s
experience will help, too, in all other areas of our group and he will
immediately join the board of our US company, Little Bee, which starts to
publish next month.”
Smith
said: “I’m very excited to be building another publishing business and having
Zaffre as part of the Bonnier Publishing Group feels like a perfect match of
know-how and ambition. I greatly admire the quality of Bonnier’s current
children’s fictionpublishing and look forward to working with the team to
navigate the future. The industry is changing rapidly, which brings opportunity
for new entrants and I’m looking forward to finding great stories from
brilliant authors and connecting them with readers around the world.”
Read More from The Bookseller Here
We have been observing the recent successes of these new
kids on the publishing block, with some intriguing acquisitions including David
Young’s Stasi Child, the return
of Caroline[C.J.] Carver with Spare Me The Truth, David
Jackson’s new series that starts with A
Tapping At My Door to name just a few of their offerings.
So as it was raining heavily [and we were close to MI6],
a cabal of trench-coated book reviewers gathered along the banks of the Thames,
to sip wine, and learn more about this interesting publishing house, headed by
Mark Smith. Joining Ayo, Mike and I at the party were Literary Agent Oli Munson, Karen Robinson of The Times,
Barry ‘Brit-Noir’
Forshaw, Maxim and Delores Jakubowski, and many, many others.
So we mingled, catching up on our reading, and now present
a few photos of the party for our readers.
A treat was to finally meet up with literary scout Vanessa
O'Loughlin from Dublin, though we’d been in contact for some time now,
initially via twitter,
it was good to finally meet.
So with the wine flowing, Mark Smith took to
the stand to welcome us all to the literary party hosted by Bonnier-Zaffre
publishing. Smith indicated that this ‘new’ publishing House had big plans to
present a niche, carefully selected list. Though a lover of crime, thriller and
mystery fiction; Smith indicated that Bonnier-Zaffre would also publish work
outside of the genre, focusing on work that would appeal to a wide readership, introducing
diversity into their offerings. Smith indicated that many of their non-genre
titles would appeal to Crime, Mystery and Thriller readers.
Diversity is a term that would sum up their
release Maestra
by Lisa [L.S.] Hilton a book that just reached No 1 in the UK, an
early success for Bonnier-Zaffre, with release later this year in the US
from Putman; and with film rights being optioned by Columbia Pictures. I was amused at how Mark Smith acquired this
book, despite some opposition internally at Bonnier-Zappre, which was amusingly
reported at The
Spectator >
Bonnier Zaffre’s CEO Mark Smith recalled how Hilton had charmed him straightaway with her plentiful talents. Alas not everyone at the publishing house was so enamored, with one member of staff worrying that Hilton’s writing suggested that she suffered psychopathic tendencies. Smith says that the staffer in question went so far as to try to stop him from embarking on a worldwide pre-publication tour with Hilton:
‘Before we headed on the trips we had to discuss the plan with my colleagues. There was one in particular who had read the book and was decidedly cold on the idea.
I had a slew of emails asking me to reconsider: what if Lisa poisons you? I really hope you come back.’
So with our investigation resolved as to who
are Bonnier-Zaffre, it was back to MI6 to report back, and a late night Pizza
for Stotter
and Karim as they discussed their own writing project[s].
More information about Bonnier-Zaffre
available here
Photos © 2016 A S Karim
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