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Pulling Back the Curtain on New York Times Book Reviews
At a Harvard University speech New York Times Book Review Editor Barry Gewen revealed unknown details about The New York Times Book Review’s “inner workings.” Authors wanting to get the scoop on the process will find insight into the minds of the reviewers at “The Gray Lady.” These inside secrets from that speech and gleaned from other sources may give authors a better idea if their book ever has a chance at making the cut

Other new york times book review Related Articles

A New Brand World
Book Review -- 8 Principles for Achieving Brand Leadership in the 21st Century by Scott Bedbury, 288 pages, February 2002, Viking Press, 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014

The Passionate Organization
Book Review -- Igniting the Fire of Employee Commitment by James R. Lucas; AMACOM, American Management Association, 1601 Broadway, New York, NY 10019; May 1999; 240 pages

Throwing the Elephant
Book review -- Zen and the Art of Managing Up -- By Stanley Bing; HarperCollins Publishers, 1350 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019; February 2002, 160 pp

Unnatural Leadership
Book Review -- Going Against Intuiting and Experience to Develop Ten New Leadership Instincts – By David L. Dotlich and Peter C. Cairo; Feb 2002, 280 pages, John Wiley & Sons, 605 Third Street, New York, NY 10158

How Does a Bestseller Happen? A Case Study in Hitting #1 on the New York Times
Last Friday, the impossible happened and a lifelong dream came true: The 4-Hour Workweek hit #1 on the New York Times bestseller list! Thank you all for your incredible encouragement and support. More unbelievable, this week 4HWW is simultaneously #1 on the NY Times and #1 on the Wall Street Journal business bestseller lists. How is this possible? How could a book from a first-time author — with no offline advertising or PR — hit both of these lists and stick for three months and counting?

Lesson #1: Slay the Dragons Standing In Your Way
Today, there are hundreds of millions of Harry Potter books in print around the world. Each book in Rowling’s series has also been on The New York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal bestseller lists. But when Rowling first began to seriously pursue her writing career, the story was a much different one than that.

Pulling Back the Curtain on New York Times Book Reviews
At a Harvard University speech New York Times Book Review Editor Barry Gewen revealed unknown details about The New York Times Book Review’s “inner workings.” Authors wanting to get the scoop on the process will find insight into the minds of the reviewers at “The Gray Lady.” These inside secrets from that speech and gleaned from other sources may give authors a better idea if their book ever has a chance at making the cut

Books, Licensing and Franchising
Recently, while visiting a book store, I came across the Self Help Section, there were books with almost every possible book, How to win friends and influence people, Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul, Chicken Soup for the Entrepreneur, Guide to Investing, Unleash the Power Within and even one on how to author a book, Guerilla Marketing for Freshers and many many more similar titles. Since, there was an entire section dedicated for Self Help Books, It does seem that this is one of the popular categories. Several of these books are New York Times Bestsellers and so on.

Authors: Rename Your Book For Another Crack At Success
There are several reasons to rename a book such as adding a subtitle to be friendlier to search engines. Another important reason is to get a new copyright date because many book critics will not review an old book and reviewers often define an “old” book as one with a copyright of more than a year old.

A review of the book, Pitch Anything, by Oren Klaff
As President of the B2B demand generation company, Find New Customers, and a prolific blogger, I’m often invited to do book review. But after doing quite a few, one grows jaded a bit – so we ask tough questions. The two questions I ask every time I do a book review: Does the book bring fresh insights and perspective? Is the book well written and easy to read? Only a book that gets a “Yes” on both questions gets a 5 star review.

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