Random House Inc.

Report: Bertelsmann Names Industrial Engineering and Econ Major Named Markus Dohle to Head Random House

The Bertelsmann Bunch circa March, 2008. Rolf Buch, Chairman of Arvato, is second from the left, and new Bertelsmann Big Cheese Hartmut Ostrowski is next. Peter Olson is at the far right. Not anymore.
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The Bertelsmann Bunch circa March, 2008. Rolf Buch, Chairman of Arvato, is second from the left, and new Bertelsmann Big Cheese Hartmut Ostrowski is next. Peter Olson is at the far right. Not anymore.

The Wall Street Journal has the story: Peter Olson's successor at Random House Inc. has been selected, and it's a German guy whom none of the publishers in New York have ever heard of. The name is Markus Dohle, and he comes from Arvato, the printing operation at Bertelsmann.

Mr. Dohle took over the top job at Arvato for Hartmut Ostrowski, who became chairman of the entire Bertelesmann corporation this past January. Mr. Ostrowski chose one of his own in nominating Mr. Dohle for the Random House appointment— a move many stateside industry observers predicted in recent weeks amid whispers and speculation that seems to come up basically every time a Random House C.E.O. abruptly leaves his job.  read more »

Bertelsmann Names Former C.E.O. Thielen Chairman of Supervisory Board

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This past January, Gunter Thielen wrapped up his six year tenure as C.E.O. of Bertelsmann AG, the German corporation that owns the largest American publishing operation, Random House Inc.; today the Bookseller reports that Thielen has been named chairman of the company’s supervisory board.

Bertelsmann was most recently in the news when a German magazine reported (without citing sources) that it had offered Rupert Murdoch a billion dollars for HarperCollins, the book publishing arm of News Corp.  read more »

Best. BEA. Ever.

bonjovi.jpg

Jon Bon Jovi is "headlining" BEA, which is actually not a big concert but a book industry expo held in the Javits Center.

PW Daily reports:

The singer will perform, with Amy Grant, at Town Hall on June 2 during BEA. The rockers, who both have forthcoming titles from the Doubleday imprint Flying Dolphin Press, will hit the stage for charity as part of the Saturday Night Benefit, raising money for the Book Industry Foundation.

Rock on!

- Tom McGeveran

A Leggy Stunner of Page Six Becomes Trump's Sexy Ghost

Last winter, my best friend Kate Bohner and I decided to do things backward and rent a house in the  read more »

A Leggy Stunner of Page Six Becomes Trump's Sexy Ghost

Donald Trump.
Barry Blitt
Donald Trump.

Last winter, my best friend Kate Bohner and I decided to do things backward and rent a house in the  read more »

Twentysomethings Meet, Publish; A Gen Adrift On Internets— "To Steal Back the Innocence!"

Last night at Beauty Bar, the retro-themed watering hole in the East Village, a chatty gaggle gathered to laud the publication of the new Random House anthology "Twentysomething Essays by Twentysomething Writers."

The book features 29 essays on topics ranging from the Serious—obsessive-compulsive disorder, rape, being gay when your mom is homophobic—to the more lighthearted, or what one might call the Universal Overachieved Twentysomething Experience, such as moving back in with your parents, discovering New York, and moving to Brooklyn, and how to explain to the kids you tutor in Harlem that you've accepted a freelance writing assignment that puts you up at the St. Regis for a few days.

The anthology's editors are two overachieved 24-year-olds, Jillian Quint (Vassar '04) and Matt Kellogg (Yale '04), who have seen firsthand the benefits of imposing their generational viewpoint upon the august publishing house. "We've both gone from editorial assistants to assistant editors," Mr. Kellogg said. "And our bosses are here!"

The book's authors wore name tags that said, cheerily, "Hi! I'm a Twentysomething." Many huddled in tight-knit groups, nursing the free Brookyn Brewery beer, discussing the weirdness of the almost-fame that had been thrust upon them.

Each had entered a contest run by Mr. Kellogg and Ms. Quint last year, in which they solicited essays from anyone between the ages of 20 and 29, on any topic, with the winner receiving $20,000. The winner was in attendance—Joey Franklin, who wrote about working the night shift at Wendy's.

It was his first time in New York. "People are more skeptical as a generation," Mr. Franklin said, drinking a glass of water. He is Mormon. "I don't drink for religious reasons, but also by choice," he said.

"We're trying to steal back the innocence that was stolen from us," Mr. Franklin said. "By the media, by pop culture."

"The Internet is liberating and confusing," Ms. Quint said, peering through black-framed glasses. One partygoer, an Andy Samberg lookalike, was overheard characterizing the crowd as "geeky librarian chic"; there were many tote bags bearing the names of various publishing companies. "It's a curse and a blessing. Nobody's really listening," she said, and sighed.

When asked if she was on MySpace, one of the authors said that the editors had requested that they each make a profile. "You know, to publicize the book," she said.

Doree Shafrir

Brewing Up Bestsellers- Frazier, Albom, Ford & Co.

What do you do for a second act when your first novel spent more than a year on the best-seller list  read more »

Brewing Up Bestsellers— Frazier, Albom, Ford & Co.

Jessica Mitford, an extraordinary life.
Evening Standard/Getty Images
Jessica Mitford, an extraordinary life.

What do you do for a second act when your first novel spent more than a year on the best-seller list  read more »

A Shameful Silence On Coulter’s Spewing

Ann Coulter.
Hai Knafo
Ann Coulter.

With the predictable regularity of a locust plague, Ann Coulter and her enablers at the once-reputab  read more »

A Shameful Silence On Coulter's Spewing

With the predictable regularity of a locust plague, Ann Coulter and her enablers at the once-reputab  read more »

Harvard's Plagiarism Scandal, the Deconstruction Begins

If you want to know the facts about the Harvard plagiarism scandal, don't go to the Times' lame and protective coverage. The Harvard Crimson has thrashed the Times and all others on the Kaavya Viswanathan story.

Today the Times failed to include a key statement in the case the Crimson reported, Random House's pointed charge to Little, Brown that its author Megan McCafferty, was robbed:

"We are continuing to investigate this matter, but, given the alarming similarities in the language, structure and characters already found in these works, we are certain that some literal copying actually occurred here," read the letter, which is dated April 22 and was signed by Random House lawyer Min Jung Lee.

More important, The Crimson also offers a reader the only real evidence in these cases, a comparative selection of passages . Real journalism in these cases must provide this information, and let the reader decide. The list here proves to me that plagiarism occured. The only question now is whether you believe it was "unintentional," as Viswanathan claims.

I've been hearing that defense all my life and it has always annoyed me. I think if you believe her, you could also believe that monkeys sitting at typewriters wrote Shakespeare. My friend Dan Swanson takes her side, saying that if someone is going to consciously plagiarize, they would go for something obscure. McCafferty wasn't obscure. Also, he says, the human capacity to memorize is tremendous. "Everyone in the Muslim world knows someone who has memorized the Quran. Children do it."

Points taken. I'm not buying though. I think that's coddling a criminal; I have no compassion for plagiarists. I think they sweat and lay a book next to the typewriter, and copy. They don't go into trances.

(While on the subject of psychology, let me acknowledge two subtexts of this scandal. A, racism. It bugs people that an Indian-American superachiever has robbed the work of someone called Megan McCafferty. B, envy. Viswanathan got $500,000 from Little, Brown for her book deal. Am I guilty of either A or B? Not me; I am a good person who never succumbs to racial stereotyping or material jealousy.)

Off the Record

On Jan. 26, at the Congress Centre in Davos, Switzerland, New York Times publisher Arthur O.  read more »

Oprah to Host Frey, Talese, Rich

According to the Oprah Winfrey Show Web site, tomorrow's program will revisit the questions surrounding James Frey and A Million Little Pieces.

A source at Doubleday said that Frey, publisher Nan Talese and Frank Rich will be appearing on the show, which is being taped tomorrow morning for airing at 4 p.m.  read more »

--Sheelah Kolhatkar

The Awful Untruth

Respect your elders: Tom Wolfe, the collected works of James Frey and Gay Talese (above).
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Respect your elders: Tom Wolfe, the collected works of James Frey and Gay Talese (above).

On Monday, Jan.  read more »

E.L. Doctorow

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“Writers don’t retire. How can writers retire?  read more »

I’ve Been Kunkeled! Whose Life Is It Anyway? Indecision On Chambers

Have you begun to pretend to read this season’s hot literary debut, Indecision, by Benjamin Ku  read more »

I’ve Been Kunkeled! Whose Life Is It Anyway? Indecision On Chambers

Have you begun to pretend to read this season’s hot literary debut, Indecision, by Benjamin Ku  read more »

And They're at the Gate: Didion, Coetzee, Gaitskill in the Running

If book publishing is a horse race, this fall we’re being treated to a Nobel trifecta.  read more »

And They’re at the Gate: Didion, Coetzee, Gaitskill in the Running

Doris Kearns Goodwin.
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Doris Kearns Goodwin.

If book publishing is a horse race, this fall we’re being treated to a Nobel trifecta.  read more »

Who's Answering the Phone?

Results of phone calls to offices of publishing executives as of 4 p.m. on Friday, August 12: Daniel Menaker, executive editor-in-chief, Random House: no answer Bill Thomas, editor-in-chief, Doubleday-Broadway Publishing Group: no answer (voice mail indicated he's on vacation until August 29th) David Hirshey, executive editor, HarperCollins: no answer Sonny Mehta, editor-in-chief, Knopf: no answer Nan A. Talese, publisher, Nan A. Talese/Doubleday: no answer Morgan Entrekin, president, Grove/Atlantic: no answer Happy weekend, publishing industry! Tune in next Friday, when the survey will move one hour earlier. --Sheelah Kolhatkar
 read more »

Coping With Irving Sprawl: One Novel? Or Two and Change?

John Irving, who also wrote some fine novels of perfectly normal length.
Jane Sobel Klonsky
John Irving, who also wrote some fine novels of perfectly normal length.

Until I Find You: A Novel, by John Irving. Random House, 824 pages, $27.95  read more »

A Novel of Brotherly Betrayal, By a Sexpert on Family Matters

Kathryn Harrison, who will always be known as the author of The Kiss (1997).
Joyce Ravid
Kathryn Harrison, who will always be known as the author of The Kiss (1997).

Envy, by Kathryn Harrison. Random House, 301 pages, $24.95.

“Can  read more »

Bibliophiles Romp in Chelsea; Book Editors Tell Sad Tales

Out in front of a shimmery glass box located so far west on 34th Street that it's practically in New  read more »

Snappy, Pleasing Novel Content With It's Own Wit

Whatever Makes You Happy, by Lisa Grunwald. Random House, 238 pages, $23.95.  read more »

Gimlet-Eyed Girl Grows Up; Preppies Poked and Prodded

Prep , by Curtis Sittenfeld. Random House, 406 pages, $21.95. Yo, prep-school papa!  read more »

The Extra Editor

The lengthy acknowledgments section of Seth Mnookin's book Hard News: The Scandals at The New York T  read more »

Postgrad Pretty Women

"I have had a crush on Kevin Bacon since seventh grade," said Elli Frank, glimpsing the actor as she  read more »

Despite Turmoil, Spiritual Memoir Keeps On Selling

"I'm an individual with a family and with friends, and my father is an individual with a publishing  read more »

Bill's Big Book Bash

C HICAGO, ILL.-After several years in which the collective mood was distinctly logy, the publishing  read more »

Little Guy Hits It Big After 20 Smackdowns

There's always a bit of a mystery when a "small" book hits it big.  read more »

Why Naughty Nannies Got Badly Spanked At Random House

Anyone with a jones for scandal and/or Schadenfreude -which is to say, most of us in the publishing  read more »

What the Hecht? The Case of the Missing Marketing Blitz

Has the recent consolidation of Random House taken its first victim?Whoever wrote the four-page memo  read more »

My Pseudonym, Myself: If You Got One, Flaunt It!

The Storyteller , which arrives in stores this week, is an engaging, funny novel about an aspiring a  read more »

Why Did Stuart Do It? And Other Random Questions

Since summer is slow in publishing-a few blockbusters courtesy of Hillary and Harry Potter notwithst  read more »

Publishers, Open Your Books! We Know the Numbers Lie

A few years ago, I met with a prominent editor at a major house on a kind of "go-see" to introduce m  read more »

Those Royal Applebaums

On a recent afternoon, a high-ranking editor at Random House Inc.  read more »

Publishing

Why Is Ann Godoff Diving on Penguin?

It's a Lovely Match  read more »

Ann Godoff Is Out At Random House

After five years as president of Random House, Ann Godoff was dismissed on Thursday Jan.  read more »

Two Paths Diverged in a Wood-One Is Booby-Trapped for Sure

World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Violence and Global Instability , b  read more »

Bertelsmann's Barracks

With his burnt-orange cowboy boots propped on his desk and a western shirt tucked into his Wranglers  read more »

The World According to Karl: Audacity Über Alles

"I don't like skinny people. I think it's very démodé." -Karl Lagerfeld, 1977.  read more »