PW Lifts Curtain on Enigmatic Reviewers, Bad Lighting

15Jul08

Hard times are upon us and book reviewers are not immune. Publishers Weekly has been an insidery book publishing magazine for, what the NY Observer calls, 136 years. It's the first to review books: it tells reviewers what to review. To be sure, a starred review will guarantee glances by people who read about writing and write about reading.

For over 80 years these reviews have been written by nameless reviewers, creating an air of authority.  But now PW has had to cut review rates by 50 percent, down from $50 per review to $25, so it's offereing bylines in exchange for even worse pay. Meet your influence makers:

Kate Axelrod graduated from Oberlin last summer and then attended the six-week Columbia Publishing Course. (It's very hard to get into! I had to go to NYU.) Rachel Bravvman has written for several magazines, including one geared towards people who have bipolar disorder and their friends and family. But Liam Brennen is the reviewer to behold though. He even responded to the Observer's email:

Well, I'm a 24 year old writer from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, having graduated just over a year ago with an English degree from the University of Manitoba. I started out writing for my student paper, covering Arts news and reviews and then managed to get a freelance job with the Winnipeg Free Press writing book reviews. In truth I hadn't actually heard of PW until I started reviewing really, and one day I noticed the review quote on the back cover of an old Stephen King book I was reading and thought that somehow I might be able to be the one who writes those! So I looked them up and within a couple of days I was reviewing for the fiction department. Shortly after that I got a job reviewing audiobooks (which is where I spend most of my time now) with PW and have since become a top reviewer in that section. And I suppose that's about it!

Well. I guess that is about it!

posted by
Tue, 07/15/2008 - 10:08pm

I really wish I hadn't read this - PW is forever ruined. BTW, love this turn of phrase you are so good at: "read about writing and write about reading."



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