Who owns Publishers Weekly?

Who owns Publishers Weekly?

It is sold and managed by Minneapolis-based East View Information Services, Inc. For many years, the magazine’s book review section, now helmed by Jonathan Segura, has been a key element in PW’s influence and success, and it occupies nearly half of every issue, covering nearly 9,000 titles a year in a dozen categories.

How do you write weekly for publishers?

If you are interested in reviewing for PW, please send a resume and a sample review (approximately 200 words) of a recently published book to [email protected].

How important is Publishers Weekly?

That listing of books enabled booksellers to learn about forthcoming titles, and eventually the publication expanded to include features and articles. Publishers Weekly attempts to serve all involved in the creation, production, marketing and sale of the written word in book, audio, video and electronic formats.

How many subscribers does Publishers Weekly have?

16,000+ subscribers
Founded in 1872 and published continuously since then, Publishers Weekly’s weekly print edition boasts 16,000+ subscribers with a pass-along rate of 4.25 readers per issue and is read by more than 68,000 booksellers, publishers, public and academic librarians, wholesalers, distributors, educators, agents and writers.

What does Publishers Weekly pay for reviews?

Although it might take a week or more to read and analyze some books, reviewers were paid $45 per review until June 2008, when the magazine introduced a reduction in payment to $25 a review. In a further policy change that month, reviewers received credit as contributors in issues carrying their reviews.

Who does the reviews at Publishers Weekly?

It is a capsule book review of about 200 words. PW reviews are primarily geared toward helping booksellers and librarians decide which books to purchase. Reviews are written by experts in the book’s genre or field, and are published anonymously in Publishers Weekly magazine and on publishersweekly.com.

How many books does Publishers Weekly review?

It currently offers prepublication reviews of 9,000 new trade books each year, in a comprehensive range of genres and including audiobooks and e-books, with a digitized archive of 200,000 reviews.

What does a star mean at Publishers Weekly?

truly outstanding quality
Reviews are written by experts in the book’s genre or field, and are published anonymously in Publishers Weekly magazine and on publishersweekly.com. Superlative books may receive the coveted PW star, an unbiased indication of truly outstanding quality.

How do I become a Publishers Weekly reviewer?

If you are interested in reviewing for PW, please send a resume and a sample review (approximately 200 words) of a recently published book to [email protected]. (Please look at published PW reviews for editorial formatting examples.)

Does Publishers Weekly review all books?

Normally PW reviews books in all formats, but because of Covid-19, they are only accepting digital copies of books. To submit a digital copy, you can upload a . pdf or . epub file, or you can provide a link to a file as long you provide any password or DRM code needed to access it for free.

How much money does a book reviewer make?

While ZipRecruiter is seeing annual salaries as high as $155,000 and as low as $17,500, the majority of BOOK Reviewer salaries currently range between $31,500 (25th percentile) to $74,500 (75th percentile) with top earners (90th percentile) making $110,000 annually across the United States.

Who are the editors of Publishers Weekly?

Jonathan Segura, executive editor, has been with Publishers Weekly since 2005. He oversees features and adult book reviews both in print and online, and is involved in digital strategy. He has written for GQ, NPR, The Paris Review, and Rolling Stone. Calvin Reid is PW’s news editor and head of our comics department.

Why publish with Publishers Weekly?

As the international journal of book publishing and bookselling, Publishers Weekly focuses on business news, reviews and bestseller lists and is targeted at publishers, booksellers, librarians, the media and literary agents.

What does Jonathan Segura do at Publishers Weekly?

Jonathan Segura, executive editor, has been with Publishers Weekly since 2005. He oversees features and adult book reviews both in print and online, and is involved in digital strategy. He has written for GQ, NPR, The Paris Review, and Rolling Stone.

Who’s on the editorial team at PW?

The publishing industry’s most experienced Editorial Team is working hard for you… Rachel Deahl is PW’s news director. She covers general news and has a heavy hand steering our rights coverage, as both PW’s Deals columnist and executive director of programming for New York Rights Fair.