Tag Archives: books

The #Giveabook campaign reached it’s goal… and raised the stakes!

#GiveaBook, Penguin Random House’s social-media-based online campaign to promote books as gifts and give back to children in need during the holiday season, has been a tremendous success in its second year, reaching 35,000 #GiveaBook hashtags and posts registered today.  For every use of the hashtag #GiveaBook on Twitter and in posts to the GiveaBook, Penguin Random House and Givington pages on Facebook through Thursday, December 24, Penguin Random House will donate one book to the literacy nonprofit First Book.  With less than two weeks remaining in the #GiveaBook campaign, Penguin Random House has raised the donation limit from 35,000 to 50,000.  Penguin Random House author Celeste Ng ‏(@pronounced_ing) tweeted:
Wow: #GiveaBook already hit 35K books. So now @penguinrandom is giving up to *50K* books. You know what to do. http://ow.ly/i/fdMdK 
CelesteNgEverythingINeverToldYouNg is the author of the acclaimed novel Everything I Never Told You and has been actively supporting the #GiveaBook campaign.  More Penguin Random House authors continue to back #GiveaBook with videos and/or tweets, including Anthony Marra, Gretchen Rubin, Margaret Atwood, Kathy Reichs, James Dashner, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. The heart of #GiveaBook is online participation. Book lovers everywhere are including the campaign hashtag as part of their social media messages about sharing the joy of reading and making book donations. Follow #GiveaBook on Twitter (www.twitter.com/giveabooknow); Facebook (www.facebook.com/giveabooknow) and Tumblr (www.tumblr.com/giveabook). For details about how to donate, click here.

Star Wars Required Reading

Star Wars: The Force Awakens is opening in theaters on December 18th, and everyone’s talking about it. To celebrate, we made a whole Star Wars page! You can browse through your favorite series, find kids books for the younger fans, and find new ones to tide you over before the movie. Happy reading!  For the Star Wars lover in your life, check out our gift list here. And last but not least, you can enter for a chance to win several Star Wars kids! Enter here!

Essential Reading: The New York Times Notable Books of 2015

It’s been a great year for books! In 2015 we’ve published some truly illuminating and perspective-shifting nonfiction. Take a look at the ones the New York Times Book Review deem among the best of the year. Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates Forget, for a moment, the ubiquitous comparisons to James Baldwin: Though fitting in many ways, they can distract us from how original Coates’s book truly is. Structured as a letter to his teenage son, this slender, urgent volume — a searching exploration of what it is to grow up black in a country built on slave labor and “the destruction of black bodies” — rejects fanciful abstractions in favor of the irreducible and particular. Coates writes to his son with a clear-eyed realism about the beautiful and terrible struggle that inheres in flesh and bone. Empire of Cotton: A Global History, by Sven Beckert If sugar was the defining commodity of the 18th century and oil of the 20th, then surely cotton was king in the 19th century. In this sweeping, ambitious and disturbing survey, Beckert takes us through every phase of a global industry that has relied on millions of miserably treated slaves, sharecroppers and millworkers to turn out its product. The industrialization of cotton rested on violence, Beckert tells us, and its story is that of the development of the modern world itself. Even today, he reports, an industry that is always looking for cheaper labor is engaged in a “giant race to the bottom.” The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World by Andrea Wulf Alexander von Humboldt may have been the pre-eminent scientist of his era, second in fame only to Napoleon, but outside his native Germany his reputation has faded. Wulf does much to revive our appreciation of this ecological visionary through her lively, impressively researched account of his travels and exploits, reminding us of the lasting influence of his primary insight: that the Earth is a single, interconnected organism, one that can be catastrophically damaged by our own destructive actions. Once more, congratulations to all the Adult and Children’s authors and their publishers, who are recognized by the Book Review on their year-end lists. Click here for the complete list. If you’re looking for a gift for the holidays, check out our guide here.

The Knockoff authors’ favorite things

In The Knockoff, by Lucy Sykes and Jo Piazza, Imogen Tate is a highly accomplished fashion editor at the top of her game, in spite of the fact that she is a bit tech-challenged (she’s barely mastered e-mail). Eve Morton is her ambitious assistant at Glossy magazine. When Imogen returns from a leave of absence, Eve has taken over and is determined to turn the beautiful pages of Glossy into an app. Imogen has to reinvent herself in ways she never imagined as she struggles to re-gain control of the magazine. Office politics have never been quite so stylish. Lucy Sykes is the former fashion director of Marie Claire and Rent the Runway. Jo Piazza is the Managing Editor of Yahoo Travel. It’s a co-author match made in heaven: The Knockoff is filled with insider dish on the worlds of fashion and tech. Here are a few of their favorite things to do, see, and read–offline as well as online. LUCY AND JO’S FAVORITE THINGS Jo’s Favorites 1. Favorite sites and apps
  • I travel so much that most of my favorite sites and apps are things I can use on the go. I use Buddhify to meditate on the road.
  • I am an NPR addict so I have the WNYC app, but then I individually have the This American Life and The Moth apps, which I listen to constantly while I travel.
  • My favorite hotel booking app is Hotel Tonight for last minute booking (and I am almost always last minute). I use City Maps to get around in a new place and I am obsessed with the Go Pro app.
2. Favorite offline things to do with friends
  • Yoga, cooking dinner, skiing.
  • Also…seeing how long we can go without looking at our phones.
3. Favorite books about women in the workplace
  • The play All About Eve inspired so much of The Knockoff that we have to mention it here (in addition to the movie).
  • Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In
  • I am obsessed with Girl Boss right now. I think Sophia Amoruso is my spirit animal.
  • I also love Kelly Cutrone’s If You Have to Cry Go Outside
lean 4. Favorite movies about women in the workplace
  • I remain obsessed with the movie Working Girl (Oh the shoulder pads!)
  • 9 to 5 (obviously)
  • Baby Boom (First time I girl-crushed on Diane Keaton!)
  • Legally Blonde
  • The Devil Wears Prada
9-5 Lucy’s Favorites 1. Favorite sites and apps
  • My Flybarre App is friendly, quick, and simple. It makes working out seem easy!
  • My Instagram is right up there–being a visual person and having the attention span of a gnat, it gives me a jolt of excitement 4 or 5 times a day. Does that sound naughty?
  • Netflix is so amazing. I get into bed and put my headphones on and I am off on a fascinating bizarre creepy story while my boys watch boring football–perfect!
2. Favorite offline things to do with friends
  • I adore Flybarre an amazing super hectic sexy boot camp/ballet class–all the rage in NYC. I have taken all my friends and my husband!
  • I adore cooking for a dinner party, totally from scratch, once a week. I call it farm stand to table, as I buy everything from Farmer Harry down the road. I also love to buy vintage cocktail glasses and old silver. Lots of white flowers and candles are my tricks to making a pretty table.
  • Hanging with my family–all the cousins, aunties and uncles and grandparents. Watching my elder son become a passionate sportsman and a good guy. Seeing my young son playing the part of Lysander was a first, and making fairy cakes with him –and eating all the mixture first.
3. Favorite books about women in the workplace
  • All About Eve (Well, the play is as good as a book–it’s so sharp, timeless and true!
  • The Help
help 4. Favorite movies about female friendships/women in the workplace
  • The Women
  • Legally Blonde
  • All About Eve (My total all time fave–Marilyn Monroe has a bit part–one of her first roles!)
  • Mildred Pierce (Both the original and remake are fantastic.)
  • The Help
  • Mad Men (Technically not a movie, but it so often feels like one!)
all-about-eve Follow Lucy and Jo on Instagram : @lucysykesrellie, @jopiazza12 Read more about The Knockoff here.