Status: On vacation
Doing: Writing this blog; recovering from being sick.
Watching: Nothing. (Seeing how the Mariners got spanked last night by Tampa Bay. I was passed out yesterday night--so I didn't see the actual end to the game.)
Listening to: Some old Electrobox taped music from C-89.5
Reading: Resistance by J.M. Dillard (ST-TNG)
TOPIC: ONE CEO'S TAKE ON E-PUBLISHING, SELF, AND POD.
I've been sick and busy this week. So my second part to the The Starchild interview is going to be done later on in spurts--and posted before the month is out.
Here's something which I'm sure you'll find interesting--if you're considering e-publishing and/or self-publishing.
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Simon & Schuster CEO to retire
NEW YORK - Simon & Schuster CEO Jack Romanos, who announced Thursday that he was retiring after a 40-year career in publishing, acknowledged that times are tight for the industry and anticipated an increasingly digital future.
"I feel there is enormous pressure on book publishers for leisure time, with all the competition from TV and the Internet and DVDs and cable television and all the other possibilities, which is why I think that growth has been modest," Romanos said in an interview with The Associated Press.
"I do think the digital option—electronic books, print-on-demand and any other application of digital content, are extremely positive ramifications for our business and that in the next decade that's what executives should be focusing their energy on."
Romanos, who turns 65 on Nov. 1, said that retirement makes sense, professionally and personally. Simon & Schuster, which publishes such best-selling authors as Stephen King, David McCullough and Bob Woodward, is enjoying record-breaking growth in an otherwise slow market. And Romanos had long promised to himself that he would step down at 65.
"I'm just blue collar enough to think that 65 is a magical number for retirement and that giving other people the opportunity to step in seems right to me," said Romanos, who joined Simon & Schuster in 1985 after working at Fawcett Publications and Bantam Books and became CEO and president in 2002. "As I will turn 65 in a couple of months, ... I think it's time."
Romanos will be succeeded by Carolyn Reidy, currently president of Simon & Schuster's Adult Publishing Group. Reidy, 58, said she anticipated no changes in the kinds of books Simon & Schuster releases, ranging from novels by King and Don DeLillo to works by Woodward, McCullough and others that have long established the publisher as a leader of political and historical titles.
Reidy, who will officially take over at the end of the year, agreed that the digitalization of publishing was only starting, adding that she expected books not only to be read and sold electronically, but to be written for that format.
"I have it in my mind that a new kind of digital book will come out, for a new generation used to reading on the screen from day one and writing on the screen from day one," Reidy told the AP. "You'll have different designs, different artwork, different jackets. Electronic publishing is not just selling and marketing books online; those are the first steps."