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Joel Rickett
Joel Rickett is deputy editor of The Bookseller, and also writes columns for the Guardian and Screen International.
Style and substance(s)
16.04.08
A Ladbroke Grove gastropub called the Fat Badger. Entry with a tattoo only. Jamie and Pete on the decks. It could only be Canongate's London Book Fair party, fast becoming a legendary annual rite of passage.
Modelled on Atlantic boss Morgan Entrekin's Frankfurt bash, the Canongate evening begins with a dinner for 60 - international editors, agents, authors and a few booksellers. Invites are so scarce that only a handful of the publisher's own staff are allowed seats. Then the shackles are off, and the blaggers are in, for the 11pm-3am rave. It's crowded, loud, and full of people that look far too sharply kitted out and fresh-faced to have been anyway near Earls Court. It's a strange kind of vicarious fun.
Our agent provocateur and columnist extraordinaire Daisy Frost has the real scoop on the madness. But on a more sober note, it's fascinating how well Canongate creates a kind of feelgood community that lets it effortlessly spread the work about its books.
And Jamie Byng's showmanship, much like Cristiano Ronaldo's tricks, actually serve a purpose. Each of last night's invited authors—including Geoff Dyer and Helen Walsh—have books out in late 2008 or 2009; Byng toasted them in turn, evangelising about their work. They laughed, they cringed, they loved it. Suddenly Hardeep Singh Kohli was hugging Borders' Caroline Mileham and setting up a long lunch in Bray with Amazon's Kes Nielsen.
Byng went on to toast Barack Obama (also, inevitably, a Canongate author) before making a lyrical appeal to the power of books and the fact that everyone working in publishing has to believe in the "Audacity of Hope". Over the top? Yes. Effective? Undoubtedly.
See Also
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