World Book Night Title Selection Almost Complete
Carl Lennertz, executive director of World Book Night in the U.S., announced this week that the selection process for the 25 titles to be given away during the April 23 U.S. event is nearing completion.
A bookseller and librarian panel is taking part in several rounds of voting to choose the titles from a list of books derived from 10 years’ worth of Book Sense/Indie Next Reading Group Picks, Barnes & Noble Discover Picks, ALA Best Book Picks, and Pulitzer and National Book Award winners, which have been cross-referenced with several years of ReadingGroupGuides.com’s most requested guides, as well as the Mystery Writers of America all-time top 100, the Goodreads top 100 adult and top 100 YA, and Above the Treeline’s top paperback bestsellers.
The goal is to announce the final list of 25 books, which will be a blend of fiction and nonfiction as well as books for teens and young readers, by December 1.
“The selection committee is being careful not to create another ‘best-books-of-all-time’ list, but, instead, to choose books that they know readers will be passionate about personally sharing with others,” said Lennertz. “We believe this will inspire a fun and resonant celebration of books and reading across our country.”
The inaugural World Book Night was launched in the U.K. last April, and though both the U.S. and the U.K. will celebrate World Book Night on April 23, 2012, each will have their own unique list of titles to give away. “Our friends in the U.K. have been wonderful in sharing their blueprint and excitement,” Lennertz said. “We know their book selection has been underway; we started later and with a different process and are close to a final list of books to match the quality and accessibility of the one they’ve just announced.”
On April 23, 50,000 book givers will hand out 20 copies of one of the 25 World Book Night picks in communities across the U.S. Over the course of the night, a total of a million paperbacks will be given away. Bookstores and libraries will be encouraged to put up displays of the books in their regular editions. As well as generating widespread publicity for the value of books and reading, the U.K.’s first World Book Night saw book sales of the picks soar.
Based on conversations he and ABA staff members have had with booksellers at this season’s regional trade shows, Lennertz said, “Everyone is psyched about promoting reading — as well as more visits to bookstores! The World Book Night displays next April will be a key part of the measure of success of the campaign, and that the imminent WBN website for the U.S. will have an indie bookseller information and tools section.”
For more information about World Book Night, e-mail carl@worldbooknight.org.