Today’s Book News Tuesday, 16th December 2025
French publishers pushed for second-hand book royalties(!) while an innovative nonfiction venture launched, a British Columbia bookseller was remembered, and the Hamilton Literary Awards highlighted regional talent. At a UKSG forum librarians reflected on balancing local needs and global change, and authors suing Meta sought to amend their complaint.
French publishers’ association SNE reported that used books make up roughly 20 % of the French market—about €351 million annually—and that second‑hand purchases have jumped from 12.7 % in 2011 to 20.1 % in 2024. Since authors and publishers receive no income from these sales, the SNE wants to introduce a system of copyright fees collected through mandatory collective management, likening it to fees for photocopies and library lending. Managing director Renaud Lefebvre warned that second‑hand sales could reach 40 % within five years and that the current situation threatens the viability of new book publishing.
Journalist Blathnaid Healy and publisher Eoin Purcell have launched Full Set, a new independent imprint focused on nonfiction. Drawing on experience from BBC, CNN, Mashable and Amazon Publishing, the duo plan to publish a small list beginning in 2026, concentrating on current‑affairs and business titles. They intend to stay agile, experiment with shorter formats and themes such as loneliness, imperialism, individualism and values, and aim to connect storytellers with readers while building a sustainable business.
The Hamilton Public Library hosted the 2025 Hamilton Literary Awards, honouring works by authors from the Greater Hamilton Area and Six Nations. Winners included Gary Barwin’s “Scandal at the Alphorn Factory: New and Selected Short Fiction, 2024‑1984” for fiction, Margaret Nowaczyk’s “Marrow Memory: Essays of Discovery” for non‑fiction, Sylvia McNicoll’s “Blue to the Sky” for children’s literature, and Lindzey Corridon’s “West of West Indian” for poetry. The honorary Kerry Schooley Book Award—recognising a work evocative of Hamilton—went to “As Is” by Ben Corridon.
Madeline Neill, founder of the independent bookstore chain Black Bond Books, has died at the age of ninety‑six. She opened the first store in Brandon, Manitoba in 1963, naming it after her grandmothers and later expanding to White Rock, Langley, Maple Ridge and other communities. The family‑run chain—now operated by her daughter Cathy Jesson and her children—grew to ten locations and later absorbed Vancouver’s Book Warehouse and Hager Books. Neill retired in 1994 but remained engaged with the business and local book events until her death on 1 November.
Reporting from the UKSG Forum held on 3 December in Brighton, The Scholarly Kitchen described how librarians navigate a “messy middle” between user expectations and institutional pressures. Speakers cited challenges such as merging multiple university collections, balancing budgets while supporting disadvantaged communities, and providing digital and AI literacy training. A notable theme was the shift from global to local priorities: presenters emphasized involving local communities in research, tailoring archives and services to regional contexts, and recognising how local identity influences collection strategies.
A Publishers Lunch report said authors suing Meta Platforms for copyright infringement asked a federal judge to amend their complaint to note that Meta torrented their books from pirate sites. The plaintiffs also want to narrow the proposed class to authors with registered copyrights and argue that Meta’s use of BitTorrent both downloaded and shared pirated works while training its Llama AI. Details of the proposed amended complaint remain behind a paywall.