Tuesday, 29 October 2013
Pushkin Hills at Pushkin House
From left to right: Katherine Dovlatov, A.D. Miller and Zinovy Zinik at Pushkin House last night, celebrating the launch of Katherine Dovlatov's translation of Pushkin Hills, written by her father Sergei Dovlatov and available now for the first time in English.
It was a wonderful occupation - absorbing and informative - and well attended, thank you to Pushkin House for hosting the event and to the three panelists for their insightful discussion.
Wednesday, 16 October 2013
Secret Leopardi - Event at the Italian Cultural Institute
Having published Canti by Giacomo Leopardi ourselves we are always
interested in reading other translations of Leopardi's work, so
tomorrow's event at the Italian Cultural Institute (39 Belgrave Square, London SW1X 8NX) should to be quite
interesting. For anyone interested in Leopardi or italian literature in
general come tomorrow 17th October at 6:30pm, free event but booking essential, see
description below:
'THE SECRET LEOPARDI: THE FIRST INTEGRAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF THE ZIBALDONE
Under the supervision of Franco D’Intino and Michael Caesar, Penguin publishes the first integral English translation of Giacomo Leopardi’s Zibaldone, the collection of notes written by the poet between 1817 and 1832.
The result of an impressive effort by the researchers, this work includes critical and philological parts, notes and a detailed introduction.
Critically acclaimed, the translation will be presented at the Italian Cultural Institute by the curators, Professors Franco D’Intino and Michael Caesar, together with Professor Susan Bassnett.
Writer Elisabetta Rasy, within the series Writers in Residence, will read from the book and chair the event.'
Click here to book online
'THE SECRET LEOPARDI: THE FIRST INTEGRAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF THE ZIBALDONE
Under the supervision of Franco D’Intino and Michael Caesar, Penguin publishes the first integral English translation of Giacomo Leopardi’s Zibaldone, the collection of notes written by the poet between 1817 and 1832.
The result of an impressive effort by the researchers, this work includes critical and philological parts, notes and a detailed introduction.
Critically acclaimed, the translation will be presented at the Italian Cultural Institute by the curators, Professors Franco D’Intino and Michael Caesar, together with Professor Susan Bassnett.
Writer Elisabetta Rasy, within the series Writers in Residence, will read from the book and chair the event.'
Click here to book online
Friday, 13 September 2013
Morrissey book 'cancelled'
According to the Bookseller, the publication of Morrissey's autobiography has been cancelled after a last-minute disagreement between the singer and Penguin. It seems the singer wanted his 600 page work to be published as a Penguin Classics.
The publishers of Alma Classics, Alessandro Gallenzi and Elisabetta Minervini would love to take this project on and incorporate it into our Alma Classics list. Having exchanged Morrissey tapes when they were young lovebirds and been dedicated fans for the past 25 years, this book would be a joy to work on and as an important account of music history we feel it deserves a place alongside the classics.
Read the full report from the Bookseller: http://www.thebookseller.com/news/morrissey-book-cancelled.html
The publishers of Alma Classics, Alessandro Gallenzi and Elisabetta Minervini would love to take this project on and incorporate it into our Alma Classics list. Having exchanged Morrissey tapes when they were young lovebirds and been dedicated fans for the past 25 years, this book would be a joy to work on and as an important account of music history we feel it deserves a place alongside the classics.
Read the full report from the Bookseller: http://www.thebookseller.com/news/morrissey-book-cancelled.html
Wednesday, 22 May 2013
Independent Foreign Fiction Prize
A splendid night at the Royal Institute of British Architects for the
annual Taittinger-lubricated celebration of fiction in translation. It
was good to catch up with so many friends and take bets on the potential
winner. Bill Swainson of Bloomsbury was right in tipping The Detour as
the dark horse of the competition – I thought the prize would be a close
race between Pushkin Press' The Traveller of the Century by Andrés
Neuman or Maclehose Press' Trieste by Daša Drndić (I hope the accents
come out OK). We also had a book in the shortlist – Bundu by Chris
Barnard – but having won last year, we weren't very hopeful of a new
success and were secretly cheering Pushkin's book alongside ours.
When they began to describe the winner, all the contenders thought they'd won: "It's a lyrical book… beautifully written… perfectly translated… a love story… a quest… an escape…" That wise man, François von Hurter of Bitter Lemon Press, who was standing next to us, rightly said: "Every cliché applies to every book – because all books are clichéd."
In the end, as I said, it was a bit of a surprise when the winner (a deserved one, I am sure) was declared to be The Detour by Gerbrand Bakker (translated from the Dutch by David Colmer). The author's and translator's speeches were sweet and I am sure their nerves eased once they got off the podium and toasted their success with more champagne.
Here I am with our author Elaine Feinstein in front of the podium. Tonight is the Man Book International Award ceremony, and we'll be there to cheer our shortlisted author, Aharon Appelfeld – and catch up with some other friends over a glass or two of bubbly.
A.
When they began to describe the winner, all the contenders thought they'd won: "It's a lyrical book… beautifully written… perfectly translated… a love story… a quest… an escape…" That wise man, François von Hurter of Bitter Lemon Press, who was standing next to us, rightly said: "Every cliché applies to every book – because all books are clichéd."
In the end, as I said, it was a bit of a surprise when the winner (a deserved one, I am sure) was declared to be The Detour by Gerbrand Bakker (translated from the Dutch by David Colmer). The author's and translator's speeches were sweet and I am sure their nerves eased once they got off the podium and toasted their success with more champagne.
Here I am with our author Elaine Feinstein in front of the podium. Tonight is the Man Book International Award ceremony, and we'll be there to cheer our shortlisted author, Aharon Appelfeld – and catch up with some other friends over a glass or two of bubbly.
A.
Friday, 17 May 2013
The Old Library
I was invited, courtesy of our music editor Gary Kahn, to Trinity College, Oxford, for a tour of the Old Library – which, apparently, has even its own ghost: John Henry Newman. The place is rich with literary associations – Dr Johnson, for example, used to study there.
There are hundreds of fabulous books there, and I'd have been happy to be locked in for a week or two so that I could browse them at leisure. The section I liked the most was the first-editions one. Here I am holding the first volume of the first edition of Pride and Prejudice, first published 200 years ago, in 1813.
But for me the real gems were the first editions of Milton's Paradise Lost, George Eliot's Middlemarch (four green volumes, left in the following picture) and Fielding's Tom Jones (six brown volumes, right). Thanks to Sharon, the Librarian, for showing us around.
A short stroll from Trinity is the Blackwell's bookshop in Broad Street. Alma is well represented throughout, and there's plenty of beautiful modern books on display, including the six titles from our splendid Fitzgerald series.
No trace of ebooks there, thank God. The physical book is still going strong in Oxford, even among students.
A.
There are hundreds of fabulous books there, and I'd have been happy to be locked in for a week or two so that I could browse them at leisure. The section I liked the most was the first-editions one. Here I am holding the first volume of the first edition of Pride and Prejudice, first published 200 years ago, in 1813.
But for me the real gems were the first editions of Milton's Paradise Lost, George Eliot's Middlemarch (four green volumes, left in the following picture) and Fielding's Tom Jones (six brown volumes, right). Thanks to Sharon, the Librarian, for showing us around.
A short stroll from Trinity is the Blackwell's bookshop in Broad Street. Alma is well represented throughout, and there's plenty of beautiful modern books on display, including the six titles from our splendid Fitzgerald series.
No trace of ebooks there, thank God. The physical book is still going strong in Oxford, even among students.
A.
Wednesday, 15 May 2013
Congratulatory Messages
Over the past twenty-four hours we have been overwhelmed with
congratulatory messages – we had no idea we had so many friends! We are
sorry if we were not able to reply to all them personally, but rest
assured that they did reach us and they mean a lot to us.
Thanks again to everyone for your warm support,
Alessandro, Elisabetta and the rest of the team Alma
Photo left to right: Alessandro Gallenzi, Elisabetta Minervini, Ion Trewin and Simon Evans. (Photo credit: Leo Wilkinson)
Thanks again to everyone for your warm support,
Alessandro, Elisabetta and the rest of the team Alma
Tuesday, 14 May 2013
Alma Books winner of the Independent Publisher of the Year 2013
Winner – Independent
Publisher of the Year
It was a huge surprise to win Independent Publisher of the Year and
we are delighted to have taken home the bacon at the third time of asking! It's
a classic case of third-time lucky.
We would like to thank the judges of the
prize, all our authors and translators, as well as all the booksellers, agents
and readers who have been supporting us over the years.
A special thanks goes to Bloomsbury
Publishing Plc and Macmillan Distribution Services for selling and distributing
our titles, the CPI Group for printing all our books to such a high standard of
quality, and all national and international reps and agents for their passion
and continued support.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)







