NYPH’09 kicks off today and I’m stoked to see that Andrew Hetherington will be blogging about all the happenings from What’sTheJackanory?.com. The potent cocktail of exhibits, parties, lectures and famous photographer spotting that seems to make up the photo festival (I’ve never been but read coverage from last year) is what I always love to read on his blog and it can’t be found anywhere else. I’m going to put an rss feed from his coverage on the sidebar so if you’re like me and not attending we don’t miss anything interesting.

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4 Comments

  1. Many thanks for the link to What’s The Jackanory. It looks like it’s very well done. I’ll be visiting the NYPH09 and am interested to see what’s going on there this year. I’m looking forward to hearing what people think of it via friends and also through the blogosphere.

  2. Very well done blog, i’ll put my 2 cents in there we’ll see, i am awaiting moderation…..

  3. A journalist pal of mine sent me this

    “How clever of Mr Power, to entitle his lecture ‘The Death of the Photo Book’ on Thursday at the NY Photo Festival that he created. In front of his bemused staff and a resentful audience he pontificated for a very short time on the subject and announced his intention to make authors pay him to produce their books in ’boutique’ editions of 50, which if they sell he would then perhaps publish in a larger number.

    It is ironic that Mr Power,CEO of PowerHouse Books and the creator of the beast: a publishing company that rarely pays it’s authors’ royalties (most do not even bother to ask for them) would publicly stab the same beast, perhaps to finish it off before he declares bankruptcy? thereby avoiding any avenging authors’s future audits of the books, legal demands for advances not paid and royalty statements never produced.

    Afterwards at the well attended festival opening party the overworked PowerHouse staff, many of whom are now taking a pay cut and working less hours, mingled with disgruntled authors. Fans of their wonderful books made purchases while the authors gamely mingled and signed books knowing they will never see their share of the sales.”


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