#FutureBook2015: Judith Curr and 'Crave'

Judith Curr_073_r1
Judith Curr. Image: Simon & Schuster / Atria Publishing Group

Following our story, Simon & Schuster and Atria Books have officially announced the launch of the Crave app (iOS initially, Android to follow)  . You can see the app site here, and learn more about it if you’re joining us at FutureBook 2015 (4th December) when Judith Curr will brief us further. Our hashtag for the day is #FutureBook15 and the Crave app is on Twitter at @CraveRomanceApp.


“Out of that world”

“The digital revolution is really the touch point of all this,” says Judith Curr. “Digital and the ebook revolution dictated that everybody wake up and smell the roses.”

She’ll join us Friday to talk about the fragrant potential of a new mobile app for people she calls “new readers”: Crave.

Curr, the president and publisher of Simon & Schuster’s Atria Publishing Group, appears on 4th December on a FutureBook 2015 panel titled “Writing the future: author-centric publishing.”

Her fellow panelists are the military history author Simon Scarrow (Headline); Robert Caskie of literary agency Peters Fraser + Dunlop and its new publishing wing, Ipso Books; and Hannah MacDonald, author and founder of the independent publisher September Publishing.

All of them will be looking at ways that parts of the industry have moved beyond the fashionable lip service of recent years—”we do it all for our authors”—to find actionable approaches to the work that both leverage and support their writers’ work with conscious intent.

What may strike some as surprising is that Curr, in her leadership of one of the Big Five’s most ambitious and successful divisions, says that she could not have forged some of the digital paths she’s traveling now without the engagement of self-published authors.

Colleen Hoover is one of the very first self-published authors we signed up, one who came out of that world.”

Texas-based YA and NA romance author Hoover self-published Slammed in 2012 and was so successful with it that Atria signed her as part of Curr’s initiative to work with independent writers. The hunch paid off. At least 10 New York Times-charting titles later, Hoover’s November 9 was on the Times‘ list again in its first week in print earlier this month.

Coming to a mobile device near you: ‘Crave’

Had things gone exactly as Curr and company wanted, November 9 would have been published—on 9th November—in a new format, suitably pink for explication at The FutureBook. Technology being what it is, things weren’t quite ready and the title, which obviously benefitted from a real-time calendar release date, launched on the 9th as a straightforward publication. But the title is the inaugural offering of a new mobile serial product that Curr’s Atria is about to introduce.

At The FutureBook Conference, she’ll be giving attendees a first glimpse of Crave, which is being developed in association with Ziv Navoth’s interactive storytelling studio in New York, Paragraph 

Crave the app shares a name with the publisher’s Crave: The 2015 Indie Author Sampler, and it samples, if you will, Curr’s experimental spirit.

In the Crave app, subscribers will be sent small sections of books at regular intervals, text heavily but smoothly augmented by various inline embellishments including video. One thing distinctive about this product in its first outing—Hoover’s November 9—is that an actor plays the male protagonist, and not necessarily in scenes from the book but in recorded and live social interaction.

Tyler Weaks may not be a household name from Hollywood yet, but his work as Ben in the Crave edition of November 9 will introduce him to Hoover’s and Atria’s loyal audience in a way the company promises is “intimate.” Curr says there may even be cases in which Weaks makes live appearances as Ben.

The character Weaks plays, maybe ironically, is an aspiring writer who gets into a Same Time, Next Year-ish relationship with the female lead, Fallon. Perfectly structured for the Crave format,  November 9 is written in the voices of both characters, as they take turns contributing short chapters. They’ll be delivered to subscribers as serial installments.

Engaging indies

Curr is becoming known as a trade publisher who capitalises and cultivates several elements of the way accomplished independent writers tend to work. She sees what she says are three kinds of authors whose work play into what she’s doing today in leading Atria’s broad range of offerings.

“The first is the self-publishing author,” she says, “who becomes a trade author, or a ‘hybrid author,’ if you like. Then you have the new kind of author, a ‘digital influencer.’ They come out of YouTube, Vine, Instagram. And then there’s the person who becomes both a publisher and book producer of sorts.

“These three kinds of new authors’ work can be combined and play off each other in all sorts of ways. And these new authors then meet the new reader, who is the mobile reader. A part of the future book may well be something like Crave.”

One of Curr’s efforts in the producer-publisher realm might involve a BBC production, she says, to be viewed on mobile along with such text-based efforts like Hoover’s.

And Curr is clear about the importance of the self-publishing mode of work as a key to potential development here: “Without the self-published author’s ability to write to a very fast timetable and then having the experience of video and the power of books and video,” this kind of work would be far harder to generate with what she terms “visual surprises,” including call-outs to readers, who respond online to quick-votes. “We get the information,” the data, when readers provide input requested by the content.

The app will offer a growing library of stories for subscribers as new material is placed. And as the approach develops, “there’s no reason we can’t do paparazzi shots in the street” with Weaks or other actors who are among the interactive components of the stories’ delivery. “That’s part of the idea. We might be able to help give some actors their starts in Crave.”

There’s more: Read on


By Porter Ander­son  

The Bookseller: FutureBook 2015: Judith Curr and ‘Crave’

Read the full post at: TheBookseller.com/FutureBook

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Info on the conference. The FutureBook 2015 


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