Canada’s meeting place for freelance writers and creators

Established 2010

Watch out Amazon and Kobo, Google wants its slice of Canada's ebook retail market.

Google's eBookstore is now open to Canadian customers, offering hundreds of thousands of books for sale and upwards of 2 million free public-domain titles.

Google has already struck deals with Canadian publishers big (Penguin, Random House, and Harper Collins) and small (Douglas & McIntyre, House of Anansi Press, and Dundurn) and hopes to partner with independent book retailers here, allowing them to sell books through the eBookstore for a cut of the profits.

How Google treats Canadian authors, publishers, and retailers will be worth tracking, though. The company is currently involved in legal disputes with the Association of American Publishers and the Authors Guild over its Google Library project, for which it digitized millions of books. The organizations claimed Google was sharing copyrighted material and failed to properly compensate writers and publishers. They reached a deal in 2008, but earlier this year a judge rejected it. The settlement administration website for the Authors Guild's suit indicates that it has been stalled since March.

EBookstore content is readable on Android smartphone and tablets, Apple's iPads and iPhones, and on Kobo, Sony's E-Reader, and Nook devices, as well as on personal computers (see the full list of supported devices). Notably, books purchased from the eBookstore are not readable on Amazon's Kindle devices, though Google says they are "open to supporting them in the future."

Kindle Direct Publishing has quickly become a popular platform for authors to promote and sell their own work. Whether it's used to publish full-length books or Singles, KDP lets authors bypass traditional publishing channels and market their writing directly, up to and including setting their own prices. But in KDP's fine print is a clause that…
Getting a humour piece into the New Yorker is no easy feat, and it takes a special kind of writer to meet the magazine's sky-high standards. Patricia Pearson, who is represented by the Canadian Writers Group, is one of those writers. Her piece "History: The Customer Reviews" made it into the October 17 issue of the New Yorker, after CWG submitted…
[caption id="attachment_2020" align="alignnone" width="580" caption="The cover of Whisky Rocks."][/caption]As part of an innovative partnership, one agency's writers exclusively created the copy for the Liquor Control Board of Ontario's soon-to-be-released magazine, Whisky Rocks. The Canadian Writers Group is the LCBO's copy partner for the 40-page…
Yesterday in Ottawa, Minister of Canadian Heritage and Official Languages James Moore and Minister of Industry and Minister of State (Agriculture) Christian Paradis spoke to the media about their plan to fast-track Bill C-11, the Copyright Modernization Act, and have it passed by the end of the year. The act is, according to many, a long overdue…
Late last month, Quebec Culture Minister Christine St-Pierre voiced her support for a "professional journalist" status in Quebec. Reaction from journalists (and from us) was predictably negative. For freelancers especially, the designation would block too many from accessing important sources in government. Some suggested it was an attack on…
Joining more than a dozen other large post-secondary institutions across the country, the University of British Columbia has ended a long-standing contract with Access Copyright, a non-profit organization that aims to guarantee fair compensation for writers and publishers when their works are copied. UBC says that the organization was demanding…
Canada Writes is "a new home for original writing," according a press release the CBC issued today. It's a place where "all kinds of writers" can "have their work read, published and recognized by the entire country." The site includes writing challenges (the current one is autobiography-related), workshops, and resources (links to writers'…
While the Robertson Settlement saga is still trucking along here (and the deadline to submit claims under second settlement is approaching), our freelancing friends south of the border are getting nowhere fast with their class-action suit against against numerous publishers. Just this month, an appeals court rejected a settlement struck in 2005,…
Something funny is going on in Quebec. Not "ha ha" funny but curious and even, in some people's opinion, a threat to freedom of speech in the province.Quebec Culture Minister Christine St-Pierre has announced she wants “a new model of regulation of Quebec media.” Her plan is based on the conclusions of a government-commissioned report by…

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