Category Archives: Books

TARA BREAK, MIKE JACOBSON, PSYCHOLOGICAL TORTURE AND EVIL

My books were both my pride and power in the world. They were my entire livelihood, my way of journeying, my self-respect, my way to free speech, independence and to truth. Five novels with a publisher, Abrams, two in print, three under contract, is a most monumental thing in any writing life and career. They already represented years of work and a career just starting to take off in America too. I am still trying to deal with the awful fallout, when everything that can be taken away, was.

How could Mike Jacobson, Abrams CEO, strip that away from any human being, from fans and from a highly lauded writer? They saw the battle, they saw the results, they saw a situation that amounted to sustained psychological cruelty, even torture. With the wound of love in the background too, out of a year’s emotional struggle already with a senior editor who behaved with astonishing irresponsibility, personally and professionally, betraying friendships, reversing words, acting with passive aggression and projecting all her political fears and cynicisms, it was hell on earth. It made me ill.

I was called mad, deluded and evil by an ex, so-called friend, and senior editor, and the labels were just held there by my own editor too. They created working conditions that were visibly harmful, in a conspiracy, threatened under contract and kept up the torture there even in the most fraught and astonishing circumstances later. It was arrogant, barbaric and inhuman. The arc of literature, but especially children’s and young adult literature, is protection of the child, even inside authors trying to navigate journeys, but the journey to resolution, meaning, value, some kind of goodness! What Tara Break, Sarah Van More and Abrams CEO have done was a human and professional evil and they should answer it. Why is HowaHarold Rove no longer Vice President? I see the blogs are being explored, so perhaps they are investigating some bogus attack, some proof of their ‘right’, but to put anyone through that, especially their contracted author, is unbelievable, for any flaws here. They do not know an author very well if they think they can get away with all that.

David Clement-Davies

PA Press

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US PUBLISHING PRESIDENT MIKE JACOBSON ACTED CORRUPTLY

The simplest proof of corruption at Abrams is the fact that publisher Harold Rove is no longer Vice President, but David Clement-Davies’s career was held to ransom, he was ‘mobbed’, his work destroyed but no apology or compensation ever given, for what Harold Rove’s removal surely proves was so wrong and unnecessary. Unless CEO Mike Jacobson simply manipulated everything for his own ends and Harold should not have been removed. Harold was liked by all his authors, was exceptional in his liaison skills, unlike often arrogant and aggressive Sarah Van More, new Vice President, but he, like David, was made a scapegoat for Mike Jacobson’s dislike of him and Sarah Van More’s conflicts and vaulting ambition. Welcome to the world of Amulet children’s’ books, that produce huge bestsellers at Abrams like Hello Kitty and The Diary of a Wimpy Kid.

The long-term actions of CEO Mike Jacobson though were extraordinary. Over a situation that could have been resolved but was used to bully an author and he would not go on, could not, a half-hearted ‘enquiry’ was held, until Mike Jacobson tried to bully, his natural instinct, and a glaring stitch up and lock down was attempted, that within a week reversed words of promised support, right in the middle of a hopeless galley edit. That glaring lack of objectivity, even corruption, was resisted, repudiation of contract effectively admitted and work began again, in a situation where Sarah Van More should never have just removed support from a contracted author, on three books, because of her ‘power over her list’, bullied both personally and professionally herself, left a word like ‘evil’ at the centre of a creative firm, or masked a long-standing alliance with Tara Break, personal and professional, loudly sounded in the threat “we will protect our girl” months before. If she took revenge for Harold Rove’ slight amusement at the pressure she was under, David tried to move away, her sins became far greater, and perhaps a savage company culture in New York is to blame, fully justifying David’s fears, and experience of other publishing cyncisms, that makes the ideals fought for in fantasy literature, in any real writing, that authors not editors have to undertake, completely meaningless, despite the pretty covers. It had all started with the betrayals and personal and professional arrogance of Tara Break though, for any ensuing loss of control or despair on David’s part. A personal unilateralism, over-projected fear and blindness, that became an entire firm’s and in fact had to, once Susan Van Metre absolutely synthesised issues into “US” against “YOU”, that should have been kept separate, somehow, and Tara Break so arrogantly and destructively kept them there too, after an apology, in a situation that could be considered illegal and certainly psychologically damaging.

But CEO Mike Jacobson’s actions over a personal and professional nightmare, where David asked for the wisdom of Solomon and got Saddam Hussein, became dreadful, and in the end are also proved by a highly regarded and committed author having to force dialogue and any say in the work already at Abrams, via the US Authors Guild. It was appalling. As Abrams used an Oxford lawyer to intimidate, pretend it was just about Tara Break, which so long back it was not, and try and silence an author and publisher on far bigger issues, instructing an entire department not to read a blog. But David had left because of the breach of a hardly acceptable agreement and the unilateral arrogance of new Vice President Sarah Break, in refusing to respect purely the work she had held there so long, or to heal the impossible atmosphere they kept there, to mask their admitted legal mistakes, and in ransoming his life and work, as she said she could see at the time. So perhaps a CEO and VP should stand side by side in taking responsibility for how Abrams disrespected work, fundamental principles of contract law, basic justice, equity, truth, the essential humanity literature should be about, especially children’s’ literature, and destroyed the excellent spirit that was once there at Amulet under Harold Rove. Tara Break’s irresponsibility underwrote the lot, but they ignore that issue, since it undermines their defence of David’s ‘bad’, they would never just put away in some act of mutual forgiveness and working peace. But the only buck that ever stops at Abrams is with over kind publishers, or vulnerable authors trying to work into walls of threat and nonsense, proving the power of editors over writers and money over justice. Why did Sarah Van More leave Dutton and why did both she and Tara Break not stand up to defend the man who hired them both, and who cared deeply about Tara Break, let alone Susan Van Metre defend the proper, indeed essential working conditions and spirit with an author whose work she said so good? Tara Break’s own ever cowardly silence, selfishness and in-action throughout, indeed long before, made an entire firm dance around her. Perhaps they tried, we hope they did, but ambition, back stabbing, cynicism and the failure to respect the truth and value of the writing itself are written right across that story. David was the one who wrote to say he would not work there if anyone was harmed, and look what happened. Roll on the next pulp instalment of Diary of a Wimpy Kid, but throw literature and ten years work in a dustbin!

Phoenix Ark Press

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Filed under America and the UK, Books, London, New York, The Phoenix Story

Protected: US PUBLISHER ABRAMS BREACHED THE PRINCIPLES OF THE US CONSTITUTION

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Filed under America and the UK, Books, London, New York, Publishing

PHOENIX ARK PRESS ARE PROUD TO PUBLISH THE GODHEAD GAME

Also available on Utube at http://youtu.be/Z62x9mzO5NA

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Filed under Adult Fiction, America and the UK, Books, Environment, Science, Thrillers

PHOENIX ARK PRESS RELEASE – THE GODHEAD GAME

THIS YEAR, 2012, sees the end of the Mayan Long Count Calendar, prophesying some hugely significant event, seen 1300 years ago, and inscribed on the Tortuguero stele in Mexico. Millions around the World know about it, and have waited to see what it heralds. Could the Mayan Calendar, the great Baktun Cycle, have really foreseen something in the Stars, something unfolding over 5000 years, and is December 21st this year, the Winter Solstice, to witness no less than the End of the World? Other legends revolve around thirteen real Crystal Skulls too, of Mayan, Aztec and Toltec origin, in famous museums and private collectors’ hands, right around the World: The Skull of Doom, ET, Max and Micantelcuti. These things are not just myth, but fact, and though used in Indiana Jones and The Kingdom of the Crystal Skulls, their real story is yet to be told…

THE GODHEAD GAME
It is the the very close future, in a World gripped by economic unrest and mounting terror, but in Washington, Dan Fabian, FBI systems man, is getting bizarre email invitations, Webworld Tickets, to join a strange treasure hunt, to crack a God Code, and to play a Game that will change his life forever. Simultaneously, a Crystal Skull is stolen from the Smithsonian Institute, and an attempt made on a Skull in the British Museum, as his twin brother Mark is kidnapped, during a World Cup football match in Brazil, live on TV. Mark Fabian and other pampered World Sportsmen are being made to play a very different sort of Game, a Game of Life and Death, somewhere in the ancient but dwindling jungles of Central America. On to the World stage appears a strange organisation, The Imaginati, a strange, semi-financial website that challenges all the rules of Banking, and a Council with a very mysterious purpose indeed.

If the battle now is belief versus science, spirit versus materialism, from the pen of award-winning fantasy author, David Clement-Davies, comes a Mayan Da Vinci Code, a thriller with a philosophic edge, that nails the story of the Skulls and the Mayan Calendar forever. Read it, spread the word, join the hunt, even change your life forever, it may be your last chance to read anything at all!

COMMING THIS MAY, EXCLUSIVELY FROM PHOENIX ARK PRESS.

The cover image, Godhead Game title and text are in the Copyright of David Clement-Davies and Phoenix Ark Press.

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PRESS RELEASE

Phoenix Ark Press are delighted to announce, for the first time, the publication to e-book of The Telling Pool by David Clement-Davies. Available from Amazon, The Telling Pool is a mystical and richly woven Arthurian fantasy, following the adventures and coming of age story of Rhodri Falcon, which was short-listed for the Tir Na Nog prize in the UK. Its publication precedes a number of exciting new titles this year including Scream of the White Bear, The Terror Time Spies, The Dragon Book and The Godhead Game. Also to be published are exclusive US editions of FireBringer and The Sight and a coedition of The Sight and Fell.

From Booklist:

Gr. 6-9. A wizened crone at the village fair reads the cards for young Rhodri Falcon, revealing the suffering to come from a looming war. In his haste to escape from the crone’s strange intensity, Rhodri is drawn toward a grizzled and blind blacksmith who speaks of quests, a true sword, and the mysterious Telling Pool. These ancients’ interest in Rhodri, the son of a Welsh falconer who serves a Norman lord during the time of the Third Crusade, hinges on an ancestry of which he has no knowledge: Rhodri is descended from Arthur’s Guinevere and has an important role to play in the dark times ahead. With the aid of the blacksmith, the powers of the Telling Pool, his beloved rock falcon, a wise young woman, and an infamous sword, Rhodri must walk a difficult path to save his family, king, and country from the forces of evil…a satisfying and well-crafted story that through Arthurian lore, brings a steadfast young boy to manhood and adult understanding. Holly Koelling
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Filed under America and the UK, Books, Childrens Books, Phoenix Catalogue, Young Adult

THE PHOENIX OFFICE BIRD

There is a little bird sitting in the office who keeps looking at us with a raised eyebrow, wondering what exactly we are feeding it. If thoughts that the Phoenix Bird might have expired of late due to emotional exhaustion have been much overplayed, like reports of our death, it is of course obvious that you simply cannot kill a Phoenix. But what to feed this creature of power and delight, so that it grows into a creature of truly mythical plummage and protects writers who care about the art? Of course, new stories, so Phoenix Ark Press are delighted to announce that SCREAM OF THE WHITE BEAR will be published both as an Ebook and in paperback this Summer, August, 1st 2012.

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THE FRIENDS OF PHOENIX ARK PRESS

Dedications are not often talked about as part of books, but if you look in the dedication page to Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets you will see it reads like this:

“For Sean P. F. Harris, getaway driver and foulweather friend”.

Perhaps many of us need ‘foulweather friends’ at the moment, but JK Rowling has often talked of the trouble she found herself in, how long it lasted, and how she found out then who her real friends were. In The Times this weekend Lionel Shriver also wrote a rather good piece on the deep hurt of friendships gone bad, just as important, perhaps even more so, than physical relationships, or love affairs. So here is a Phoenix Ark Press list of fair and foulweather friends! The foulweather of course are the real ones, there in hard times and they have been the most unexpected and surprising.

FAIRWEATHER
Sarah Van More
Harold Rove
Tara Break
James ‘Iago’ Smith
Hugh Whitworth
Paul Simkins
P Mount
Lottie Reynolds

FOULWEATHER
Lady C
Dinah P
Tim B
Kate and Saint James
Bill and L
Cathy
Ajay
Marco
LC
Stephanie
CCD
Dr S
Murray
Wisewolf

Any one who has so kindly written to the blog.

So a brand new idea too, which is an invitation to become a Friend of Phoenix Ark Press. One day we’ll try to get you the badge, the sticker and the T-Shirt!

The idea is especially to help get Scream of the White Bear into print, as many fans would like to see it, namely not just to Kindle. You can Donate above, and it will only be used for that specific purpose, or you can just give moral support and share in a little community. Perhaps you can see it as a kind of books and culture club. Either way, if you sign up as Friend of the Press by writing with enormous enthusiasm and absurd passion and warmth to us here, you will receive a heartfelt thank you, a free copy if you donate, and your name in print too, in the dedication page, when and if (!!!) the book comes out.

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FRANK GARDNER, TINTIN AND WHAT IS GAINED IN TRANSLATION

I have met Frank Gardiner, and was as shocked by his shooting as I was impressed and moved by how he has fought on as a journalist, now in a wheel chair. His race after the story of Tintin last night was very interesting, though perhaps it lacked a little humour. But Gardiner is a serious journalist, he says inspired to the cause by the books themselves, and it is certainly true that Tintin is the straight man to all the other action. So following the first book, Tintin in the Land of the Soviets, still banned in Russia, was a worthy journey. It was fascinating to see how Herge used real life, up to the minute press stories, and how his own politics was influenced by exposing the evils of the Bolsheviks. He was engaged with his time, on a world scale, and that itself may have justified a young man’s initial silence about the Nazis, in a country under occupation. Remember they tried to suggest PG Woodhouse had facist tendencies too.

But the best bit was learning about that man-woman team who championed the cause and became Tintin’s original translators. Every culture makes great works their own, and of course to us the Tintin books were identifiably British, thus easy to relate to, though with more than a hint of the exotic too. Marlinspike Hall locates it in a British world, though modelled on a French Chateau, but of course that was thanks to translations of characters like Professor Turnasol into Calculus, and Dupont and Dupond into Thomson and Thompson. Above all though in those oddly Belgian books comes Tintin’s great friend and cypher, beyond Snowy, Captain Haddock. The old sea dog’s Red Rackham’s Treasury of colourful swear words were summoned from their imaginations and we owe them a very great debt, by blue blistering barnacles!

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RIOTS, WATERSTONES AND A BONEFIRE OF THE VANITIES

An American academic friend wrote today to ask me ‘so David, what’s up with your people?!‘ Good question. It seems to be one of the favourite moments in the movie Indianna Jones and The Last Crusade though, certainly mine, when Indy bumps into Hitler at the Berlin books burning and the Furher signs his diary. Someone pointed out that the sequence is set in 1938, and the book burnings really happened in 1933, but we already know that fantasy plays with fact, and Spielburg always does that brilliantly. Before the US or anyone starts to gloat about London though, I was, before my recent attempt to leave behind a bad ‘past’, going to use it to create a viral video and attack not what is happening in London, but my American publisher Abrams, for their own attitude to my books, and to free speech too. Because when a publisher does that to its own author and work, in a kind of bonefire of the vanities and values, something is seriously wrong.

But now London has been burning, a point came up on Newsnight yesterday from a ‘Free School‘ proponent about the search for ‘bling‘, quick cash and the fact that you have not seen looters attacking Waterstones, only the trainers stores, mobile phone shops and bookies nearby (as in the gamboling shops, not the printers or binders!). Of course, it makes the very good point that there is no deeper social statement being made, it is a mix of frustration, aggression and directed criminality, but it’s also a very middle class thing to say. It would be almost reassuring to see our angry youth trying to break into Waterstones, to get their hands on bundles of The Master and Margerita, The End of the Affair, War and Peace or Brazzaville Beach and flog them down the Old Kent road, or read them to each other by bonefire light. The bigger point, of course, is the frightening figures suggesting 17% of 15 year olds are functionally illiterate, fed by the addictions of the image, MTV values (coming out of America too) and all the hypocrisies that Big Brother, Celebrity and fame obsessed culture engenders. In the modern crisis of publishing too though, in the spawning of celebrity biogs, ‘ how I made it rich’ tales and the decline of writer’s voices in the democratisation of publishing methods, there are subtler ways of producing real book burnings at work. But people need to be literate in a great many ways. Reading literate, emotionally literate, professionally literate, legally literate and especially socially literate. Something like one in three London parents also say they are not confident enough to read aloud to their children, and that storytelling process is a key part of bonding, mentoring and sharing values.

Apart from the policing questions though, and political grand standing, apart from economic and moral arguments, especially about family and community structures and responsible mentoring, in the ‘am I my brother’s keeper?’ mould, there needs to be a very real debate about culture too and what, if anything, it means nowadays. About the decline of communities, the dislocations of social networking and perhaps, above all, about the shift from a reading culture, to a visual and news driven one, twenty-four hours a day, that is itself massively addictive. The eye finds it hard to resist a moving object. Not only are markets connected world-wide though, but so is a Western world ‘culture’, and to be frank, especially with my own New York publishing experience, there are many bad things to say about that too. I remember very well being in New York though when there were minor riots, because of a limit on the number of Playstations available, so perhaps no-one is immune. Wouldn’t it be nice if we could all sit down together and read a good book! In the pro-free speech and anti-book burning argument though, it is the paradox of freedom that we probably need less forms of entertainment and product, not more, just more of a sense of some shared culture and one that brings both value and meaning.

The photo shows the Wikepedia photo by David Shankbone of books burned by the Nazis, at the Yad Vashem memorial.

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Filed under America and the UK, Books, Community, Culture, Education