Your weekly round 
up of publishing news, publicity information and trivia!
Good afternoon! Compass Points is back this 
week after a short holiday – I do hope that anyone else who had a little break 
enjoyed it!
Well – it’s always good to see one of our books 
mentioned on prime time TV in front of millions of viewers – and such a moment 
occurred on Wednesday evening when Dara O’Briain suggested that the latest 
candidate on The Apprentice to be booted out by Lord Sugar might enjoy 
reading The Buffer’s Guide 
to Wine! What a great plug for this book – and indeed the 
whole Bluffer’s Guide series. There are 
three more must-have guides coming in August –  
where you can find out all the information you will ever need on Football, Opera 
and Rock Music – and all 
without having sit through Match of the Day, Wagner’s  Ring Cycle or a Stone Roses concert – what a 
result!
Big summer blockbuster films – love them or hate 
them – the season is definitely upon us. One of the biggest is going to be 
The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones. This is the first instalment of a 
movie franchise based on the multi-million-selling series of 
supernaturally-themed Young Adult books. Have a little watch of the trailer below – even if you are not a fan of this particular 
genre, I defy you not to jump about 10 feet up in the air at one point! One 
thing is for sure – it is about to make a mega star out of the male lead - 
Jamie Campbell Bower. This young chap 
already has a big fan base with the laydeez after vamping it up and casting 
spells in the Twilight and Harry Potter franchises; and he is now 
poised to become a household name. So – what a bit of luck that coming in July 
is The Jamie Campbell Bower Album from 
Plexus. Filled with facts and trivia, this full colour paperback reveals 
all about the young actor’s formative years at an English boarding school and 
early forays into youth theatre; his first major role opposite Johnny Depp in 
Tim Burton  ’s Sweeney Todd; his short-lived engagement 
to Harry Potter co-star Bonnie Wright, and subsequent romance with Mortal 
Instruments leading lady Lily Collins. Also covered is his bohemian personal 
style; his life as front man of indie-rock band the Darling Buds; his 
experiences shooting and promoting the Twilight films, and his on-set 
adventures everywhere from Ireland  to Canada  to Africa . Illustrated throughout with full-colour photos, 
this visual biography tells you everything there is to know about Jamie – from 
his least favourite thing about working on Breaking Dawn to the one item 
of clothing he’ll never leave the house without – and why he’s about to hit the 
big time. This book is £12.99, make sure it’s well displayed – you know you’ll 
sell loads to all those swooning teens!
Now – another topic that provokes a love/hate 
reaction: footie. I actually thought the football season was over; but no – it 
still seems to be going on and on … and on. One man certainly much in the news 
recently is Sir Alex Ferguson – who 
co-incidentally has written the foreword to a major new biography of Denis Law – King and Country. Sir Alex says “He 
was the finest player that Scotland   has ever produced and one of 
the greatest the world has ever seen. He was my idol as a player.”  Top praise indeed. If you are not familiar 
with the legendary goal scoring brilliance of Denis Law, then have a quick watch 
of a short YouTube film below.  In this 
unique portrait; the first book solely devoted to Denis Law’s illustrious international career; 
Alex Gordon interviews a vast array of 
former teammates such as John Grieg and international opponents such as 
Gordon Banks, George Best and Bobby Charlton. Denis Law was the showman supreme. He was more 
than a mere goal scorer whose cavalier thrusts and menacing darts brought panic 
to opposing defences. Law was an inspiration to those around him at club and 
country level and to younger generations of fans everywhere. Team-mates adored 
him, opponents feared him, fans revered him. He was a free spirit, an extrovert, 
a complete one-off, a rare combination of impudence and intelligence, class and 
clout. Denis Law is, was and always will 
be The King. He is undoubtedly one of football’s favourite sons and there will 
be a big market for this book from Man Utd fans, Scottish fans – in fact all 
footie fans in general! It is published by Arena Sport in 
August.
 Now – click here is the instantly recognizable trailer for a 
film that has become one of the most talked about of a generation. 
It still 
looks totally modern, so it is very hard to believe that it is in fact 20 years 
since Trainspotting burst into the world. 
It has now sold over one million copies in the UK alone, has been translated 
into thirty languages, was long listed for the 1993 Booker Prize, was 
number 10 in Waterstone’s Top 100 Books of the Twentieth Century,  tenth in the BFI’s 100 Best British 
Films and voted Best Scottish Film of All Time. Lust for Life: The Trainspotting Phenomenon by 
Neil Munro is published to coincide with 
the novel’s twentieth anniversary, has been officially approved by Irvine Welsh 
and contains rare, unseen photographs.  The book takes us back to the mid-1980s, when 
Irvine Welsh’s life was going nowhere fast. His teenage dreams of being a 
footballer or a rock star were over, and he was stuck in a series of 
white-collar jobs which he loathed. With the last throw of the dice, he started 
to write. In 1993 his debut novel – which centred on the desperate day-to-day 
struggles of a group of Edinburgh   junkies – was published. Even 
Irvine  ’s 
publisher, Secker &Warburg, didn’t hold out much hope. Only 1,000 copies 
were printed and the word was that Irvine   might become a cult author. But, as the 
rave reviews increased, the book rapidly achieved global success. It was 
followed, in 1996, by Danny Boyle’s raw, high-energy film, which received 
worldwide critical acclaim and launched the careers of several young Scots 
actors such as Ewan McGregor, Ewen Bremner and Kelly Macdonald. So, how did an 
unknown Edinburgh   writer pen this extraordinary story? 
 Lust for 
Life: The Trainspotting Phenomenon is published by Birlinn in 
August at £12.99.
As sunshine and warm weather finally seems to have 
hit the UK ; it’s hard to 
imagine what it would be like to be in one of the coldest and most desolate 
places on earth – Antarctica . What would it 
feel like to be out there alone in that empty vastness?  Only three people in the world have crossed 
Antarctica  alone. The first two were men and 
both Norwegian. At the age of 34, British woman Felicity Aston became the third – and unlike her 
predecessors, she didn’t use kites or parasails to assist her. Alone in Antarctica is a gripping and 
inspirational account of personal endurance shows what you can achieve when you 
grit your teeth and decide just to get through today in one piece. Felicity Aston has spent over a decade travelling, 
working and living all over the Polar Regions . 
In 2009 she led the first international team of women ever to ski to the South 
Pole; which became the subject of her first book, Call of the White. 
Outside Magazine, the leading adventure-travel magazine in the US  , 
named her one of their 2012 Adventurers of the Year and Felicity’s 
achievement was reported around the globe: the volume and breadth of media 
interest indicates the human interest value of the story. During the 59-day 
journey, Felicity was able to send text messages, and her openness and humour 
earned her a following of 10,000 people on Twitter, with more than 130,000 
listening to her ‘phonecasts’. Alone in 
Antarctica is a unique account of an adventurer’s emotional and 
psychological journey and with the approaching centenary of Shackleton’s 
‘Endurance’ expedition in 2014; this is an ideal time for a fresh, modern 
perspective on Antarctic exploration for a new generation. You can find out more 
about Felicity on her website www.felicityaston.co.uk and you can order Alone in Antarctica here.
“Amazon: the destroyer of bookshops”? Strong 
words – and they’re not mine but those of the France  ’s Culture Minister 
Aurélie Filippetti. Her attack coincided with her announcement of a €9m joint 
plan with French publishers to support independent booksellers. Her ideas make 
interesting reading – and you can find out all about it in an article in this 
week’s Telegraph here.
And finally – if you’re looking for some new display 
ideas for your bookshop; then have a look here for 35 suggestions as to what to do with all those books!
This newsletter is sent weekly to over 600 
booksellers, publishers and publicists. If you would like to order any of the 
titles mentioned, then please click here to go to the Compass New Titles 
Website or talk to your Compass Sales 
representative.
That’s all for now 
folks, more next week!







I'm going to try that arch of books round my door right now!
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