Brace yourselves for a luvvie-fest darlings, this 
year the National Theatre is 50.  As part 
of the celebrations, the BBC will be broadcasting a unique, live 90 minute 
performance from the NT’s Olivier Theatre on BBC 2 on 2 November, 
consisting of a montage of theatrical landmarks from the past 50 years. There 
will also be two BBC 4 Arena documentaries on 19 and 26 Oct and a 
BBC Radio 4 Extra afternoon of NT delights. All fabulous publicity for 
our book The National Theatre Story by 
Daniel Rosenthal which will be serialised 
in the Sunday Times on 3rd Nov, alongside features and interviews. This 
definitive, authorized account takes readers from the National Theatre’s 
19th‐century origins, through false dawns in the early 
1900s and on to its hard‐fought inauguration in 1963 at the Old Vic. There, 
Laurence Olivier was for ten years the inspirational leader of the NT Company, 
before it moved into its concrete, South Bank home, whose three theatres have 
since 1976 hosted more than 700 productions, premiering some of the 20th and 
21st centuries’ most popular and controversial plays, including Amadeus, 
The Romans in Britain, The History Boys and War Horse. 
Certain to be essential reading for theatre lovers and students, The National Theatre Story is packed with 
photographs and draws on Daniel 
Rosenthal’s unprecedented access to the National Theatre's archives, 
unpublished correspondence and more than 100 new interviews with directors, 
playwrights and actors, including Olivier’s four successors as NT Director 
(Peter Hall, Richard Eyre, Trevor Nunn and Nicholas Hytner), as well as the 
likes of Edward Albee, Alan Bennett, Judi Dench, Michael Gambon, David Hare, Ian 
McKellen, Maggie Smith, Stephen Sondheim and Tom Stoppard. This sumptuous 
800-page £35 hardback is full of great photos and is published by Oberon 
Books in November. You can order it here.
Let’s remind ourselves of some of the NT’s most 
famous moments – here’s Laurence Olivier taking 
about what makes a great actor from the time when the theatre began 
back in the 1960’s. And here’s a trailer from one of its most famous recent 
productions; War Horse – based on the wonderful book by Michael 
Morpurgo of course. If you haven’t seen this amazing production then I really do 
urge you to go.
Trains and Lovers by Alexander McCall 
Smith is coming in paperback in November from Polygon – with 
an absolutely gorgeous cover, this is the ideal stocking filler present for – 
well pretty much anyone who loves a good read really! This lovely novel from one 
of the world’s most popular authors links 
a group of passengers on an Edinburgh  to 
London 
You can order Trains and Lovers here and remind yourselves of 
the ultimate Trains and Lovers film clip 
here!
Now, who wanted Frances UK New 
York 
More good news for our poetry titles: we’ve just 
heard that Parallax by Sinéad Morrissey has been shortlisted for the 
T.S. Eliot Prize, which was announced 
yesterday. Sinéad Morrissey is a vital 
voice in contemporary Northern Irish poetry and in August 2013 she was appointed 
Belfast 
Now, I know some of us really could not give a 
monkeys about footie titles – but there are many many out there who do buy them 
– and this one has the potential to be a big bestseller. Spain: The Inside Story of La Roja’s Historic 
Treble by Graham Hunter 
published by Back Page Press in November follows in the critical and 
commercial success of Graham’s 2012 title, Barca: 
The Making of the Greatest Team in the World which has now sold 
25,000 copies (paperback) in 12 months in the UK and was Football Book of the 
Year at the 2013 British Sports Book Awards. When they won the 2012 
European Championships, Spain Spain  will be favourites to win their fourth 
major championship in Brazil Germany Spain Spain 
This next title will appeal to any of us who has 
ever sat at work, daydreaming of ways to make their work and their annoying 
colleagues disappear. That deadline is looming, your diary is full to the brim 
with mind-numbing meetings, and that pile of paperwork has grown so much that 
it’s touching the ceiling. It’s no wonder you’re at your wits’ end. Office Genius: An Alternative Guide to Getting 
By at Work by James Andrews is an amusing catalogue of tricks 
and shortcuts which has the solution to all your office work problems. Whether 
it’s subtly letting down a colleague who has had a rubbish idea with a 
Consolation Cupcake or making other workers jealous of your self-inflated salary 
with a Fake Payslip, Office Genius is the perfect antidote to dreary days 
behind a desk. It’s published by Summersdale as a £9.99 Gift and Humour 
paperback in November.  Order Office Genius here
And talking of being annoying in an office – well – 
there’s only really one clip we could choose really; have a look below to see Twenty 
Five of the Office's funniest lines
That’s all for now 
folks, more next week!
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.






 
David Brent for PM!
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