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Studio Notes


Augmented Reality Children’s Books: What Happened When We Tried It in 2010
Before AR became a buzzword, I built interactive children’s books using webcams and printed pages. Here’s what worked, what failed—and why the market wasn’t ready.
11 min read


Why the Society of Authors Keeps Getting Blamed - And Why the Real Problem Lies Elsewhere
Why is the Society of Authors criticised for neutrality while authors feel increasingly unsafe? Because publishers have abandoned cultural leadership. This blog explores how consultancy thinking, risk avoidance, and corporate amnesia have left the SoA carrying the weight of an industry too timid to defend its own creators.
5 min read


Nobody's Girl - Virginia Roberts Giuffre and other Books That Have Killed Reputation
From the unforgettable scream of "No wire hangers!" to the surreal spectacle of "Piggate," these books dropped bombs on the images of some of the most powerful public figures. This is a look at the moments when books didn’t just make headlines — they remade history.
18 min read


Diversity at the Front Door, Amnesia at the Back: Why Recognition Still Matters in Publishing
Publishing loves a good diversity panel. But behind the scenes, creators are quietly being erased. If we don’t protect credits, are we building legacy— or theatre?
4 min read


Reader’s Digest: Rise and Fall of a Publishing Giant
From a speakeasy basement in 1920s New York to a marble-and-brass editorial fortress in Berkeley Square, Reader’s Digest defined 20th-century publishing. I began my career at their London offices in 1979, and watched as the world’s most widely read magazine rose, thrived, and slowly faded. This is a story about illustrated books, prize draws, fine art, forgotten founders, and a publishing ethos that might just deserve a second look in today’s AI era.
9 min read


Who Killed the Author?
In 1495, Gutenberg’s printing press rewrote the rules of power, religion, and knowledge - fueling revolutions and reshaping Europe.
14 min read
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