Yellow Kite

Yellow Kite is an imprint of Hodder & Stoughton, a British publishing house, now a division of Hachette.

History

An imprint of Hodder and Stoughton, Yellow Kite was founded in 2013 by Liz Gough – (who would brought it to launch) one of the first ever lists dedicated to the health and well-being genre. Yellow Kite began publishing in January 2014[1] and in its first year (Yellow Kite) had two Sunday Times Top Ten bestsellers: One Million Lovely Letters by Jodi Ann Bickley and Black Rainbow by Rachel Kelly. It also had a New York Times bestseller with David Perlmutter’s Grain Brain. Publishing about a dozen non-fiction titles per year, its (stated) mission is to produce ‘books to help you live a good life’ covering inspirational self-help and memoir, mind, body and spirit, healthy eating, diet, nutrition, and practical personal development. In 2015, Yellow Kite published the biggest selling debut cookery book since records began – Deliciously Ella by healthy eating phenomena Ella Woodward.[2] The book went on to sell more than a quarter of a million copies in 2015 and positioned Woodward as a brand author in the healthy eating arena. In 2016 Yellow Kite published Ella Woodward’s second book Deliciously Ella Every Day along with bestselling diet title The Sirtfood Diet and the debut book Keep It Real by Vogue Commissioning Editor and healthy eating "guru" Calgary Avansino. Its online wellbeing festival,[3] launched in 2015 is now an annual event which celebrates its books and authors.

gollark: PotatOS has from 6_4's list: VFS, multitasking, networking, sandboxing, compatibility with normal CC programs, not encryption yet but limited compression, backup system, antivirus, optional code signing requirement, sort of IPC (not really, planning to do it properly), authorization system, running on a variety of screen sizes / color palettes (grayscale mapping), error handling (stacktrace thing), password / security, uninstallation, specific area for config / user data, cloud, security profiles, lots of libraries, able to turn off certain parts, daemons, caches, documentation (loosely), bootloader (ish), file encoding, securing the OS/kernel, and TLCO.
gollark: I bet there are web factorizer tools.
gollark: Please stop.
gollark: It's coreutils or something, yes.
gollark: Don't.

References

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