Global Rights Watchlist
Confirmed rights records appear first. When confirmed rows are sparse, the page separates watchlist signals from public shelf records so the first paint still explains what is documented.
Confirmed rights records appear first. When confirmed rows are sparse, the page separates watchlist signals from public shelf records so the first paint still explains what is documented.
Monitor confirmed rights records across tracked countries, languages, and publishers. Launch shows the broader public market layer first: shelf records, documented publishers, translation routes, and only those confirmed rights records already visible in public. Rights Watchlist narrows that same record to confirmed rights records first, then falls back to clearly labeled watchlist signals drawn from documented books, translation gaps, and market records.
Confirmed rights records are the main feed. Watchlist signals are earlier cues from the public record that have not yet qualified as confirmed rights records. The page labels that distinction explicitly so the rights view stays compatible with Launch and each country shelf.
Rights watchlist
No confirmed rights records for these filters yet
Confirmed rights records will appear here as they are documented with enough context to trust.
No English edition documented means WPH has not documented an English edition in current sources. Rights status must be confirmed with the publisher or agency.
Documented records count the rows currently in view. Countries visible counts the distinct markets represented by those rows. Confirmed rights records are the documented rows that qualify as full rights records rather than watchlist signals.
No qualified rights rows match this filter set yet.
Broaden the target language, change country, or remove a genre, mood, or subject filter to return to the wider watchlist.
There are no qualified rights rows for the current filter combination, not a broken page.
What's live now
No qualified rights rows are visible here yet, but these books, publishers, and early signals are already visible elsewhere in the public record.