Unlike the Tower of London or Edgar Allan Poe, we have no ravens. So it is quite fitting that we look to be in no danger of falling and that our current manuscript submission rate is best described as “evermore”. Chemical biology is receiving more attention than ever. The numbers of research papers that stem from the field have clearly increased over the past couple of years, and a growing number of universities are offering courses in chemical biology in its own right. At ChemBioChem, we have had a particularly privileged position in watching the rapid advance and development of this young discipline. In fact, given that in 2007 approximately 90 % of the pages in ChemBioChem were dedicated to your original research articles (160 Full Papers, 116 Communications), our impression is that chemical biology is not merely “developing”, it is thriving. At the end of 2006, we made what we, at the time, perceived to be a daring move to 18 issues per year—daring because we were not entirely certain how this would be received by the community. Had we known that in 2007 alone we would see a more than 40 % increase in the number of submissions, we might have considered the decision to be less daring than sheer necessity! With the trust that you continue to invest in the journal by submitting your research work to ChemBioChem and with the increased impact factor of 4.100, to all intents and purposes ChemBioChem has taken on a life and identity of its own. The regional distribution of the submissions at ChemBioChem has not changed: the majority of our manuscripts still stem from Europe (50 %) followed by Asia (30 %) and North America (20 %). An idea of how the numbers have grown overall can be gleaned from Figure 1. This growth, as might be expected, led to a slight increase in publication times for the latter half of 2007. Nevertheless, the overall downward trend in the time it takes for us to publish your articles has continued, and we will make every effort to ensure that we stay on course. The average time from submission to on-line (EarlyView) publication for the first 16 issues of 2007 was less than 100 days; in fact 50 % of manuscripts were published on-line in less than 70 days! In comparison with the publication times of 2006, which averaged at about 130 days (receipt to on-line publication), we can safely say that our efforts have made a difference. Above all, we remain committed to the quality that you have come to expect from ChemBioChem, which is reflected in our maintained rejection rate of more than 50 % (Figure 1). To give you an idea of the quality of the papers that we have published over the last year, a list of the top ten articles downloaded from Wiley InterScience can be found in Table 1. Total number of manuscripts received and published by ChemBioChem between 2001 and 2007; * indicates extrapolated figure. Title Authors Volume (Issue) “Simple and Rapid Colorimetric Biosensors Based on DNA Aptamer and Noncrosslinking Gold Nanoparticle Aggregation” Y. Li, M. A. Brook et al. 8 (7) “Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction” J. Wilhelm and A. Pingoud 4 (11) “Bifunctional Ligands that Target Cells Displaying the αvβ3 Integrin” L. L. Kiessling et al. 8 (1) “Drug Design Strategies for Targeting G Protein-Coupled Receptors” T. Klabunde and G. Hessler 3 (10) “Seeing Is Believing: Peptide-Based Fluorescent Sensors of Protein Tyrosine Kinase Activity” D. S. Lawrence and Q. Wang 8 (4) “Molecular Mechanisms of agr Quorum Sensing in Virulent Staphylococci” T. W. Muir and E. A. George 8 (8) “Chemical Labeling of Protein in Living Cells” J. Rao and A. Dragulescu-Andrasi 8 (10) “Metal-Free Triazole Formation as a Tool for Bioconjugation” J. J. L. M. Cornelissen, F. P. J. T. Rutjes et al. 8 (13) “Evidence for the Mode of Action of the Highly Cytotoxic Streptomyces Polyketide Kendomycin” R. Müller et al. 8 (11) “Optimized Fluorescent Trimethoprim Derivatives for in vivo Protein Labeling” L. W. Miller, V. W. Cornish et al. 8 (7) This information along with other recently launched features on Wiley InterScience will help you to keep track of the best science that is being published not just in ChemBioChem but across the family of journals lead by Angew. Chem. A new link on the right-hand side of our homepage, for instance, will lead you straight to the most-cited articles. Naturally, this is not the only thing that is new. For authors of primary research articles whose funding agency requires an article to be deposited in an archive, ChemBioChem and its sister journals have adopted Funded Access. With this option, the article can be made available to non-subscribers upon publication via Wiley InterScience, as well as being delivered to the funding agency's preferred archive when applicable. (For more information, please see the link at the top of the ChemBioChem homepage.) We are, of course, very proud to announce that another journal has joined the family. ChemSusChem 1 (http://www.ChemSusChem.org) will cover research at the interface of chemistry and sustainability, with an emphasis on all aspects of green chemistry from energy research to materials science and from chemical engineering to biotechnology. You will be able to keep informed about the developments in ChemSusChem through the two-page “Spotlight” section that we have been providing for you since July. Like ChemMedChem, our new sister journal is co-owned by the Italian and the German Chemical Societies (SCI, GDCh) as well as 12 other European Chemical Societies. As a unit, we will provide our readers with a one-stop resource for all that is current in chemistry at the interface with other disciplines. We shall continue to expand and improve our services to our authors and readers through 2008. In order to be able to do this effectively, your feedback is invaluable. We have already received some input from you through the customer satisfaction survey that was carried out last year by Wiley-VCH. Your reaction and response to the journal remains fundamentally positive, and the message we have received can best be summed up by the comment from one particular author: “Nice journal, serious publisher, good impact.” We thank you—our authors, readers, referees, and editorial board members—for making 2007 another milestone for ChemBioChem. The editorial team wishes you a happy and prosperous New Year and we look forward to continuing the successful collaboration between us. 1 1 1