Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Daily Thoughts 9/1/2010 (Blogs, The Defector)
Daily Thoughts 9/1/2010
I took a little bit of time to look through places that had links to my site. There is http://www.shakespearewroteformoney.wordpress.com/ which is a book review site and http://www.morevikings.com/ which is an entertaining site on books, comics and speculative fiction book reviews. Speculative fiction is an all encompassing term for writing that speculates about the nature of reality; it includes science fiction, horror, magical realism, fantasy, and other books with fantastic elements in them. I rather like the More Vikings site.
I put in the reviews of material from May 2009 today. When I am done, I may go back and pull out links to create a resource list of the internet sites which I have written about.
On the way to work, I found a paperback copy of Daniel Silva, The Defector. It is a spy novel with quite a bit of style and art in it. The author mentions Caravaggio, Vogue, chess, and a villa in Italy in the first 23 pages. I rather like it.
Today has been a very busy day. I put together a bookmark for starting a business today as well as had several of my older bookmarks printed up for distribution. I also printed up a new form for tracking missing items and had several flyers printed for the Womens Enterprise Development Center sessions on small business. I also took some time to sort through the donations for a few minutes. There was a new copy of Before I Fail by Lauren Oliver which is a fiction title, some classsic paperbacks, and a few Naruto graphic novels.
The requests for the book mobile came in as well. There were a number of requests for books on the bounty mutiny as well as works by David Niven, books on Leonardo Da Vinci, and biographies.
Friday, June 11, 2010
Daily Thoughts 6/11/2010
Front view of a plant sculpture of a green bookworm reading a book with a B and C on it. Photo from Manchester.11 July 2008 (2008-07-11), 15:09:08, Taken by Terry from Wikimedia, Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic Daily Thoughts 6/11/2010
Today, I looked at my stats. I looked at Webmaster Tools to check on search queries related to my blog. http://www.google.com/webmaster/tools/
The number one search term which my blog comes up under is Rosie The Riveter. There is a certain irony in this. It is exactly the type of thing which I don't mind being attached to. This is followed by monopoly pieces. I am rather partial to the hat. Then comes Mary Shelley. I do rather like Frankenstein. The internet can be both silly and amazing at times.
The keywords are almost on target. The number one keyword is thoughts followed by book. I do think a lot and read a lot of books. The keywords are not that far off.
I also like to look at http://siteexplorer.search.yahoo.com/ Yahoo's Site Explorer. I find it to be more interesting and accurate than most other site exploration functions including the hit counter on my blog. I usually find out about some rather interesting sites that are linked to my blog.
Here are a few that are not in my blogroll. I wonder sometimes if I should include a set of links for non-book related sites in my sidebar. There are a few blogs which follow me very regularly which have other functions than books. Chicago History Journal is where I get the majority of inbound links for my blog. I find it rather interesting. http://www.chicagohistoryjournal.com/ .
Another blog which I enjoy a lot is Cromely. The pictures of gardening, travel and conventions are wonderful. He has some excellent comic book material, material on Star Trek, and a few book reviews. If a blog has a lot of book reviews, but is not purely a book review blog, is it a book review blog. Blogs are very flexible in their content. http://cromely.blogspot.com/
There were also a few book blogs which linked to my site in their blogger profile, but not necessarily in their blogroll; Bookish Ruth, http://www.bookishruth.com/ , Lexie, http://lotuseyes.livejournal.com/ , Magdalena ball, http://www.compulsivereader.com/html/ , and Sandra http://freshinkbooks.blogspot.com/ .
The Viscount Who Loved Me by Julia Quinn came in for me to read. This is for me to read for my Readers Advisory 101 class. Occassionally, we have to step out of our normal reading habits and try books which are a bit different, not necessarily our favorite subjects. Reading it would be part of my continuing education as a librarian.
Today, I focused a bit on getting the Bookletters page ready, took one more look at the Suggestion an Item form for our library website, and printed up some flyers for the upcoming poetry program. I also talked to someone about a table they set up in the lobby. They are offering computer classes for adults something which a lot of people have been asking for at the library.
We finally have a new bestsellers page put together from Bookletters and a suggest an item for purchase form up on our website. I have worked a little bit more on evance which is an online sign up form for summer reading. It is the second year we are going to be doing the adult section of the summer reading program.
I also picked up a short paperback called Food Rules An Eaters Manual by Michael Pollan. He is the author of The Omnivore's Dilemma.
I read some of The Viscount Who Loved Me. It is easily one of the most atrocious books I have ever attempted to read. The rakeViscount Bridgerton father dies after being stung by a bee and his love interest reads gossip sheets. It is awful. On the cover of the book are the words USA Tdoay Bestselling Author. It made me sleepy.
I do occassionally read romance titles. I like Elizabeth Lowell and Linnea Sinclair. I am even intrigued by some of the settings in romance, the Harlequin NASCAR romances seem like they would be interesting. We get lots of requests for romance, especially African American romance, Brenda Jackson and Rochelle Alers are asked for a lot. We get a lot of historical romances. Kathleen Woodiwiss is very popular.
Monday, February 9, 2009
O'Reilly Tools of Change For Publishing (Part 1)
The Allegory of Painting -or- The Art of Painting, Jan Vermeer van Delft, 1666 O'Reilly Tools of Change For Publishing
Good morning. I am sitting at my computer at 5 a.m. typing away. I am ready to go to the O'Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing Conference. It starts with a continental breakfast at 7:30 a.m. . This is the conference with the earliest start I have ever been to. I will be taking the train in a few moments. I am very much looking forward to going.
I read a bit more of Monster A Novel on the way to the conference. The train was not very full in the early morning hours. It was nice light entertainment.
I got to the conference at 7:00 a.m. at the Marriott Marquis Hotel on 1545 Avenue of the Americas. The continental breakfast was quite pleasant. I talked to a lady from New Zealand who was there to learn about what was happening with the web. The breakfast was pleasant and the coffee was good.
I went to the first panel by Chris Brogan who has a blog at http://www.chrisbrogan.com/ . The title of the panel was Blogging and Social Media. His blog looks very well put together.
His presentation reminded me of someone who had very deep web knowledge like http://www.searchlores.org/ (Fravia) or Shally Steckerl http://jobmachine.net/shally/ (Recruitment), or David Carpe, http://clewllc.com/ (Business Research). I realize these are research oriented people with a different focus, but the knowledge is there.
The panel started at 8:30 a.m. in the North Ball Room. Apparently, Chris Brogan likes libraries, bookstores, and comic books something I can very much relate to. He chatted with me for a few moments before the panel started.
He had a very open ended discussion that was not in a particular order. It was spoken extemporaneously with lots of questions from the audience. I am rearranging what I think I learned from his talk to the audience. It was quite enlightening. This is more an arrangement of thoughts than anything else. Everyone sees the world differently, so what I remember may not exactly mirror the words of the speaker, but they should be somewhat similar.
I took notes in long hand on a pad of paper. I like writing and taking notes in long hand because the physical act of writing helps me remember what I am writing. I also rearranged what I heard so I could make sense of it.
More than one person should work on a blog in a company. The primary purpose of blogging is communication. The first thing that a person should see on the top of a blog is how to communicate with the author. The purpose of social media is to have presence and communicate with people. Social media is two way communication.
The currency of blogging and social media is trust and attention. This means not just using things like twitter, but combining them with older methods like email marketing. If you want a successful blog you should make things easily accessible and help people. Also, you should give a reason for people to visit your blog. Part of that reason it to point to places where people can find useful information.
Most blog and web tools are free and cheap. It is more important to invest in educating yourself in how the tools work than buying very expensive technology. Most of the tools he demonstrated on the screen like http://www.twitterfall.com/ and http://www.wordpress.org/ are free.
He mentioned a software application for annotating different locations in the world called Bright Kite using an Iphone. You can say things about specific locations when you visit them. He compared this to William Gibson's science fiction novel Spook Country where the main character used virtual reality to annotate different physical locations. He called this ARG (Alternate Reality Games). It sounds like one of those classic techie things where you can do unusual things with the internet.
Another idea he expressed was that publishers were becoming information brokers. A book is a package or bundle of information. He said that if he buys a book, he should be able to read the physical copy, listen to it in the car, and read it on his iphone on the way into the office. It should be a complete experience. I rather liked this idea. I can see this happening easily in the not too distant future.
Twitter was a large part of the conversation and tools built around Twitter. He compared Twitter to the phone of the future. I rather like Twitter, I was very impressed with his over 30,000 followers on his Twitter feed. I intend to read his tips for blogging on his blog to figure out how to improve what I am currently doing.
Part of this conversation which was all over the place was about authors. One of the authors he mentioned was Neil Gaiman who has a blog at http://www.neilgaiman.com/ and a twitter feed at neilhimself. Although, he did not mention it, the author who I most think of in connection with Neil Gaiman is Jonathan Carroll http://www.jonathancarroll.com/
I asked him about social networks. He pulled out a few suggestions, Shelfari, Librarything, and http://blog.bookoven.com/ An audience member mentioned a site called Red Room. I have Shelfari on my website. I have never heard of Red Room or Book Oven. I also learned about another social networking site for books later in the day, Authonomy. There is also http://www.aalbc.com/ African American Literarature Book Club, http://www.litminds.org/ Lit Minds.
There was the classic mention that people are no longer just consumers of content, they are now producers. A Flip Mino for the price of $100-120 can produce cheap web video. You can buy a domain and very easily redirect content to it through one of the many different sites: ustream.tv, blogtv.com, blogtalkradio.com, blip tv, and viddler.com.
Another theme was something he called, "Cafe Shaped Conversations," or small focused discussiions that relate directly to the reader.
The talk was very open ended, but I can remember large amounts of it still because the speaker was quite vivid. There were other things being discussed, but these are the things which I remember the most from the talk.
I will continue describing the second session after I take the time to rearrange my notes. The second session was as deep as the first session.
Saturday, January 10, 2009
O'Reilly Tools For Change Publishing Conference 2009
I will be attending the February 9 and 10, 2009 O'Reilly Tools For Change Publishing Conference. http://www.toccon.com/toc2009 . I have to thank Joe Wikert's Publishing 2020 Blog for telling me about this conference http://jwikert.typepad.com/. The conference looks tremendous.
It took me a while to get the paperwork together to get my job to cover meeting attendance for the conference. I had to provide a detailed agenda of what I was doing at the conference for them.
This is my agenda:
Contact and look at the booths for the following conference sponsors:
I will be visiting O'Reilly Media (we buy Missing Manuals Series as well as many other computer books for our library.) Oreilly has just made all 140 of their titles available as ebooks http://toc.oreilly.com/2008/12/oreilly-ebooks-130-top-titles-plus-iphone-app-and-head-first-pdfs.html).
I also intend to visit a variety of other vendors including Frommer's Custom Travel Guides (I think they might have a new online product for travel), Safari Books Online (They have an ebooks package for computer books for libraries.), Espresso Book Machines (a print on demand book system.), and The Book Industry Study Group.
I intend to bring back literature from the exhibitor floor for the library. The list is short enough that I won't need a floor map of exhibitors. Hopefully, I will be put on mailing lists for publisher information.
The conference sessions which I am attending are planned out as well:
1) Monday 8:00 a.m. Blogs and Social Media which is led by Chris Brogran of Cross Tech Media. The library I work at is redesigning their web page. Part of the web redesign will be a library blog. We have not chosen a platform or done anything with it yet. I think it could benefit from services like LinkedIn and Twitter.
2) Monday 1:30 p.m. Building Communities Around Content led by Francois Gossieaux (Beeline Labs & Society for New Communications Research.) I am hoping that I can find more about books and publishing communities. When we design a library blog it will have some different purposes than a personal blog. I am interested in how to structure announcements for events.
3) On Tuesday Cory Doctorow will be giving a keynote speech for half an hour. I really like his writing, especially the articles he has written for Locus Magazine. Cory Doctorow has numerous free books available on the internet including the essay Ebooks, Neither E nor Books for the 2004 O'Reilly conference http://manybooks.net/titles/doctorow11071107711077.html
I am also interested in the keynote speech by Peter Brantley from the Digital Library Federation. The presence of large collections of free ebooks is having a very interesting impact on the way people read. I sometimes look at Project Gutenberg to read books that our out of copyright.
4) Tuesday at 10:45 a.m. I am going to Google Book Search past, present, and future by Jon Orwant. Google has been in the news lately with its settlement with the publishing community. I think the session should be quite interesting. Library Journal wrote several articles on this subject.
5) Tuesday at 1:40 p.m. I am going to the session on The Rise of Ebooks with Joe Wikert and Mark Coker. I am interested in hearing about the changes taking place with ebooks. Sony ebooks sold over 300, 000 electronic ink readers last year. Kindle has not released its sales figures for ebooks. The Kindle has been endorsed by people like Oprah Winfrey.
6) On Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. I will be attending What Does The Future Look Like for Publishers. There has been a lot of consolidation in the publishing world, as well as the move of much of the news to online mediums. I prefer reading my news online, and my books in print.
This all may change depending on how things go at the conference. I am looking forward to a very diverse program and a chance to learn a lot about the changes that are happening in the publishing industry. These will all "trickle down" into the library world as well.
I am still looking at the website for the conference to find out a little bit more. I am going to be working on a new business card for the conference.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Morning Thoughts, Thumbnail, Social Networks

This is the new thumbnail I am using for websites like Technorati, Blogcatalog, and Fuelmyblog.
I started reading John Ghazvinian, Untapped, The Scramble for Africa's Oil. I found the listing fo this book when I was looking at the blog, The Thin Red Line. I am past the first fifty pages already, so I will definitely finish reading this book and review it.
I even sent an email to him requesting he put up a Youtube video. There are a lot of authors who use Youtube to promote their books.
Hello, John Ghazvinian,
I am reading your book Untapped The Scramble For Africa's Oil. I was hoping there was a Youtube video of you talking about the book, about two minutes would be fine. It is a short way to promote your book. There are actually a lot of interviews of authors on Youtube. I know it sounds like an odd idea, but it makes it easier for me to review a book on my website. I am blogging anonymously, well sort of anonymously.
Regards,
Book Calendar
http://www.bookcalendar.blogspot.com/
I am beginning to think that in the not too distant future every author, editor, and publisher will have to have a social media kit for the web. It will consist of an image representing the author in multiple sizes, 125 pixel by 125 pixel, 50 pixel by 50 pixel, and 400 pixel by 400 pixel. I think most authors have this. This image will be used to post on sites like Technorati
In addition to this the author or editor will be expected to create either a short talk of about two minutes on the book they are editing or writing, or a brief reading which they did at a store or other venue. Usually, this will be posted as a video on Youtube. It can't be can too long because then the author would be giving away too much. It would be nice if every recent book I read had a short video clip about it.
One of the things I did tonight is go on Technorati and add some blogs to my favorites. Many of these blogs were already in my blogroll on the side of the page. I Technorati favorited Joe Wikert's Publishing 2020 Blog and The OUP (Oxford University Press) Blog. Now I have both of these blogs linked in more than one place. This creates a kind of network of shared places.
I have done this with some other blogs, I have The Thin Red Line as one of my Entrecard favorites, in my Blogroll, and as a "friend" in Blogcatalog. I think this has helped turn some blogs that share social networking sites into regular readers. There is a web of linkages between the different social network sites where you begin to recognize and read blogs which belong to more than one social networking site.
Some blogs purposefully join you in belonging to more than one social networking community because they like the content of your blog. While I was using Entrecard, the Inkweaver Review asked me to do a link exchange with their site. I did this and now we share use of Entrecard and links between our sites. I hope this helps to build regular readers.
Monday, April 7, 2008
Morning Thoughts
Someone called in and requested A Thousand Splendid Suns for pickup. I have The Kite Runner on my desk. I am going to read it on the train home today. I read a bit of The Kite Runner on the train. For a bit, I pondered stopping reading the book, there are definitely pieces of the book I don't like. I thought it would be more exotic. I thought too much of the book was predictable and showed a stereotyped view of Afghanistan. I think I will finish reading the story. I am definitely not going to review it.
I was also looking through Locus Magazine. David Drake came out with his sixth book in the Lieutenant Leary Commanding Series, or RCN series. I rather like that the two main characters Lady Adele Mundy and Lieutenant Daniel Leary are close friends, not lovers. This does not usually happen in most military science fiction titles.
I ran into the usual request for me to get my own url. Supposedly, if you have your own url you will get more traffic, be more professional, and have greater control over your blog. I am using blogspot. I think there are different purposes with different blog services. For example, Livejournal, is a site specific designed for keeping a blog as a kind of journal. Ellen Datlow, a major science fiction editor has a blog on Livejournal which is very much in the personal journal style. http://ellen-datlow.livejournal.com/ .
Blogs and blog services serve very different purposes. For example, Typepad charges a fee to use their blog service. They offer a variety of special widgets and services found nowhere else. It seems that many professional publishers use typepad. Joe Wikert's blog, Joe Wikert's Publishing 2020 Blog uses typepad http://jwikert.typepad.com/
The main reason, I would switch from Blogger is if I needed my site to become much more general than just a blog. Jeff Vandermeer started his blog on Blogspot. http://vanderworld.blogspot.com/ . Then when he needed to have his blog become a general website about him, he purchased his own domain name. http://www.jeffvandermeer.com/ . This is a good example of a change from a blog to a more general site.
One of the main reasons that I use Blogspot, is that it allows me to use a variety of advertising and similar materials. Wordpress is not as geared towards advertising or commercial use as Blogspot. In fact, there are terms of service in Wordpress which limit advertising. Adsense is a major product of google and people are encouraged to include it in their blogs.
Another reason is that I am learning how to do blogging. I get suggestions on how to improve my blog and it is fairly easy to go into the CSS and change things in Blogspot. I added a footer, put in metatags, and now am considering altering the anchor text in many of my images so they will be more easily picked up by search engines. This is SEO (search engine optimization) stuff.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Teach Yourself Copywriting, 2nd Edition, J.Jonathan Gabay, c2000-- Comments
I am going to go over some of the things I read about in this book which I found interesting and useful to me. The first is that advertising is about creating a connection on an emotional level between a buyer and a seller. The basic objective is tell the person what they are going to gain by buying a particular item.
Like blogs, it is very informal language. Grammar is not a strong point in advertising language. The objective is to identify as closely as possible with the consumer so they will buy your product. Coca-cola, Dow, and other giant marketers want you to identify personally with their brands so you will buy them. The bigger the company the more they want you to have a personal committment to them. A good thing to remember if you want to protect yourself from advertisers is that you don't have to be personally committed to companies like Marlboro or Nike.
Part of this committment is about identifying who you are. You are a yuppy, road warrior, buppy, generation x, baby boomer, or punk rocker. The easier it is to identify who you are the easier it is for an advertiser to directly address you. This is why when you go to the supermarket, they offer a discount card to collect your personal information. You do not have to get a Macy's card, a Waldbaums card, or anything else. Your personal information is a commodity to advertisers.
Language is simplified to be more informal and thus closer to you. This is the same for blogs. Advertisers and copywriters use cliches like buy now, yours free, limited time offer, cheap cheap cheap, we are here to serve you to create closer identity with the customer. The aim is create recognition where there is none. The language is colloquial, for example, "Where's the beef?"
The aim is often to address universals like love, happiness, revenge. There is an idea that if they connect with you on a basic level, you will buy their products. This book cites an example, that in Hollywood there are supposed to be only 11 film plots.
The objective is to get you to immediately. It is believed that there are 1 1/2 seconds to get through to a person with a headline before it loses its effects. Thus you are bombarded with statments like "Don't Walk on the Grass." Part of sales and advertising is to create immediacy. In newspaper classifieds, it is supposed to be only 3/4 of a second to hold a persons attention. The simple patience to wait a few seconds longer before becoming attracted to something often can break a sales pitch, or an impulse buy in my experience.
There are some interesting ideas which come out of advertising that are useful. One of my favorites is readability. This means how hard is your blog to read. Blogs which are hard to read don't necessarily get as much traffic. I think my blog is about 7th grade reading level.
http://juicystudio.com/services/readability.php#readweb
This book covers a lot of different mediums. I am not sure that I can really focus on television, film, or radio that much. However, we have been scouted to do episodes of some television series on occassion. There is a small financial reward in this. I think we were once scouted for an episode of CSI.
The section on newspaper advertising is rather interesting. We do occassional newspaper ads. Usually we have three lines to put an announcement for a program in the newspaper. This has to be very concise and accurate. I rather liked the books suggestion to focus on action words when advertising in newspapers. The same is pretty much true for libraries and radio stations. We get about three sentences for a community services announcement on radio.
The section on posters was useful as well. He says there are basically three parts to a poster, an intriguing headline, some graphics, and a few company logos. I guess in a way that the fliers I am producing are a bit too complicated.
I can't imagine advertising in trains and subways. However, my experience is that advertisements in buses and trains are much more complicated than posters and billboards outside of trains. People will be sitting for a long time, enough time to read at least a couple full paragraphs of text. In the New York City subways, there is a campaign caled "Poetry in Motion" put together by the Poetry Society to encourage people to read poetry. I guess it would be a form of advertisement.
http://www.poetrysociety.org/motion/mapsite/pimpoems/newyork/nyindex.html
There is a brief section on websites. His main point is that it is important to keep websites simple to read and use. The website is not a mass marketing tool, but a direct marketing tool aimed at individual readers. You should include words that keep the structure flowing like but, however, so, because. You need conviction or you will lose your audience immediately.
This book was useful to read. It is not a book which I would buy immediately. It is the kind of thing which I would check out of the library first.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Thoughts for the Day
I hope to learn a few things from the copywritng book; how to write press releases, choose title lines for articles, and write to sell.
Sometimes, as soon as I am finished reading one book, I start reading the second book. I prefer reading to looking at the other passengers on the train sometimes. The books are often more attractive than the smiling face of your fellow passengers. A lot of people wear sunglasses on the train, I prefer a book or newspaper to shield my eyes.
It is a very slow day today. I sorted some pamphlets, checked around to see if we had enough round footstools for the basement. There were quite a few in odd places. I also spent a decent amount of time on the reference desk. I also planned a little bit on what I was going to do next week, weeding, ordering career books, a business program, and maybe a visit to the local art gallery.
It is one of those days where I am not quite sure what to write about. One of the things I have been thinking about is the concept of what a professional blog is. Some people have complained that my blog does not look particularly polished. One of the goals I have in writing this blog is to learn to use the technology of writing blogs. This means designing my own banners, buttons, and similar things. It also means learning to upload pictures and video files.
I am trying to do all of this myself. This means, it will have a very personalized style. I don't expect everything to look perfect. In fact, that is one of the charms of blogging. You get to see a persons individual style.
Another reason I am reading the book Teach Yourself Copywriting is I am a believer in many cases of anti-consumerism. I believe there is an overemphasis on cheap unhealthful products for people. Some might call this Un-American. I call this a type of alternative thinking. This is one of the reasons I reviewed Debt Is Slavery earlier.
I think there is a thread of marketing and advertising which is not good for people in general. I will read material for consumer self-defense. It is not enough to just read on how to save money, but also how to protect yourself from advertising. Some people become overwhelmed by shopping and it destroys their lives.
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Clear Blogging-- Bob Walsh-- Review and Comments
I also found a decent book listed here Random House, Handy Grammar, Usage, and Punctuation. He also suggests The Elements of Style. The book describes a lot of basic ideas on how to write a good blog.
He also gives an excellent example of a fake blake and a splog on page P.70. On P.76 he introduces one of the first blogs on the internet http://www.megnut.com . I am rather surprised that it is a simple two column blog. I often find three column blogs hard to navigate. I have to move around the screen to see all of the content. This can be quite inconvenient. There is also a short interview of Meg Hourihan.
The book is full of interviews of a variety of different blog luminaries Seth Godin, Kurt Opsahl from the Electronic Freedom Foundation, Darren Rowse founder of Problogger, Shari Olivieri of Sharma Designs, and many more blogging people. Almost all of the interviews are short and to the point and quite interesting. I could recommend the book just for the interviews of high profile bloggers.
There are also a lot of different types of blogs covered, everything from corporate blogs to lawyer blogs, doctor blogs, clergy blogging, kosher food blogs. In addition specialized resources like blogs for lawyers, or blawgs are covered http://www.abanet.org/genpractice/resources/blawgs.html
Two blogging job boards are shown, http://jobs.problogger.net and http://performancing.com are talked about. This book explains a lot about what makes a blog professional. It is clearly meant for both the beginner and the more advanced blogger.
I just finished reading an interview with David Sifry, Founder of Technorati on P.156. He points out that the internet is about people and interacting with people more than anything else. Following this on P. 172 is an interview with Steve Olechowski, Founder and COO, Feedburner, Inc.
A lot of the major technology is quite well covered. But, this book is not just about technology. It is about writing well so you can connect with the "blogosphere". It gives suggestions on how to spellcheck and grammar check blogs, as well as choose topics to write about. The trick of outlining a subject a day; Monday-- tech day, Tuesday-- writing day, Wednesday-- Humor day is suggested. I think I will pass on this one, I would much rather be extemperaneous in my writing.
There is quite a bit on successful blogging. I am learning as I read along with the book. I am not finished with it today. I will continue writing about it as I read more material.
I read a little more and learned some interesting ideas. It takes about a 1000 visitors per day before you can get any significant amount of money through advertising. To earn a living from a blog, it takes about 10,000 users per day. The two main guaranteed streams of income are Google Adsense and Amazon Affiliates. These take a long time to build up. It took several years for Problogger, Darren Rowse to develop his income. There is an interview of Darren Rowse on Pp. 258-262 which is quite interesting.
The last chapters concern reaching out to other people. Most of this is your standard material, join feedburner, remember to respond to comments, be a guest blogger and similar advice. I did submit my blog to a new blog directory at their suggestion, blogopolis.com.
This book was enjoyable and informative to read. It gives a lot of useful information and suggestions about how to improve your blogging. It looks to be right on target.
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Thoughts for Today
Last night I watched Duck Soup starring Grouch Marx. I have always liked Harpo Marx the most. I especially like his scissors. It is part of our 100 Essential Films collection. It was a nice break from blogs and reading.
I was invited to join http://www.bloggeries.com a couple days ago. It is a blog forum which reviews and comments on blogs. The title and logo make more sense than most traffic generating sites. Before I could ask for a blog review, I had to make ten comments on the forum. I did this dutifully.
All of the sites have some kind of gimmick you have to do. I'm glad it wasn't to put anything on my site. I requested a review of my site then. On Bloggeries suggestion, I stretched the banner out on top of my blog and changed the color of the words "Book Calendar."
There seem to be a million of these things available now. I was also invited to join Bloggers Showroom but I declined because I had to add a widget to my site. I already have too many widgets on my site. Every so often, I go through and erase widgets.
Every day, I get invited to join something new, the names are all very odd, Spott, Quasia, Squidoo, and various other things. Most of the names are nonsense words. Somehow, these things are supposed to increase my blog traffic. It is already almost too much to keep track of all the different traffic widgets on my site.
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Stick To Drawing Comics Monkey Brain! -- Scott Adams-- Review
This is rather interesting. I found the book in the new books section in the library under biography. It is kind of odd. I guess if you write a blog it counts as biography. Most of the material in this book is biographical in nature. Most entries are about a page to a page and a half long. There is a list of quotes in the back from some of the entries.
There is also a faq-- frequently asked question section about his cartoon, Dilbert. He answers questions about syndication and his work as a cartoonist. He describes how often he writes and what it is like working as a cartoonist. This is short, about four pages.
My favorite entries are about How the syndicated cartoon Dilbert is edited. You learn what is the acceptable way to use butts in newpaper cartoons, why it is better to use a donut instead of a gun when a policeman is firing bullets in a cartoon, and other things like the best way to depict a dolphin attack on a consultant.
There are numerous examples of the cartoon Dilbert throughout the book. Many of these are examples of cartoons that got rejected for inappropriate content then reedited so they fit the newspaper syndicates requirements.
I find the most interesting part of this book to be his interactions with people who read his work and give comments on it. There are numerous examples of how he deals with people who don't like some aspect of his work.
He also describes his process of finding what he thinks is funny. He apparently reads a lot of news and is a news junkie. He describes that he is looking for things that are not funny in and of themselves, but can be commented on in a funny way. This can be everything from the elections to religion.
The entries in the book are a lot more edgy than what appears in the newspaper. There is a lot more scatological humor, sexual innuendo, married life humor, and making fun of religion and politics in this book than in the cartoon. He does not spare any group of people. He is an equal opportunity cynic when it comes to religion and politics. The book is not censored.
He tells you what he doesn't like masseusses with giant hands, people singing in cars, electronic voting machines, and stupid people. Quite a bit of the humor is self-deprecating. He has trouble removing fluorescent light bulbs and can't seem to get using the dishwasher properly.
There is a lot which is not that funny to me. It is more experiential in places than funny. However, because it is not one narrative, but numerous small essays, it is easy to skip over the pieces which I didn't like and go right to the juicy parts. There were quite a few very funny moments in the book which made me laugh out loud.
Because this was originally a blog, it covers a huge variety of subjects. I think this is an interesting commercial experiment. If this is successful, we may see more books translated directly into blogs. Scott Adams says this is an experiment for him. He is trying something new in writing this book. If I had known it was from his blog, however, I might have read the blog first.
I think, however, it is a very different experience reading something from a computer screen than reading something from a book. You can carry around a book. You can hold it easily. You can read it in the subway. I'd be a little nervous opening a laptop in a subway car full of people. Books are much more of a tactile experience. They are also much easier on the eyes. There is no glare from a book, and generally, the dots per inch have a much higher resolution than on a computer screen.
I think reading this book may make me interested in reading a little bit more of Scott Adam's blog. I would read the blog first, then see if I liked the humor. It is clear that his style of humor in this book may not fit with everyone.
Sunday, February 3, 2008
Morning Thoughts, Supermarket Reading
Right now, I am relaxing a bit. I looked at a few sites from blogcatalog. I went through and looked at library related blogs. There wasn't that much that was very interesting. I looked at both recommended blogs on the American Booksellers Association site and the American Library Association site. Only a few seemed interesting. American Library Association recommended http://www.bookslut.com/blog which is fairly entertaining, but can be a little raunchy at times. After looking at the American Booksellers Association blog, I only found one blog which they linked to which was very interesting; Vroman's books, the largest and oldest independent bookstore in Southern California http://vromansbookstore.blogspot.com/
It was interesting looking at these sites. I am not sure that it really made any difference. I am still looking around at professional blogs. There is one for Infotoday which covers their conferences. It is actually kind of interesting to read conference blogs because there is always something interesting to point out. The point of conferences is to entertain the attendees in addition to whatever professional activities go on. The Infotoday Blog covers four conferences over several years, Computers In Libraries, SLA-- Special Library Associatin Conference, Internet Librarian, and Online Information in London. http://www.infotodayblog.com/
I am not sure this does anything for my regular readers who are interested in my thoughts on books. There is a classic statement that "You don't want to sell anyone else's products. Direct people to things in your store." I think it applies to websites as well.
I was at the supermarket shopping for a little bit to get groceries. Something to remember is that 60% of books are no longer sold in bookstores. There is a small section for adult books at teh supermarket. It is mainly bestselling thrillers and romance books. Authors like Dan Brown and Jeffrey Archer who can entice a person to buy on impulse. The romances have your typical Fabio Lanzoni covers. Fabio was supposedly the first man to write a romance novel not under a pseudonym. I think of him as a romantic version of the cartoon character He-Man. I find him to be quite funny. If I go to the drugstore Walgreens near my house, the book selection is no different.
What really surprised me during the visit to the supermarket is that they were selling a few paperback reference items, the Merck Manual, the Oxford Essential Dictionary, and a Net Carb Counter. The Merck Manual was the most surprising item. I guess people are becoming a little more conscious about their health. Of course because this is superbowl time, there was also a glossy magazine on the superbowl.
The magazine selection was no different than you might find in Harpell's drug store. It had your typical titles like Forbes, Playstation, Wired, Nascar 2008, Bride, Cosmopolitan, along with a mix of crossword puzzle books and now sudoku books.
Next to the baby food section there was a selection of little golden books. I actually like a lot of the little golden books, there are condensed versions of Richard Scarry and Thomas the Tank Engine which are really quite nice. Unfortunately almost all of the Little Golden Books were disney items like Aladdin, the Jungle Book, Home on the Range, and other childrens movie tie ins.
There was a small section of childrens books not far from the Little Golden Books rack. These mainly consisted of popular authors and movie tie ins as well. There were Shrek children's books, The Spiderwick Chronicles-- a soon to be movie which looks like it will be spin off of the string of preteen fantasy movies that are coming out; The Chronicles of Narnia, The Golden Compass, and Harry Potter. Also the redwall books by Brian Jacques were being sold. I think they are going to make these into a movie as well.
Among the drek were a few decent board books. I rather like Eric Carle and Margaret Wise Brown. But, for the most part everything was a commercial designed to encourage you to buy or see another commercial product.
As you came up to the front checkout counter, there were some magazine racks with Better Homes and Gardens, Cosmopolitan, the National Enquirer, and a few other cheap newspapers.
It is increasingly hard to get the Weekly World News at the supermarket or even at the local corner stores. The corner store is Pakistani and they say they won't carry it because it repeatedly insults muslims and they won't carry it. The Korean news store which is not far off says the same thing. The Korean store claims it is stupid, obnoxious, and racist. I can't get it at 7-11 either for the same reason.
I can get it at the Walgreens. They don't seem to pay attention to that kind of thing. The Weekly World News is basically the paper which claims things like Aliens abducted Elvis, and Batboy is Hunting for Osama Bin Laden. I admit I read it sometimes for a laugh. It is dumb. It is also not politically correct.
Saturday, February 2, 2008
Blog2Print, Morning Thoughts
I was at Joe Wikert's Publishing 2020 Blog and found a couple of interesting things. http://www.jwikert.typepad.com/ . The first thing I noticed were two services that turned blogs into books. The first was http://www.blog2print.com/ a service that for a fixed commission you can turn your blog into a book which people can purchase. It is a very interesting idea. There was also something called http://www.blurb.com/home/1/ which turns your blog into a book for a fee. It sounds kind of interesting, so because I like to experiment, I put blog2print on my website.
I found Joe Wikert's Publishing Blog 2020 by looking at the Really Strategies Blog. Really Strategies was one of the firms which sponsored the Publishers Reception for the Information Industry Summit. http://blog.reallysi.com/ . I often like to hop from recommended site to recommended site. There is a very different feel between corporate sites and personal sites.
Joe Wikert's Publishing 2020 Blog reminds me of Kimbooktu http://kimbooktu.wordpress.com/ . Both of the blogs are focused on book technology. Kimbooktu is more focused on physical book technology, but I still feel there are some real similarities between the two blogs.
I also am starting to look at some of the more prestigious blogs. I posted on http://www.blog.oup.com/ for a first time. For a while I was afraid, I might be thought of as ridiculous. But, it was an interesting experience.
One of the few things which professional blogs have an advantage over smaller personal blogs is that they can requst interviews with authors to be included in their sites. I can of course go get some interview from youtube to post on my site, but it is not the same as reading a transcript of an interview on a blog which is supposed to be authentic. It is not that easy for me to get a major author to committ to having an interview put on a small personal blog. There is usually an honorarium requested for this kind of thing. This is one of the few advantages I can see right now for publishing blogs.
This afternoon I returned Debt Is Slavery to my local library. There was nothing which I wanted to check out during this visit. There were a few titles which I had read earlier which might have been interesting, but, I would prefer to write a review from a fresh perspective.
The walk to my branch was pleasant. It was quiet. There were very few cars on the street. The weather was clear, crisp and cold. The only thing of interest was a spindly tree limb wich had fallen on the sidewalk.
Sunday, January 6, 2008
The Meaning of Book Reviews, A New Year's Resolution
This is especially true for the New York Times Book Review. A lot of the review is about the authors writing style and opinions not the book itself. If you wanted a book review that was concise that told you exactly what the book was about in one or two paragraphs then rated the quality of the writing you would look in a review magazine like Kirkus Reviews. Maybe a few collection development librarians, and bookstore ordering people look at this kind of magazine but not the every day readers. I don't think that most people want this when they are reading book reviews.
They want to know about the important idea in the nonfiction book and why they should read about the book, not necessarily even the quality of the writing. In a fiction book they might want to know about the setting, tone, and characters in the book.
There is a tremendous variety in personal tastes. When I look at stars on a review, unless the book is absolutely panned, or rated as absolutely exceptional, I often ignore the rating. Ratings are projected at the "average reader" in the reviewers mind. It is hard to know what the reviewer considers the average reader. I think creating an average reader is often a bad mistake. Audiences are often not what you expect them to be.
Also the blogger can put down the book if they don't like it and simply say something like, "I didn't like this book, I couldn't get past chapter three and I am not going to continue reading it." A professional reviewer has to finish reading the books they are reviewing or at least pretend to. I rarely see books which people didn't like being reviewed on blogs.
The best reviews in my opinion talk about a central idea in the book and analyze it from different perspectives. They are not a statement that this book talks about this. Here it is in front of you. They tend to bring in books which the author may have written at other times, as well as other books in the subject being discussed.
Book reviews also occur within a particular space. A review in People Magazine will be very different than Aviation Week And Space Technology. Also a review in a blog will be different from a magazine. It will be much more personal.
I think in the blog space when we are reading book reviews, we are looking for the bloggers opinion not a dry analysis. The more unusual or interesting points which the blogger can make about the book, the more likely people will take interest in it. It is possible to discuss books in ways which don't fit in with the traditional magazine review format which is rather bland.
Magazines also don't contain comments sections. Actually, if they are online they do. But, that is another story. Comments allow one to discuss the opinions stated about a book.
Another thing which blog reviews can do is change in real time. You can go back and edit an opinion or add to it as time passes. This is definitely not true for printed magazines.
Also, the blog is often not selling the particular book or item in question. This is a big problem for game review sites. They will have a particular game which is being advertised on their site. Then the reviewer will have to talk about the game. The reviewer risks being fired if they give an honest review saying they didn't like the game. This is an example of what may happen if there is a negative review of by an editor of content being sold on an internet site. I know it is not books, but it is very similar. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/ent/stories/DN-gamer_1208gl.ART.State.Edition1.36d582d.html
The actual review of this video game is incredible to watch. It is mildly disturbing. I am not going to feature it separately. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aBD0cUeeEQc
Being honest about a books good and bad points is interesting. Some books will have both good and bad points about them. I don't see a whole lot of mixed reviews on books. I would like to see more of them.
I spent some time looking at how book reviews are done professionally. If I was writing from a professional perspective, I would have to include more of the bibliographic information about the book, the publisher and year for example. But, I am being a bit lazy. I should probably add these.
The essential pattern is introduce what the book is, identifying the author, subject, and publisher. The second step step generally is to summarize the content of the book. The third step is to write your thoughts on the book. The fourth step is to summarize the central ideas about the books combining the previous written information.
I am also not overly concerned with authority which is a large portion of what academics seem to be focused on. What authority does the author have to talk about a specific subject? Do they have a doctorate in the subject or are they a layman. In traditional reviews, this is a big focus. The reviewer is also subject to this scrutiny as well. They are supposed to have some experience with what they are writing about. In the blurb of extensive reviews, there are often a few sentences about the reviewers credentials.
Also truth is a big factor in professional book reviews. Often, I am reading for pleasure and express this in my reviews. In academia, it is a terrible sin to lie, even in history books or biography. Unlike many people, I take a dim view of this. History books are written by the winners, they express the dominant view of the culture for the most part. The most interesting history books are quite partisan. The Lives of the Twelve Caesars by Suetonius is one of the most entertaining and partisan books I have ever read.
There is also an insistence that a professional reviewer know a lot about a specific subject. Sometimes, it is more intereresting if a person is honest and they say, I am a dilettante, but I am very interested in the subject, and have a lot of personal opinions that differ from the author.
A lot of biographies also seem to be lies as well. They are often the official version of a persons life. Many biographies are cleaned up to the point of ridiculousness. This swings to the opposite of the spectrum as well. The unofficial biography is usually an attempt to smear a persons reputation. I like to consider most biographies as fiction.
Format is often considered by the professional reviewer. Letting the reader know the size of the book, whether it is illustrated, or has photographs is important. Even talking about one or two of the photographs can make the book more interesting. Improper formatting of a book can make a book much less readable. Also the reading experience differences between a hardcover and a paperback. It is much harder to read a large hardcover book on the subway for example.
For my own satisfaction and curiosity, I took some time to look up submission guidelines for Publishers Weekly and Library Journal. Publishers Weekly has guidelines on how to submit a book for a review, not how to write a review. This is rather interesting, I thought, they would have material on the actual writing guidelines. Instead they have material on how to send a galley or advanced reading copy to Publishers Weekly. http://www.publishersweekly.com/info/CA6428088.html
Locus Magazine, the professional magazine for Science Fiction and Fantasy also does not accept unsolicited reviews of material. They do most of their reviews in house or approach specific people to do their reviews for them. Like Publishers Weekly, they accept review copies. However, the guideline for Locus Magazine is that the copy sent in must be the book in its final form, not a galley.
In contrast, this is a link to Library Journal's Review Guidelines for books. It is quite interesting. They have specific ways you are supposed to write about books for publications. http://www.libraryjournal.com/info/CA6505977.html
I am not sure that I would ever attempt to submit reviews to Library Journal. In some ways, I am not sure of myself in this way. I prefer to take a more alternative path to doing things.
I am writing this on Monday, January 7, 2008 in lieu of a new post.
I went through the post today and corrected a few grammatical errors. I sometimes wonder why blogger does not include a grammar or spellchecker.
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A promise, an oath, a new year's resolution with my hand on heart, my feet on the ground, and my eyes up to the sky. Everyday, I will try and write at least a paragraph on this blog consistently without hesitation. There may be breaks of a day or two on occassion, but for the most part I will write every day consistently.
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Wandering Through Blog Land, Virnor Vinge Ebook
Most of the blogs I've looked at have been pretty incoherent. One of my pet peeves so far is the icon which people use to show their blog. If they put a little symbol of what they are writing about, it would help a lot better than a picture of themselves, or in the case of many book sites, their cat. There are so many blogs out there, that if you don't immediately give an idea of what your site is about, you lose people. This is especially true when you are looking at blog directories. Often there is no caption, just a picture in places like blogcatalog and bumpzee.
Looking at book blog sites has been very interesting. Mostly the book sites provide reviews of books and thoughts on writing. There is very little else. It is interesting when people put in videos of authors talking, news about books, and bits on new technology. Even a little bit on their experience in a bookstore or library might break up the endless reviews.
Some of the sites also include movie reviews and television show reviews in addition to book reviews. This is actually a good thing. Most libraries are media centers. Where I work more people check out dvds of movies and television shows than books. We even have a section for the greatest films, and a section on African films.
Of course there is often the ubiquitous picture of the cat curled up on the book in book blogs. Cats must read a lot.
I usually see a short biography as well. Quite often this is very cozy and sweet in nature. I haven't seen anything truly wicked yet. It would be nice to see something wicked. The Bookslut Blog is the one exception which is mildly risque. It is also kind of sexy. The site gets a lot of visitors and is very well done. http://www.bookslut.com/blog/
These are just some thoughts on visiting different blogs. I will write more as I think of more to write about. I am also seeing endless attempts to support a million different products everything from bookmarks to computers to advertising. If you are going to sell something, stay focused on selling what you are talking about.
People get turned off by advertising. Some people suggest that you should not have Adsense ads because people will leave your site if they see them. Almost every site has pictures of them. I am thinking of replacing one of my adsense ads with a cafepress button for a store. I know this sounds kind of silly. I just did, it contains a really basic logo and a few gift items. I found out about Cafe Press when I was looking at bookslut.
Every site I visit has social bookmarking tags. I am not even sure that these are particularly helpful. I think it is more important to go visit other peoples sites and make comments about what they are writing about. I've visited quite a few different peoples sites and done this. Everything from David Brin, Jeff Vandermeer, SpamPoetry, and others. I make it a point to visit your site if you post a comment on my site. I'll show you mine if you show me yours. This seems to be the best thing that works. Also posting in newsgroups discusing blogs seems to help as well.
Keywords, search engines, and little buttons which are spread across most of the sites which I visit don't seem to do a whole lot. Joining sites which discuss blogs like blog catalog, and fuelmyblog seems to help as well. Communities of people discussing different subjects tend to be interested in what you are writing about. My favorite site for discussing blogs and the site which seems to do the best job for blog promotion, blog searching, discussions, and exchanges is http://www.blogcatalog.com/ . My experience with them has been very good. I just put in a widget for blog catalog.
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I found another free science fiction ebook, Vernor Vinge's Rainbows End.
http://vrinimi.org/rainbowsend.html . I haven't started reading it yet. I think I'll review it for a change of pace.
Sunday, December 2, 2007
How to: Be an uber blogger, by Cory
An interesting talk about how to promote your blog by Cory Doctorow, Editor of Boing Boing and Science Fiction writer.
Monday, November 26, 2007
The Recruiter, The Competitive Intelligence Professional And The Librarian

Aynsworth Rand Spofford, Librarian of Congress, 1864-1897
Internet Sourcer is a kind of specialist position, it is finding people on the internet to interview as hires. It can also include other things like examining company web sites, tracking certain kinds of news, looking at layoffs, finding sales leads, and identifying similar companies to the company you are working at.
At the company, I took the beginning, AIRS training-- Advanced Internet Recruting Strategies. http://www.airsdirectory.com/, What this really means is that I was trained in how to find people on the web. Recruiters look at web sites, forums, people databases, blogs, alumni associations, social networking sites and anywhere that people may gather on the internet. They often take the time to learn the more advanced commands in internet search engines like link, url, file type so they can find specific documents leading to resumes or people. They also use specialty people search engines http://www.zoominfo.com/ , a biographical database, http://people.yahoo.com/ an excellent people finder.
I also used many more web tools as a recruiter than as a librarian. I had the Alexa toolbar which I checked to see who used a certain site. I used the http://www.completeplanet.com/ deep web search engine, I had several tools on my desktop like http://www.webferret.com/
and http://www.copernic.com/
In addition, they extract information from web sites, phone numbers, titles and addresses using software like Black Widow Site Sucker, or Webmole email extractor. There are various trainers who show people how to find people on the web. Probably the most famous of these is http://www.jobmachine.net/ , Shally Steckerl. There are others as well.
This makes many of them more proficient in searching the web than many librarians who are mainly focused on searching for documents and basic information. In fact in most public libraries, librarians are discouraged from letting people use email, forums, or blogs because they consider it disruptive. Things like myspace.com and facebook.com are frowned upon. But, this is where people are going to now. Social networking sites are becoming very popular. There is even one to share personal libraries, http://www.librarything.com/ .
Things like http://www.linkedin.com/ are an incredible opportunity for people who find people as their business on the web.
Librarians in the public setting and in many cases in the corporate setting have fallen very far behind the curve in using the internet to find information. They are now just getting into blogs and other social networking software. Recruiters have been there from the beginning because they are looking for people.
The other group which is using the web much more extensively than librarians in many cases are the competitive intelligence professionals. People like David Carpe use the internet as a source for finding information about competitors companies. http://www.researchzilla.com/ is one of David Carpe's websites. They also spend a lot of time finding people to interview so they can find out what is really happening inside a company. The web is a giant interconnected group of people that are writing about themselves, their interests, the places they are working at, the places they are working for, and just about anything else under the sun.
Librarians are not connected into the people part of the web. The web is not static, it is not the printed page. It changes dynamically. This is a nice little diagram of what social networking is:
http://www.orgnet.com/sna.html . People share websites in clusters. There is usually a central authoritative website which most people are linked to or discuss. The same goes for newsgroups. There are usually one or two people who have the most clout in a forum or newsgroup. Finding these people often identifies who you can ask where certain information is.
Librarians should take the time to learn more about how the internet works, especially the people focused part which is being ignored for the most part.
A lot of the strategies I have used to promote this site have come from my brief experience as a sourcer. I have searched newsgroups to find the proper group to post to, I have searched forums to identify where to drop links, I have looked at social networking sites to see where I can post comments or get widgets.
Anyways, this is part of my two cents for the day.
I have learned quite a bit trying to promote this web site. It has been a very interesting experience so far.
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Let me get back to what I am focusing on books. I am thinking about bookselves right now and the proper way to shelve books in a bookstore or library.
Ideally when books are placed on the shelf, all the spine labels should be visible as well as writing on the spine, they should be hal an inch in from the edge of the bookshelf. The books should not be packed too tightly together because it breaks the spine of the book and causes it to split in half.
There should be a bookend on each shelf with approximately 3-5 inches of space at the end of the shelves. Shelves should be dusted regularly.
No books should be laid on top of other books. This can be dangerous because this leads to a chance for the books to fall off the shelf and hit somebody. Larger books can be dangerous especially if they fall and hit someone in the head or foot.
Ideally bookshelves should not be too deep and should include a bracket in back to prevent the books from falling behind other books.
I've always found steel case bookshelves to be the best. Wood may look nice but it is not very practical in some cases.
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I am further into A Feast for Crows. I am on about page 60.
Saturday, November 17, 2007
Elizabeth Moon and Some More Random Thoughts.

Thursday, November 15, 2007
Please Tell Me About the Books I Have Posted.

Hello, if you could please tell me about the books I have posted so far it would be great to get some comments. Also comments on any of the links would be appreciated as well. I am surprised at the lack of feedback.
I recently went to Yahoo Groups, but I found most of them were very heavily moderated, even the public ones require you to clear the posts with the moderators. So I posted on Yahoo Groups -- books which was the only unmoderated group which I could find which also did not moderate individual posts.
If you have a site you would like me to post a link to please let me know in the comments section.
Or if you would like me to comment on your thoughts on your blogs let me know as well in the comments section.
Monday, November 12, 2007
The Genuine Article (Official Disclaimer)

Right now, I am in the early stages of getting this thing going. This means I will email various people to get them to look at the site and hope people will make comments on it. Very nasty comments are just as important as good comments. Saying, "You Suck" is as important to me as saying this is absolutely great. I would really appreciate feedback from people.
In fact if you think I am an email spam gremlin, go ahead and say it. I am digging into my past for people, many who I know next to nothing about. In fact, I am just as likely to try to contact a friend, as a person who I barely knew like the author and agent who I took the Introduction to Publishing class from at New York University, Sheree Bykofsky who wrote The Complete Idiots Guide to Getting Published, or Alan Zimmerman who at one point had a bookstore in Manhattan, or people who worked at Brooklyn Public Library.
I really enjoyed the magical past when they had science fiction bookstores in Manhattan, now sadly, there is no more Science Fiction Mysteres and More, only one shelf of science fiction books at Forbidden Planet, no Science Fiction Bookshop. In a way, I miss the readings at Dixon Place, or at the cramped little stores now taken over by Barnes and Noble in the real world, and Amazon in cyberspace.
It is rather amazing to me that the only thing you need to get published these days, or publish yourself is a computer.
Anyways, later, I will probably feed this thing into a free website submission engine. The problem with doing that, of course, is you get lots of spam. This means I'll have to create a separate hotmail account for the website submissions, so I won't get overwhelmed with ads for viagra, cialis, Nigerian bankers, found money, free computers, and work at home jobs.
