Archive for July, 2010

Agency Becomes EBook Publisher: Random House P.O.’d

Monday, July 26th, 2010

I received emails from the Author’s Guild today telling how the Wylie literary agency has set up its own publishing branch called Odyssey Editions and cut a deal with Amazon for twenty in-print, famous books like Lolita, Invisible Man, and Portnoy’s Complaint.  Random house is up in arms  (I assume they have print rights to these books). It turns out that these are books for which the authors kept electronic rights, which the publishing houses are trying to get.  Read the whole story here and here.

Interesting stuff– I’m on the writers’ side of course, except that I want all information to be free, live long, and prosper.

David’s Kindle

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

We’re at the lake with Andy’s brother David, and David has a Kindle.  It’s a first generation Kindle, and David says he uses it primarily for reading fiction– pleasure reading.  He says he doesn’t use it for anything that he would take notes on. I fooled around with it for twenty minutes, as I have in the past, but this time more serious about turning it on, reading some pages of Booth Tarkington’s Magnificent Ambersons, turning pages, testing larger font sizes  (can I read without my glasses?– yes, but such short pages who wants to?), tried it outside on the hammock, and yes, sun and shade, very readable.  He says images and maps, photos of, say, the subject of a biography– all of that is pretty useless, as is the miniature keyboard at the bottom.

And!  He has an app for his computer that reads books for Kindle, and he bought a copy of Trespassers (Hamilton Stone Editions)  from Smashwords and loaded it, and there it was, my first ebook sale, sort of.  Well, well, well.

Libraries

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

I always loved them, as buildings, as spaces: the dark side of the single standing shelf in the one room woman’s club library in Shinnston, WV, where the grown up books were.  Where I met Dostoyevsky.

The awesome lion-guarded 42nd Street Library in New York far more like the Metropolitan Museum than the library where I first took out books.  But in some weird way libraries never became my preferred  source of books: the books I loved most were in people’s houses (my mother’s set of Charlotte and Emily Bronte with the Rockwell Kent woodcut illustrations;  a book of cartoons in my aunt’s house in Scott County Tennessee that were like a twisted version of New York to me– drunk flappers and street urchins, pigeon breasted matrons).  I liked to own books.  I bought all the Black Stallion books, $2.00 each of birthday and holiday money over several years.

Why did I never bond with libraries? It wasn’t about ownership as much as about intimacy, perhaps.  I know people who read constantly from libraries, sometimes visiting several branches in a day to get enough books to tide them over their vacation. And I DID sign out books, stacks of books, but they weren’t mine.  I had to return them.  There was a vague anxiety about getting them back in a timely fashion, unsoiled, with no dog ears.

Partly, I think  I don’t like the social aspect of running into people I know. Reading is deeply private to me.  When I read, I leave my body here, and go elsewhere.   I trade books on Paperback Swap; I buy cheap used books via Bibliofind and the other places for used books. I look through my husband’s mysteries and thrillers if I’m really at a loss.  I hope soon, finally! to have an electronic reader, access to all books, all knowledge, all entertainment, all experience.