Bookcasts Part Two

Welcome to the second installment of “Bookcasts”, where I give you a brief rundown on the podcasts that I follow. Those that don’t have books as their primary subject matter will be marked with an asterisk. Part one is is here. In Our Time* In Our Time is a long-running BBC Radio programme that’s very much like CBC Radio’s Ideas, although the topics turn more frequently to literary matters (I’m not sure if it’s still up in the archives, but there was an excellent show on Borges a while back). The Good: Even though his pronunciation can be a little idiosyncratic, Melvyn Bragg is a spectacularly good host. He’s well-informed, well-spoken, and he manages to keep the discussion on track so that as much of a given topic can be covered—although it should be noted that the discussion doesn’t ever descend into superficiality. The Bad: Once in a while Bragg… Continue Reading

Bookcasts Part One

I am lucky enough to have a job that lets me work with books. I am doubly lucky in that my job allows me to listen to headphones, and rather than listen to music, I listen to audio books and podcasts, most of them dealing with the subject of books. As this is, of course, a book-related blog, I thought I would share those I listen to with you. Those that only occasionally deal with books (their primary subject matter being something else, or perhaps even simply general interest) will be marked with an asterisk. There are quite a few of them, so I will spread the out over two or three posts. Authors On Tour—Live! Recorded in Denver at an indie bookstore called The Tattered Cover, this podcast is a weekly series of author readings. It features authors from a multitude of genres, from fiction authors of all stripes… Continue Reading

So That Happened

Well, the old database died completely, and I was unable to export the data. What happened instead was that I salvaged the data from static files and spent the last two days reposting them by hand into a new Movable Type installation. The end result is that there should be fewer problems in the future, comments now work like they should, some of the data was lost (one or two posts only, I think), and the archives are no longer where they used to be, meaning that any links to individual entries are now broken (sorry, couldn’t help it). I haven’t quite figured out how to add all the existing comments, but I do have the data and when I figure out what to do I’ll put them back up. Hopefully I’ll be back to posting regularly by tomorrow, and I’m going to take advantage of this restructuring to tinker… Continue Reading

Reading 2007

I’ve inaugurated a new category here: Reading 2007. What I plan to do is blog my impressions, and a kind of review, of every single book that I read this year. Since I read somewhere between 70 and 90 books a year, there will be plenty to read about. I’m starting out with Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ’s Childhood Pal, which is one of the books I was given for Christmas. I started it this afternoon. A few samples already in the wings, in no particular order: Special Topics in Calamity Physics, Marisha Pessl Famous Last Words, Timothy Findley The Children’s Hospital, Chris Adrian Uncollected Stories, William Faulkner The Autograph Man, Zadie Smith The Emperor’s Children, Claire Messud On Literature, Umberto Eco Invitation to A Beheading, Vladimir Nabokov Dr. No, Ian Fleming

Appalling

Appalling. There are almost no words for how ridiculous and horrible a thing this is. A UCLA student was arrested in a campus library and then repeatedly tasered by the police after he had been handcuffed.

Spam, Spam, Spam, Spammity…

Comment spam has increased to the point where it’s crippling the database and making it almost impossible for me to manage it (although it never reaches you, the reader, or almost never), so I am going to switch over to MySQL. There maybe glitches and data loss because I tend to never do these things right on the first try.

DIY Publishing

Current web-app superstars (or arrogant prima donnas, which ever you prefer) 37 Signals have written a book and are distributing it solely as a PDF, for $19USD a pop. They are now claiming that because of their success with the book (1750 copies sold so far) that there is “a new sherrif in town” (ie. DIY publishing). But is there really? Kottke chimes in as usual with a look at raw numbers rather than context and calls it good (well, “an interesting expirment” is his final declaration, but the rest of the short post seems more optimistic than that), but then I expected no less. What I think we really have to look at is this: Who is their target audience? In this case it’s tech-savvy entrepeneurs who are trying to get the most out of their budgets and still learn from people who are successful. Go to the business… Continue Reading

Novel School

Last month Louise Doughty (apparently a widely acclaimed author, although if I had a nickel for every widely acclaimed author I haven’t heard of I would be far better off than I am today) began a column on, essentially, how to write a novel in a year. Throughout 2006, I will be writing a column in this newspaper called Write a Novel in a Year. Can you write a novel in a year? Well, yes, if you don’t do much else and you work hard and are talented. But in actual fact, if you follow the column, and do the exercises I set (yes, exercises) what you will end up with will not be a novel, it won’t even be the first draft of a novel, it will be a body of work, the raw material, which you may one day be able to shape and work on until it… Continue Reading