Tag Archive for 'Books'

QOD | Writers are lovers

I love to read ........photo © 2011 Nina Matthews | more info (via: Wylio)

 

A quote for consideration this morning.  From Natalie Goldberg in Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within:

Writers are great lovers. They fall in love with other writers.  That’s how they learn to write. They take on a writer, read everything by him or her, read it over again until they understand how the writer moves, pauses, and sees. That’s what being a lover is: stepping out of yourself, stepping into someone else’s skin.  Your ability to love another’s writing means those capabilities are awakened in you. It will only make you bigger; it won’t make you a copy cat. The parts of another’s writing that are natural to you will become you, and you will use some of those moves when you write. But not artificially. Great lovers realize that they are what they are in love with.

I’ve been told repeatedly that what you see in other people is a reflection of yourself — you can’t see what you don’t hold within and know, at least, subconsciously.

VOD: So you want to write a novel

A few years ago, a Jenkins Group survey found that 80 percent of Americans would like to write a book. (You can count me in too!) The reality is not nearly as glamorous as we’d like.

PS. What’s up with all of the videos, covering generalizations about various careers, that have been floating around of late?

Heartbreaking photo essay of an abandoned school in Detroit

griffioen1

The interior of the former Detroit Public Schools’ book depository is the first of many heart-breaking photos in James Griffioen’s Vice Magazine photo essay.   It’s not only sad to see a place of learning abandoned, but that so many resources that could have been used by other school districts and charities were left to rot is just criminal.

Via The Daily Dish

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VOD: Bricks and mortar Book Buying

Since my list of places that provide new homes for your books was so popular, I thought we’d visit the protocol for book buying in bricks-and-mortar stores.

Passe, I know. But it happens to all of us.

Scoot’s Bookstore Tips

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Clearing off your book shelves? Ensure they find a good home

library

photo by photocapy

I’m doing some tidying up of my unread book piles, pulling out titles that peaked my interest a few years ago, but that I’m no longer inclined to need.   Given the rise of the used book market, it isn’t worth posting to half.com, when I’m likely to bring in $1 or less for most of the tomes I want to send on to their next home.

The next best thing to money is another book, which is why I list books in need of a good home at BookMooch.  At BookMooch I earn points for each book I send to a fellow member.  In turn, I get to use those points to mooch books from other users.

But like any retailer experiences, some books just aren’t flying off the shelves in your chosen location or demographic.  Thus, I’ve been looking for alternative places to distribute books in need of new homes.

Your local library

The most obvious choice for donation is your local library, most of which will give you a receipt that you can probably use to write off the donation come tax time. Older books aren’t likely to go into circulation, but they may wind up being sold as part of the regular used book sale fundraising.

For those of you looking for more creative places to donate your used books, there are plenty of options.

Prisons

Looking to get rid of old college textbooks?  Already solved that quarterlife crisis and don’t need those self-help books any more?  Look no further than your local prison.  While the rules vary from prison to prison, many accept a variety of educational and recreational reading materials, since their library budgets are limited.

We all know the resale value of college text books is limited since new editions with different pagination are constantly being issued.  Here’s an opportunity to really pay it forward.

  • Books Behind Bars provides information about what types of reading materials are accepted by prisons all around the country and to whom you should ship your donation

Prisons also gladly accept used fiction, particularly paperback since it’s easier to ship.

  • Books to Prisoners is a volunteer organization that ships requested titles to individual prisoners nationwide.  They send out close to 10,000 books a year are are always looking  to replenish their stockpile.

Troops

People are still looking for ways to support the troops abroad.  Shipping your collection of Stephen King paperbacks to deployed soldiers is one way to go.

Low-income kids

Basic literacy will forever be a key component of early childhood education.  Unfortunately not all school libraries are well-stocked and not all families can afford to buy books for home.  These groups try to put books in the hands of young learners throughout the country.  So if you have gently used children’s titles to get out of the house, consider these two groups.

  • Books First distributed more than 15,000 books to teachers and their classes in 2007, benefiting more than 2000 pupils.
  • Project Nightlight reaches out to homeless children, providing “individual tote bags each filled with a security blanket, an age-appropriate book, and a stuffed animal to children (ages 0-10) in homeless shelters.”  They are always looking for like new books to be included in their care packages; if you’re as obsessive about your books as I am about mine, most of them are like new.

When all else fails, Got Books?  The group ensures no books winds up in a landfill.   Some books they sell, donating half the proceeds to a variety of charities, and others they donate to schools.

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QOD: B.F. Skinner on learning

staircase

photo by extranoise

“Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten.”

“We shouldn’t teach great books; we should teach a love of reading.”

B. F. Skinner, 1904-1990, psychologist

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Friday Fun: What Book Are You?

I’d be embarassed, except that people buy me books like I Always Look Up the Word Egregious and The Highly Selective Dictionary for the Extraordinarily Literate.  While I’ll never be a party animal, I’ll always be the first person you’ll call when you’re stumped.

Your turn.  What book are you?


You’re The Dictionary!

by Merriam-Webster

You’re one of those know-it-all types, with an amazing amount of
knowledge at your command. People really enjoy spending time with you in very short
spurts, but hanging out with you for a long time tends to bore them. When folks
really need an authority to refer to, however, you’re the one they seek. You’re an
exceptional speller and very well organized.


Take the Book Quiz

at the Blue Pyramid.

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The Patricia Cornwell Effect

Four or five novels ago, (Black Notice is the last novel of hers sitting on my shelf, so it must be The Last Precinct that ended her reign), Patricia Cornwell lost her ability to tell a great tale. Her plots became formulaic, and her endings had lost the dramatic final showdown with the bad guy. I haven’t enjoyed a Kay Scarpetta mystery since.Karin Slaughter is another author focusing thrillers with a legal and medical focus. Her most recent book is Beyond Reach, and I fear Slaughter has fallen victim to the Patricia Cornwell Effect. I’ve read all of her previous novels cover to cover within hours of reading them, but her latest, I just couldn’t finish. I couldn’t get into the plot; the story felt too splintered. Next year, when her next novel comes out, I’m not sure I’m going to be in as much of a rush to buy it. Slaughter may have peaked, but I hope she’s just stumbled.

Fortunately, Lee Child is still cranking out well-paced thrillers that are compulsively readable. 8 books into the series, I think Child continues to weave a great story, focusing on a compelling former military man of mystery, Jack Reacher.