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The Future of Reading?

October 1, 2008 | 3:36 pm

The history of world includes the history of ideas; and ideas require communication in order to flourish. How does that communication happen?

People talk, and people write. Talking hasn’t changed much over the years; but reading and writing certainly have.

I’ve finally taken my own first steps into the future of the manuscript: last week I bought my first ebook reader in the form of Amazon’s Kindle. And it’s certainly an interesting experience.

I bought it mostly because, as a writer myself, I feel I need to experience what is clearly the future of books, at least for many people. I also am enormously attracted by the ability to carry a whole library with me when I travel, and (with the easy ability to order more books) no more panic when I’m on a trip and run out of things to read.

So while it’s early days, for what it’s worth, here are my impressions so far:

  • The screen is terrific. It’s really easy to read and the font size can be changed quickly if necessary.
  • I have not yet gotten used to the page forward and page back buttons, which are all aligned on either side of the screen — the places where I’m most likely to grasp the “book” and therefore inadvertantly flip around. I expect that ease will come with practice, but right now it’s damned annoying.
  • Also annoying is the fact that the spiffy jacket fits loosely and falls off easily.
  • I thought I’d be mostly reading books, but it’s absolutely marvelous for magazine reading. So you don’t get the pictures (and obviously Smithsonian and National Geographic aren’t therefore good candidates); but I get to read articles in one of my favorites, the Atlantic Monthly at a fraction of the offline subscription price, and don’t use dead trees to do it. That pretty much rocks my world right there.
  • I haven’t yet got the process down, but a deal-breaker for me had always been that I was confined to buying books from Amazon to read via the Kindle. This is not the case: other ebooks and even pdfs can be sent to the Kindle from my very own MacBook. It’s trickier to do than to simply buy from Amazon, but it’s feasible, and some rainy Saturday afternoon soon I shall learn how to do it.
  • The looks aren’t as bad as I’d feared, Yeah, it looks like a clunky version of some medical device that would be used in sick bay on the starship Enterprise, but it grows on you. I have dreams, still, of what Apple’s eventual ebook reader will look like, but for now I’m willing to settle for this one.
  • The first three days I had the Kindle I was in Boston taking the subway all over the place and it’s absolutely terrific for reading in small crowded spaces. It remembers what page you were on and gets you admiring glances from people around you.

I don’t yet have any gradiose conclusions about the future of printed books or how we’ll communicate our ideas in the next century. But I’m having a lot of fun in this one dipping my toe into the waters of the future.

As long as there are words, I’ll survive!

– Jeannette Cézanne
Open Your Heart with Reading

Posted by: reading, writing, reading books, writing books, Reading toolkit, Words, Opening the heart — jcezanne | Comments (0)


A pause for applause

May 27, 2008 | 8:42 pm

May 27, 2008

A break here from my weekly blog to talk about the book behind it.

“Open Your Heart with Gardens” recently garnered kudos from the publishing industry. The Midwest Book Review, one of the prestigious reviewing organizations, released this commentary:

“Growing your own garden, raising the plants to maturity and then enjoying the spoils of your long, hard, arduous labors can create quite the sense of accomplishment in you — it can almost be explained as enlightening. ‘Open Your Heart with Gardens: Mastering Life Through Love of Plants’ is here to help those who seek this sense of accomplishment and enlightenment achieve those very feelings using the hobby of gardening. Promoting tips on how you can benefit from gardens emotionally even if it isn’t your own, the unusual quirks of gardening, and the other benefits the garden can promote for its’ gardeners. ‘Open Your Heart with Gardens: Mastering Life Through Love of Plants’ is highly recommended for both self-help and gardening community library collections, and for any amateur gardener hoping to get something intangible yet invaluable out of their gardens.”

Wow! Thanks, guys!

On the heels of this review, the Indie Book Awards announced their 2008 results — and OYHG was a finalist in both the Home/Garden and Nature/Environment categories!

(Fellow Dreamtime authors also fared well: Shawn Rohrbach won the Fitness/Sports/Recreation category, and finaled in Motivational, with “Open Your Heart with Bicycling,” while Janice Phelps Williams also doubled-finaled, in Animals/Pets and Inspiration, with “Open Your Heart with Pets.”)

Per the IBA website (http://www.indiebookawards.com): “The Indie Book Awards was established to recognize and honor the most exceptional independently published books in 70 different categories, for the year, and is presented by Independent Book Publishing Professionals Group (www.IBPPG.com) in cooperation with Marilyn Allen of Allen O’Shea Literary Agency.

Big score for DreamTime, having 3 of its authors place or win in 5 categories! Remember that DreamTime is only two-and-change years old.

For myself, over on the magazine side: my profile of novelist Archer Mayor will appear in the August issue of The Writer magazine. Mayor is the author of the esteemed Joe Gunther police procedural series set in Vermont. I recommend his books to anyone who enjoys high-quality fiction, especially mysteries with a literary texture.

Next week, back to our regularly scheduled programming.

–Carolyn

Posted by: Uncategorized, Pets, pet books, bicycling books, writing books, Something completely different, Publishing, Opening the heart, gardens, gardening, yard, plants, cultivation — Carolyn Haley | Comments (0)


Learn How to Get Your Spiritual Writing Published, Part Three

November 25, 2007 | 2:18 am

You’ve decided you want to write, and you know it’s for all the right reasons: You’re truly inspired and want to share your words with others (see parts one and two of this series on this blog).

Now what?

How do you actually get started? How do you overcome the blank piece of paper and the hopelessly white computer screen?

Try writing a “Dear Reader” letter. Imagine what your ideal reader looks like, and then write a letter to that person, letting your thoughts flow. What do you want to say? This technique will help get you started and get the words moving.

Posted by: writing, writing books, Publishing, Opening the heart, Learning something new — Meg | Comments (0)


What Are We Doing Here Anyway?

October 31, 2007 | 9:20 am

I’ve been having a lot of conversations in the last week or so about what the Open Your Heart series is about, so perhaps it makes sense to share some of those musings here.

There are, let me start by saying, very many books out there that open the world to people. Self-help books. adventure books. Birdwatching books. Parasailing books. If you want to try something new, the shelves of any library are filled with possibilities, with options, with promise.

And that is not what the Open Your Heart series is about.

I was fortunate to have the exceptionally talented Mary Votava review my book, Open Your Heart with Geocaching, and her comment was that “in a sea of how-to books, Jeannette has finally written a why-to book.” And I really think that that can be a comment about the series as a whole. We’re not offering readers yet another book on a new activity or hobby — we’re sharing ourselves, our lives, our experiences, with them, giving them a sense of the passion that we feel for and through the activity, and inviting them to share it.

Our job, as authors, is not simply to write the books; we’re here for the long haul, to keep the excitement we feel ignited by speaking, by sharing, by blogging, by reminding people that we’re excited and eager to share that excitment.

You, the readers — tell us how we’re doing! What books from the series have you read? Did they excite you? Did you feel the delight and insight experienced by the author? Tell us … because you’re an important (perhaps the most important!) part of the Open Your Heart series!

How are we doing?

– Jeannette Cézanne
www.jeannetteCezanne.com

Posted by: writing, writing books — jcezanne | Comments (0)

 
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