April 2000

e-vanity fare

Most
libraries have a policy regarding the inclusion of
self-published or vanity
press works. But what of vanity
e-books?M.J. Rose has a relevant piece
in Wired magazine titled E-Books for Writers, Not
Readers.It is at: http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,35
722,00.html


He
notes that “while 5 percent of the survey
respondents said they BOUGHT Stephen
King\’s e-book, Riding the Bullet, less than 1 percent
claim to actually have READ
it.” So was the shooter firing blanks, one
wonders?The survey was by the Book Report
Network at: http:/
/www.bookreporter.com/brc/index.asp
< Rose goes on to note that there are over 24 million writers in the United States but less than 5 percent have been published. Companies such as Xlibris, iUniverse, and Mightywords are wooing the other 95 percent, often as not to what used to be called vanity publishing. And the public library issues are thought provoking, indeed. Most libraries have a policy regarding the inclusion of self-published or vanity press works. But what of vanity e-books?M.J. Rose has a relevant piece in Wired magazine titled E-Books for Writers, Not Readers.It is at: http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,35
722,00.html


He
notes that “while 5 percent of the survey
respondents said they BOUGHT Stephen
King\’s e-book, Riding the Bullet, less than 1 percent
claim to actually have READ
it.” So was the shooter firing blanks, one
wonders?The survey was by the Book Report
Network at: http:/
/www.bookreporter.com/brc/index.asp
< Rose goes on to note that there are over 24 million writers in the United States but less than 5 percent have been published. Companies such as Xlibris, iUniverse, and Mightywords are wooing the other 95 percent, often as not to what used to be called vanity publishing. And the public library issues are thought provoking, indeed.Rose goes on to note that there are over 24 million writers in the United States but less than 5 percent have been published. Companies such as Xlibris, iUniverse, and Mightywords are wooing the other 95 percent, often as not to what used to be called vanity publishing.  And the
public library issues are thought provoking,
indeed. 

http://www.iuniverse.c
om/

http://www.xlibris.com/

http://www.mighty
words.com/

 

I am
reminded of Richard Brautigan’s Library for
Books Nobody Wants.  The concept is in
his book, The Abortion: An
Historical Romance 1966. New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1971. The book is out of
print, and only available in libraries :-) 
And, as an aside, how is this for the great
Amazon.com as clueless?  Though it is out of
print, they offer two
options – e-Bay, natch, but also other "historical
romances!"  Kerouac,
Ginsberg and Brautigan would have
gotten a great HOWL out of that!  I saw
the best dot coms of my generation destroyed by… ah
well.

 

Bruatigan\’s
main character was a librarian at a mythical library. The
library was at at
3150 Sacramento Street in San Francisco. At this library
anyone who wrote a
book could add it to the shelves. Books were accepted
in any form. There was no
Dewey Decimal arrangement, nor any other order to the
library. The author alone
decides on which shelf the book should be. Brautigan
is rumored to have
self-published a work in 1968 entitled "The San
Francisco Library: A
Publishing House." No more than 10 copies are
thought to exist. http://w
ww.riza.com/richard/library.shtml

 

Brautigan
was at one time a best selling beat/hippie
author.  Early in his career, he like many beat
authors and poets, had
trouble getting his stuff published. 
One can speculate on this as his motivation
for
the library in his
novel. 
According to the site just
noted, a manuscript library from Brautigan is being
housed at the Burlington VT
(Fletcher Free Library). The library is not accepting any
new submissions 🙂
Mayonnaise jars serve as
bookends!

 

So,
for library planning purposes we will soon have some
questions -questions that
Brautigan\’s librarian may have asked upon a
time.   Do we supply only the e-book titles we
purchase/select?  Or do we take
donations of e-vanity
fare?  If we
take donations, won’t we
need to read them first?  If not how do
we assure they are consistent with our collection
development policies, not to
mention consistency with the state and federal laws for
our library?  And e-book plates
for donated vanity fare,
what do we do with them? 

 

I
have no answers here, only questions that I think
Brautigan, among others may
have liked.  But I do have an
observation, to Joe Schallan and others – I still think
it’s a great time to be
a librarian. 

 

So
sign me once again,

datcalmguy

 

 

Thomas
J. Hennen Jr.

http://www.haplr-inde
x.com

6014
Spring Street

Racine,WI 
53406

Voice:
262-886-1625 
Fax: 262-886-5424

thennen@haplr-index
.com

Librarian hazards

Ron Force sent in this Story From The Seattle
Times
, Friday, April 21 edition.


\”Architect Rem Koolhaas not only has designed a
striking exterior for the Seattle Public Library, but he\’s
apparently set on revolutionizing the library\’s interior, as
well.

Rumor is he wants the entire library collection (a k a
books) placed in a continuous sequence, arranged on
shelves ascending seamlessly from lower level to
upper levels.

Ron Force sent in this Story From The Seattle
Times
, Friday, April 21 edition.


\”Architect Rem Koolhaas not only has designed a
striking exterior for the Seattle Public Library, but he\’s
apparently set on revolutionizing the library\’s interior, as
well.

Rumor is he wants the entire library collection (a k a
books) placed in a continuous sequence, arranged on
shelves ascending seamlessly from lower level to
upper levels.
That would indeed be visually stunning. But there\’s one
problem: What happens to the carts used to shelve
books? If left untended, will library carts hurtle downhill,
knocking patrons flat?

Sources say the library is anticipating this challenge,
developing a motorized book cart with a so-called
\”dead man\’s switch.\” This leads to a second concern:
possible ankle injuries for librarians. \”

Volumes of Verse Help Children Mark National Poetry Month

Ellen Freilich, a writer for Reuters
has written this
article
for National Poetry Month.



\”April is National Poetry Month, a perfect excuse, if one is needed, to put aside prose and visit
some verse. To help young people observe the occasion, publishers offer an intriguing variety of new
and classic poetry books.\”
.

Ellen Freilich, a writer for Reuters
has written this
article
for National Poetry Month.



\”April is National Poetry Month, a perfect excuse, if one is needed, to put aside prose and visit
some verse. To help young people observe the occasion, publishers offer an intriguing variety of new
and classic poetry books.\”
.Many new anthologies, filled with modern and classic poems, are recommended…



\”In “Jumpety Bumpety Hop: A Parade of Animal Poems\’\’ (Puffin Books/Penguin Putnam), Kay Chorao has
assembled 50 animal poems for children from authors ranging from Beatrix Potter to William Cole.

“Days Like This,\’\’ a charming collection of small poems selected and gently illustrated by Simon James
(Candlewick Press), is perfect for the youngest poetry lovers.

“It\’s a Woman\’s World: A Century of Women\’s Voices in Poetry,\’\’ edited by prolific anthologist Neil Philip
(Dutton Children\’s Books), is a vivid collection of verse by well-known poets and less familiar ones.



“The Oxford Illustrated Book of American Children\’s Poems,\’\’ edited by poet Donald Hall, offers a sort of
Hall of Fame of poetry written for children by America\’s finest poets. The archival illustrations are intended
to return many poems to the scenes of their origin, Hall writes in a brief preface.

Sail the high seas or meet fire-breathing dragons in “My First Oxford Book of Poems,\’\’ a poetry collection compiled
by John Foster, including work by poets ranging from Shakespeare to Ted Hughes. Illustrations for each poem were
commissioned from a wide variety of artists.\”

Wizard of Oz Gets Special Exhibit

Associated Press writer Carl Hartman
has written this
article
about a celebration at the Library of Congress for the classic movie.



\”The small “Oz\’\’ show opening today is part of an elaborate celebration of the library\’s own
200th birthday on Monday. Just twice as old as Dorothy, it\’s now the world\’s largest collection
of books – more than 27 million.\”

Associated Press writer Carl Hartman
has written this
article
about a celebration at the Library of Congress for the classic movie.



\”The small “Oz\’\’ show opening today is part of an elaborate celebration of the library\’s own
200th birthday on Monday. Just twice as old as Dorothy, it\’s now the world\’s largest collection
of books – more than 27 million.\”
One of the more intriguing parts of the story…

\”Many remember Dorothy as a 16-year-old Judy Garland in the 1939 film, where the silver shoes
of the book are replaced by the famous ruby slippers. [Exhibit director Martha] Hopkins pointed out the line in the original
shooting script that still mentions the silver shoes. She doesn\’t know when the change occurred or why.



“Better for Technicolor,\’\’ she suggested.\”

Putting the I in IT

Frank Ryan writes:


The quote below is part of the introduction to a recently published book
entitled \”Mastering Information Management\” from the Financial Times. It is
a great opening to a \”milestone\” book …

Putting the I in IT by Thomas H. Davenport

\”Imagine a world obsessed with plumbing. In this bizarre place, hundreds of
magazines and books, and even a few television channels, cover the plumbing
industry, celebrating the latest advances in valves, fixtures and pipes.
Cocktail party conversation is dominated by the issue of whether one brand
of sink drains faster than another. Plumbing equipment magnates are on the
cover of business and even general interest publications, and become the
world\’s richest citizens. Companies pay millions, billions, trillions to
connect all their plumbing devices and to ensure that pipes reach every
desktop, every home office, even every car.

\”

Frank Ryan writes:


The quote below is part of the introduction to a recently published book
entitled \”Mastering Information Management\” from the Financial Times. It is
a great opening to a \”milestone\” book …

Putting the I in IT by Thomas H. Davenport

\”Imagine a world obsessed with plumbing. In this bizarre place, hundreds of
magazines and books, and even a few television channels, cover the plumbing
industry, celebrating the latest advances in valves, fixtures and pipes.
Cocktail party conversation is dominated by the issue of whether one brand
of sink drains faster than another. Plumbing equipment magnates are on the
cover of business and even general interest publications, and become the
world\’s richest citizens. Companies pay millions, billions, trillions to
connect all their plumbing devices and to ensure that pipes reach every
desktop, every home office, even every car.

\”
Only one plumbing-related issue is overlooked in this strange world – water.
Is it clean and fresh? Is water even what consumers want to drink? Are they
thirsty?


Oddly enough, a similar situation prevails in our own world. We need only
substitute computers for plumbing fixtures and networks for pipes. Just as
plumbing technology overshadows water in our imaginary environment,
information technology (IT) outshines information itself in the real world.
But although good water can easily be obtained from a clear mountain stream,
good information is rarely synonymous with advanced IT. It is time that we
focused on the \”I\” rather than the \”T\” in the world of business IT.

Libraries loot lures kids to learn

News-Record.com in sunny NC has a nice Article on how libraries are appealing to children.

\”What\’s a sure way to get children and young adults into the single biggest vault of knowledge to be found in their town?
Simple: Appeal to their basic sense of greed.\”

News-Record.com in sunny NC has a nice Article on how libraries are appealing to children.

\”What\’s a sure way to get children and young adults into the single biggest vault of knowledge to be found in their town?
Simple: Appeal to their basic sense of greed.\”Public and school libraries across the state on Saturday began a three-year campaign to raise youth\’s awareness of the learning opportunities found within their walls, and they did it by offering prizes ranging from compact disc players and NASCAR tickets to U.S. Savings Bonds, computers and rounds of mini-golf.


Two levels of gifts are being offered as incentives for young library patrons to get familiar with their local librarians. At the state level are the big-ticket electronic gizmos and savings bonds. At the local level, High Point merchants have donated six savings bonds, board games and gift certificates from their restaurants and shops.

To E or not to E



I just finished reading this comprehensive and insightful article written by Stephanie Ardito for Searcher Magazine.



A full overview of e-books is presented, from its history dating back to the late 1960\’s to its current and future trends.


Links to e-books products and directories are included in the link to the article.



I just finished reading this comprehensive and insightful article written by Stephanie Ardito for Searcher Magazine.



A full overview of e-books is presented, from its history dating back to the late 1960\’s to its current and future trends.


Links to e-books products and directories are included in the link to the article.

The author makes many relevant points regarding libraries and their relation to e-books.

\”Without doubt, the purchase of electronic books has advantages for the academic and public library communities and their users. A single copy of a work can be loaded onto a server and made accessible to an unlimited number of users, technologically at least, if not contractually. Searching for specific information in large volumes of text can save time and turn texts into reference books. Links, graphics, and sound embedded in texts can provide additional resources of information. Electronic archives can preserve historical print texts in jeopardy of disintegrating. Because there is no physical inventory, electronic books can be printed or downloaded on demand; consequently, a publisher never has to worry about running out of stock.\”



In addition, she relays to the reader the current research that is taking place to make the e-book experience more enjoyable.



\”Displays are improving, but the development of a device that delivers the brightness and resolution of a printed page may be a long time in coming. As far as the feel of paper, Xerox PARC and E-Ink (a spin-off of the MIT Media Lab) are co-developing “digital paper”. IBM, Motorola, Lucent, and other technology companies are attempting to create “thin, flexible sheets that look and feel like paper, yet can hold an electronic charge and display electronic text. E Ink is working on several e-paper prototypes.\”



And her conclusion…



\”E-publishers have a long way to go before they completely satisfy print book lovers and prove Captain Picard wrong. We need sufficient content to make the industry appealing. Pricing has to be attractive. Portability and comfort are necessary (including screens that emulate the feel of books, not to mention the wonderful pleasure of hearing pages turn). And most important, we must be reassured that our privacy will not be invaded.\”

Library lends a visual effect to the landscape

Ron Force suggested
The Seattle Times has a neat Story on the use of library green space as a sculpture garden.

\”New experiences are possible on a walk through the Kirkland Library, where the latest art exhibition, \”Sculptural Discoveries,\” took three years to assemble.

The works, all of which are from Sun Valley, are in Kirkland because of the community\’s desire to make something more significant out of a patch of grass on the roof of the library parking garage.

Ron Force suggested
The Seattle Times has a neat Story on the use of library green space as a sculpture garden.

\”New experiences are possible on a walk through the Kirkland Library, where the latest art exhibition, \”Sculptural Discoveries,\” took three years to assemble.

The works, all of which are from Sun Valley, are in Kirkland because of the community\’s desire to make something more significant out of a patch of grass on the roof of the library parking garage.

When the library opened in January 1995, the green space attracted the attention of Bill Ballantine, a Kirkland businessman and art patron, who devised the concept of using the space as a sculpture garden.


At the time, Ballantine was intrigued by how many artists have inventories kept in back rooms and how artists as well as the public might benefit by public showings. Since the sculpture garden opened later in 1995, dozens of exhibitions have been held. It was about three years ago, that Ballantine, who\’s on the library\’s sculpture committee, first saw works by Michael Zapponi, a Sun Valley sculptor who works in cast bronze and fabricated metal.


\”He wanted Michael to set up a show of his outdoor sculptures,\” said Karen Vance, who runs a fine-arts placement service from Bellevue, Idaho, near Sun Valley.


\”It took three years to finally come to this point,\” Vance said of the show.

Measure censoring Net at libraries gains

The Denver Post has a Report on a new measure in the State House.

\”A measure that would censor the Internet on library computers and keep kids from being exposed to pornography won unanimous approval Wednesday from the House Education Committee.

But the committee rejected an amendment by Rep. Don Lee, R-Littleton, to require parents\’ signatures when issuing library cards to minors. The amendment would have allowed parents access to library records so they could monitor what their children read.\”

The Denver Post has a Report on a new measure in the State House.

\”A measure that would censor the Internet on library computers and keep kids from being exposed to pornography won unanimous approval Wednesday from the House Education Committee.

But the committee rejected an amendment by Rep. Don Lee, R-Littleton, to require parents\’ signatures when issuing library cards to minors. The amendment would have allowed parents access to library records so they could monitor what their children read.\”

House Majority Leader Doug Dean, the sponsor of Senate Bill 85 in the House, said that while he would not oppose the amendment, he could find out what his children are reading by looking in their backpacks.


The measure, which now goes to the House Appropriations Committee, would establish a $2 million grant program and make public and school libraries eligible for portions of it if they equip computers with software that will \”limit the ability of minors to gain computer access to material that is obscene or illegal.\” Internet gambling is an example of illegal materials.

The grant amount per library would be $3,000. Those libraries already equipped with software or filters could use the money for books or other materials. Rich Ashton, Denver\’s city librarian, said, \”We have many small libraries for whom $3,000 will double the book budget.\”

Tetris Maximus at Brown Library

Bonnie Good Buzzell Writes:

In this morning\’s Providence Journal, a story about a giant Tetris game
display on the 14 story Sciences Library at Brown.
The Story is at Projo.com.

\”The Brown students\’ version uses a desktop computer to control 10,000 Christmas lights strung in the windows of the 194-foot high library building, one of the tallest buildings on the city\’s East Side. The lights span windows on 11 floors, illuminating each window separately. (Only 10 of the 11 floors are working). The grid replicates a crude but effective 10-by-10 pixel screen, visible from outside the building.\”

Bonnie Good Buzzell Writes:

In this morning\’s Providence Journal, a story about a giant Tetris game
display on the 14 story Sciences Library at Brown.
The Story is at Projo.com.

\”The Brown students\’ version uses a desktop computer to control 10,000 Christmas lights strung in the windows of the 194-foot high library building, one of the tallest buildings on the city\’s East Side. The lights span windows on 11 floors, illuminating each window separately. (Only 10 of the 11 floors are working). The grid replicates a crude but effective 10-by-10 pixel screen, visible from outside the building.\”To play, students stand on the steps of an adjacent building with a laptop computer, which is connected, through the Internet, to a computer inside the library.


To keep from disturbing anyone studying at the library, the students have waited until midnight to play. Passersby are invited to play as well.


The idea was the brainchild of the students who live in Brown University\’s Technology House, an on-campus building that\’s home to about 30 students interested in science and technology.


The idea had been kicking around Tech House for several years, Spies said. A previous attempt to build it about two years ago didn\’t get far.


This year, more students were enthusiastic about the idea, and they had the technical wherewithal — from computer science and digital circuits classes — to pull it off, said Ryan Evans, who did much of the project\’s programming.

Story in Wednesday\’s Brown Daily Herald:
http://www.browndailyherald.com/stories.cfm?ID=2122


Project\’s homepage: http://bastilleweb.techhouse.org/