at Amazon. See this letter.
And more.
You, too, can write to jeff@amazon.com to tell him what you think of his "business practices." Bully.
UPDATE 7/25/14: Oh, goody, more bad news for the wannabe ceo of Earth.
And more good news for writers -- and readers -- who care.
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
8/09/2014
6/20/2014
Small independent bookstore acts independently.
Here, they decide not to carry RLimbaugh's "children's history" books. And to carry a very diverse selection of children's books. Remember the song... "You have to be carefully taught."
Here, they explain A**zon's predation. And decide not to carry kindle books. Wow. Radical.
Donate here.
Here, they explain A**zon's predation. And decide not to carry kindle books. Wow. Radical.
Donate here.
11/22/2013
10/25/2013
10/14/2013
12/10/2012
Catcher in the Rye dropped from US school curriculum - Telegraph
Yikes! This has got to be an April Fool's joke, right? Even the Gateses aren't so artless.
Schools in America are to drop classic books such as Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and JD Salinger's Catcher in the Rye from their curriculum in favour of 'informational texts'.
12/06/2012
11/02/2012
5/09/2012
4/24/2012
4/12/2012
3/28/2012
Harry Potter Shows Us The Way
Rowling's private distribution of Potter books on her own site Pottermore is so new & different that it could change future e-book distribution channels. And libraries. Non-DRM. Interesting. Very.
3/19/2012
3/11/2012
Book Covers for Lolita
Here is a history, and here is a contest (which originates at this page), searching for new ways of visualizing this complex novel. Interesting. Soon to be an art book.
3/05/2012
2/24/2012
2/19/2012
Dept of Too Cool
The Millions' Mark O'Connell's unearthing of a long-buried Martin Amis work Invasion of the Space Invaders: An Addict’s Guide to Battle Tactics, Big Scores and the Best Machines, with an introduction by (ahem) Steven Spielberg. IT's a rare book now, hundreds of dollars to get one, but very cool excerpts from MA:
"..At one point, we are treated to a series of Hogarthian prose sketches of the grotesques the author sees all around him in these arcades: 'Zonked glueys, swearing skinheads with childish faces full of ageless evil, mohican punks sporting scalplocks in violet verticals and a nappy-pin through the nose [...] Queasy spivs, living out a teen-dream movie with faggot overtones....' ”
1/08/2012
12/16/2011
I'm the anti-Amazon.
Basically, because their entire thrust has been to be cheaper than anyone else and be shop-from-home-in-your-pyjamas convenient. They started by selling books, now they sell everything. I buy my breakfast bars from them, 3 dozen at a time. Why? Because I can, because my supermarket doesn't stock them, because they're cheaper and they come to my house on a set schedule and I don't have to do a damn thing except pay the credit card bill. Why am I book shopping where I'm grocery shopping?
They've always been in competition with Barnes & Noble, from Day 1. But I've only started resenting it since I started selling Nooks at the store.
Time ran a story about people who come into the bookstore, get the look & feel of a book, run it through a price-finder on their phones, then go home and order it online.
Well, here's the deal: If you keep doing that, soon you will have no bookstores to look & feel at. Or take your kids to. Or browse book-covers, or look for the odd happy accident you meant to read three years ago. Bookstores -- and libraries, which are also not immune -- convey the culture. Seeing other people read validates your own reading habits and gives you hope for the future, that sentences can run longer than a few dozen characters... and still use capital letters & punctuation.
(I hate to rant like a cranky bag lady... but it's also an educated person's rant. And I don't mind seeing the language and usage change and evolve to meet the times, but have you ever actually seen Melvil Dewey's suggested changes? Not even the re-spelling of his prename caught on!)
The other day, when a woman came into the store and asked if we sold Kindles, I realized that their machine had become de-branded and was now a generic, like Kleenex or Scotch Tape. She meant e-readers. I demo'ed the Nook for her and she left happy, knowing she'd bought the better machine. I now use the "we need bookstores" argument as a very persuasive selling tool: real readers -- and they are out there -- know it's not just about price.
It seems to be the Hewlett-Packard model: sell the printer for peanuts and get you on ink cartridges & paper forever. Bezos sells books and music and movies and wants to send them to you without you having to leave your chair. Fine. Buy or rent or lease or stream the movie Wall-E and see what happens next. Your move.
Update: Looks like I'm not alone here.
They've always been in competition with Barnes & Noble, from Day 1. But I've only started resenting it since I started selling Nooks at the store.
Amazon is anti-bookstore. If Amazon wins, there will be no bookstores. They have already put countless bookstores out of business -- Borders is just the latest.
Time ran a story about people who come into the bookstore, get the look & feel of a book, run it through a price-finder on their phones, then go home and order it online.
Well, here's the deal: If you keep doing that, soon you will have no bookstores to look & feel at. Or take your kids to. Or browse book-covers, or look for the odd happy accident you meant to read three years ago. Bookstores -- and libraries, which are also not immune -- convey the culture. Seeing other people read validates your own reading habits and gives you hope for the future, that sentences can run longer than a few dozen characters... and still use capital letters & punctuation.
(I hate to rant like a cranky bag lady... but it's also an educated person's rant. And I don't mind seeing the language and usage change and evolve to meet the times, but have you ever actually seen Melvil Dewey's suggested changes? Not even the re-spelling of his prename caught on!)
The other day, when a woman came into the store and asked if we sold Kindles, I realized that their machine had become de-branded and was now a generic, like Kleenex or Scotch Tape. She meant e-readers. I demo'ed the Nook for her and she left happy, knowing she'd bought the better machine. I now use the "we need bookstores" argument as a very persuasive selling tool: real readers -- and they are out there -- know it's not just about price.
It seems to be the Hewlett-Packard model: sell the printer for peanuts and get you on ink cartridges & paper forever. Bezos sells books and music and movies and wants to send them to you without you having to leave your chair. Fine. Buy or rent or lease or stream the movie Wall-E and see what happens next. Your move.
12/12/2011
Laura Miller's 2011 Fiction List
is interesting, if not surprising. At least it's different from WaPo & NYTimes.
And this is what the real writers liked.
I'd like the time to read some of these bloody books!
And this is what the real writers liked.
I'd like the time to read some of these bloody books!
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