I'm starting to notice a disturbing trend since my return to active blogging (after a 13-month hiatus, I've been blogging again for about six weeks), and I'm wondering if other book bloggers are noticing the same thing. Simply put, the source of a good percentage of my blog traffic has shifted from Western Europe to countries known for most of the malicious hacking that goes on in the world today. And that (while maybe it shouldn't) makes me a little nervous.
Prior to my time away from the blog, the majority of my visitors came from the U.S., Canada, the U.K., the Netherlands, Germany, France, Australia, and India (pretty much in that order of magnitude). But since my return in October, while I still get visits from all the previous countries on a regular basis, the Ukraine, China, Russia, and Poland have moved into the top six or seven countries from which my visitors come. I have to wonder if many of these are just hackers looking for a way to mine usable information from the blog.
Should I be concerned? Would you be? What could they possibly get from hacking into a blog since the blog is hosted on an outside server and not on my home computer network?
As you can see, I have more questions than answers. I would welcome your input, guys.
A seventeen-year-old book blog offering book reviews and news about authors, publishers, bookstores, and libraries.
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Sunday, November 30, 2014
Saturday, November 29, 2014
"Bookstores Have Left the Building"
Have they ever.
I remember the day when I could accompany my wife to a shopping mall with the relative confidence that I would not become bored silly within ten minutes of our arrival. Those days, sadly, are long gone. Long, long gone. While it is true that today's cookie-cutter retail malls all have the same basic array of stores, that is not a particularly new trend. What's new (and terrible) is that NONE of those stores are dedicated to selling books or recorded music. None of them...zero...just shoot me now.
Long gone are the days when there was usually a B. Dalton bookstore on one end of the mall and a Waldenbooks location at the other, with maybe a Sam Goody, a Camelot, and a Record Town to browse through on the way from one bookstore to the other.
Now it is a matter of having to suffer through one lookalike store after another, all of them selling the same basic lines of clothing, sports fan attire, overpriced electronics, or junk aimed at teens. My mind numbs at the very thought of having to negotiate my way through massive parking lots with few empty parking spaces located in the same zip code as the mall building just to wander through that kind of shopping wilderness. Not. Gonna. Happen.
I can't remember the last time I've gone to a shopping mall (and I'm not kidding or exaggerating), but according to Bookstores Have Left the Building (from The Stranger,) it has gotten even worse than I imagined it might be. Oh, well. If I am ever forced to endure a mall again for anything more than to pop into and out of one or two stores for specific purchases, I'll bring my own book and plant myself on a bench.
They still have benches, don't they?
I remember the day when I could accompany my wife to a shopping mall with the relative confidence that I would not become bored silly within ten minutes of our arrival. Those days, sadly, are long gone. Long, long gone. While it is true that today's cookie-cutter retail malls all have the same basic array of stores, that is not a particularly new trend. What's new (and terrible) is that NONE of those stores are dedicated to selling books or recorded music. None of them...zero...just shoot me now.
Long gone are the days when there was usually a B. Dalton bookstore on one end of the mall and a Waldenbooks location at the other, with maybe a Sam Goody, a Camelot, and a Record Town to browse through on the way from one bookstore to the other.
Now it is a matter of having to suffer through one lookalike store after another, all of them selling the same basic lines of clothing, sports fan attire, overpriced electronics, or junk aimed at teens. My mind numbs at the very thought of having to negotiate my way through massive parking lots with few empty parking spaces located in the same zip code as the mall building just to wander through that kind of shopping wilderness. Not. Gonna. Happen.
I can't remember the last time I've gone to a shopping mall (and I'm not kidding or exaggerating), but according to Bookstores Have Left the Building (from The Stranger,) it has gotten even worse than I imagined it might be. Oh, well. If I am ever forced to endure a mall again for anything more than to pop into and out of one or two stores for specific purchases, I'll bring my own book and plant myself on a bench.
They still have benches, don't they?
Friday, November 28, 2014
Book Trailer of the Week: Pan (the 2015 movie)
This one is scheduled for the summer of 2015, so it is still a ways off, but it certainly has the look of a movie that will be making a big splash. It appears to be a retelling of the Peter Pan story in which many of the characters are yet to evolve into what most of us remember from the Disney cartoon version of Peter's story...and just how much it has to do with the J. M. Barrie book remains to be seen. Could this be something akin to "Peter Pan: The Origin," the events that precede the story as we know it now? We'll have to wait until next summer to find out, but it looks pretty cool - and the kid portraying Peter seems to be a wonderful young actor.
Thursday, November 27, 2014
P.D. James Dead at 94
"What the detective story is about is not murder but the restoration of order." P.D. James
Author P.D. James, best known for her Adam Dalgliesh novels died this morning at her home in Oxford. Phyllis Dorothy James, who carried the title Baroness James of Holland Park, was born in Oxford on August 3, 1920. She sat in the House of Lords as a member of the Conservative Party.
The author's career began relatively late in her life and she did not prove to be an especially prolific writer, producing only 14 Dalgliesh novels from 1962 to 2008. She also wrote two Cordella Gray novels, three standalone novels, and three books of nonfiction. Her last novel was Death Comes to Pemberley which was published in 2011 - and she is credited with writing the screen adaptation for the same in 2013. Reportedly, the author had a novel in progress at the time of her death.
Two daughters, Claire and Jane, five grandchildren, and eight great-grandchildren survive Ms. James.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Outrage at Blanco
Cover of latest edition |
When I was
growing up, Roy Rodgers was still “King of the Cowboys” and Gene Autry’s
“Melody Ranch” was winding down a long run on CBS radio. Roy and Gene were, of course, the good guys
and they always handled black-hatted scoundrels with relative ease. Well, I’m here to tell you that even Roy and
Gene would have had their hands full with villains like those in Bill Crider’s
western novel Outrage at Blanco.
Set in the
small-town Texas of 1887, Outrage at
Blanco begins with a kick directly to the reader’s gut. Ellie Taine, on her way back to the farm with
a wagonload of groceries, encounters two cowboy psychopaths only a mile out of
town where she is brutally raped and beaten by the men. The cowboys plan to be in Blanco only as long
as it takes to rob the town’s one bank, and not being at all worried about
being called to account for the rape, they allow Ellie to live. Bad mistake, that.
Ellie Taine has
had enough, and after her husband fails in his own efforts to hold the men
accountable for what they did to her, Ellie goes after them herself. But she does not plan to bring these guys
back to the sheriff when she finds them – she has other plans for their
immediate future. Outrage in Blanco, though, is more than just a shoot-‘em-up
western. Crider has populated little
Blanco, Texas, with a whole cast of characters who get involved in everything
from bank-robbing to incompetent attempts at heroism to living life at the
fullest before it is forever too late to do so.
Some of them deserve a book all their own.
Bill Crider |
(There is also a
second Ellie Taine novel titled Texas
Vigilante.)
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
A Little Girl Who Is Going Places (Watch for the Wink)
I've been meaning to post this for the last several days - I finally found the "embed" code today - so I'm happy to get it done. The Little Free Library People found this little girl and I think they got a little more than they bargained for in the interview. She's a definite winner with a bright future. She may be little, but she knows a lot about preparing for the future.
(She's also a born "ham" and that makes me smile.)
Monday, November 24, 2014
Bibliobimbo and Her Depraved and Unbridled Lust
I love old pulp fiction paperback covers of the fifties and sixties and, apparently, I am not only one because really good ones are getting harder and harder to find. So it gave me a good laugh yesterday when I stumbled upon a short series of parody covers that were created by Heldfond Book Gallery.
My two favorites are shown below:
Are these clever, or what?
My two favorites are shown below:
Are these clever, or what?
Sunday, November 23, 2014
My Salinger Year
I am a huge fan of well written memoirs (reading at least a dozen per year in recent years), and when I find a good one written by a publishing insider, I feel as if I've hit the memoir jackpot.
When I read Joanna Rakoff's My Salinger Year back in August, I wrote this review for use on a couple of websites. Because I did not write the review specifically for Book Chase, it might be a little rough around the edges. The sentiments expressed in the review, however, are sincere ones:
And here's a bonus book trailer featuring author Joanna Rakoff in which her enthusiasm and excitement (almost twenty years after her "Salinger year") is still evident:
This one will appeal to a diverse group of readers, I think: memoir fans, fans of Salinger, fans of books about books...it's a good one.
When I read Joanna Rakoff's My Salinger Year back in August, I wrote this review for use on a couple of websites. Because I did not write the review specifically for Book Chase, it might be a little rough around the edges. The sentiments expressed in the review, however, are sincere ones:
Joanna Rakoff was fortunate enough to experience the atmosphere of an old-school literary agency, one that managed to represent some of the most respected writers of the 20th century - and she did it just in the nick of time: 1996.As recounted in her memoir "My Salinger Year," the agency and the agents were nothing like the author expected them to be. Instead of finding a high tech (well, as high as high tech was in '96, anyway), Rakoff walked into an office that still thrived on manual typewriters, carbon copies, dictaphones, and walking down the hall to speak with co-workers. These people thought that having a copy machine was too high tech to fool with and there was no way they wanted computers in the office. When they finally got a copy machine, the typists were overjoyed - but when they got one IBM computer for the entire office and were pretty much told to stay away from it, they were reminded where they worked and for whom.Rakoff was 23 years old in 1996 when she found herself working for J.D. Salinger's agent, and her encounters with the man are both interesting and endearing (especially for fans of Salinger's work). She only met him one time, as I recall, but had numerous phone conversations with the hard-of-hearing Salinger during which he shouted into the phone at her.
Joanna Rakoff Joanna Rakoff grew into her job. She was little more than a secretary (1950s-style) when she started at the agency but, by the time she left just a year later, she had sold a story on her own and identified a new client for the agency via a manuscript she plucked from the company slush pile. But, ultimately, Rakoff decided to move on with her life - one in which she finally shed an anvil of a boyfriend, married and had a couple of children, divorced, and finally joined the college boyfriend she pined for throughout the length of "My Salinger Year."Avid readers will enjoy this insider's look at a New York literary agency as seen through the eyes of someone fresh from school. It is one of the better books-on-books of 2014.
And here's a bonus book trailer featuring author Joanna Rakoff in which her enthusiasm and excitement (almost twenty years after her "Salinger year") is still evident:
This one will appeal to a diverse group of readers, I think: memoir fans, fans of Salinger, fans of books about books...it's a good one.
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Backpack of Library Books Stops Bullet
First Book Struck by the Killer's Bullet |
According to an article in USA Today, 21-year old Jason Derfuss was the shooter's first intended victim - but two books he had just stuffed into his backpack saved the student's life. The books were so effective in stopping the bullet, in fact, that Derfuss did not even realize that he had been shot at until he emptied his backpack at home, noticed the damage to the books, and found the spent slug.
The slug passed all the way through the book pictured above but was stopped by a second book.
To read the entire USA Today article, CLICK HERE. The article includes a video interview with the student.
Friday, November 21, 2014
"The Top Ten Words Invented by Writers"
I have been a dedicated reader of the book pages of the U.K.'s Guardian newspaper for what must be at least two decades now, and seldom am I disappointed by the offerings there. This morning, for example, I found this little throwaway list of "The Top Ten Words Invented by Writers."
On the list were several words whose origin surprised me. In particular, this one:
And while you are there, take a look at all the fabulous stuff in the Guardian book pages (you can thank me later).
On the list were several words whose origin surprised me. In particular, this one:
If you are interested in more from the list (such as the origins of words like: "hard-boiled," "serendipity," and "Banana Republic"), do click on the link to the article.6. Freelance
i) One who sells services to employers without a long-term commitment to any of them.
ii) An uncommitted independent, as in politics or social life .
The word is not recorded before Sir Walter Scott introduced it in Ivanhoe which, among other things, is often considered the first historical novel in the modern sense. Scott’s freelancers were mercenaries who pledged their loyalty and arms for a fee. This was its first appearance: “I offered Richard the service of my Free Lances, and he refused them – I will lead them to Hull, seize on shipping, and embark for Flanders; thanks to the bustling times, a man of action will always find employment.”
And while you are there, take a look at all the fabulous stuff in the Guardian book pages (you can thank me later).
Thursday, November 20, 2014
The Last Kind Words Saloon
First, the bad
news. The Last Kind Words Saloon is Larry McMurtry’s first novel in five
years, and, at that pace, it could well prove to be his last. But the good news is that it marks a return
to the kind of fiction for which McMurtry is best known – and most revered – his
comic debunking of the mythical history of the American West.
The Last Kind Words Saloon is filled with real life heroes and
villains from America’s past: Wyatt Earp and his brothers, Doc Holliday,
Charles Goodnight, Buffalo Bill Cody, the Clanton brothers, Teddy Blue, Johnny
Ringo, plus Indian chiefs Quanah Parker and Santana, among them. Readers familiar with the historical versions
of these men, however, might see them a little differently after reading this
one because McMurtry, as usual, is more interested in their personal
insecurities, drinking problems, general laziness, and womanizing than in the
legends they ultimately became.
Although this is
a novel not long on actual plot, McMurtry packs a lot into a relatively short
book (its fifty-eight chapters total only 196 pages), catching most of his
characters toward the tail ends of the lives that would turn them into “cowboy
legends.” This ramble through the
history of the Old West has a feeling of inevitability about it as the Earp
family, always in search of a way to make the most money via the least effort
required, decides to move to Tombstone, Arizona, just in time to clash with the
Clanton clan at the O.K. Corral.
Fittingly, this thirty-second gunfight, one for which both the Earps and
the Clantons will be forever remembered, takes up only the last half-page of The Last Kind Words Saloon – a half-page
that can be read in approximately thirty seconds.
Author Larry McMurtry |
But the best
part of the novel is the dialogue between Wyatt and Doc that sometimes rivals
that of Woodrow Call and Gus McCrae in McMurtry’s masterpiece Lonesome Dove, with Wyatt often reminding
the reader of Call, and Doc sometimes sounding a bit like Gus. McMurtry has a talent for revealing much
about his characters through humorous conversation and he uses it to advantage
here. So while The Last Kind Words Saloon may be no Lonesome Dove, it is
Larry McMurtry and that’s a good thing.
His fans will not want to miss this one.
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Enhancing the E-Book Experience: Long Way to Go
Publishers are actually doing a little better job these days when it comes to the "covers" they attach to their e-books, but seeing a cheesy, cheap looking cover on an e-book is still one of my biggest turnoffs.
So let's take it one step further, publishers because, let's face it, reading an e-book is not nearly the experience that reading a physical book is. There's just too much about physical books that cannot be replicated. But...there are a couple of things you can do easily and cheaply to bring the two experiences a little bit closer to being the same:
So let's take it one step further, publishers because, let's face it, reading an e-book is not nearly the experience that reading a physical book is. There's just too much about physical books that cannot be replicated. But...there are a couple of things you can do easily and cheaply to bring the two experiences a little bit closer to being the same:
- Emphasize the cover art by taking as much care with it as you do with your physical book covers - front AND back. Have the cover appear at logical break points in the e-book presentation, be it at the beginning of chapters or, at least, before already-designated section breaks. Those books that are written to be presented in multiple parts now generally use nothing to emphasize the section breaks other than two or three blank pages.
- Take advantage of chapter breaks, especially in books that don't have more than a dozen or so chapters. Show the cover between chapters or, at the very least, have a separate page between chapters that show the chapter number - and maybe put the cover there every three chapters, or so.
"When reading a book in print, we interact with the cover every time we open and close the book – we see it all the time, it reinforces our perception of the book in our minds," Pelican book designer Matt Young told Creative Review. "Whereas when reading an ebook, the cover often has a much smaller role to play – reduced to a thumbnail, and sometimes never seen again once the book has been purchased. With Pelican, the cover is echoed throughout the entire book: each chapter begins with a full-page/full-screen chapter opener, acting as an important visual signpost and echoing the cover, reinforcing the brand and the series style."
This is a great marketing tool that should create some brand consciousness for e-books, Pelican. And here's hoping that other publishers take your ideas and run with them.
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
U.S. Book Sales Up 5.7% Over 2013
According to figures just released by the Association of American Publishers, book sales are doing surprisingly well these days, thank you. ( I say "surprisingly" because of all the doom and gloom associated with most all of the recent projections having anything to do with publishing.)
Granted, the numbers are only through August 2014 sales, but a comparison with the same eight months in 2013 shows book sales having grown by almost 6% year over year. Some genres, and some formats, are doing better than others, of course, and that's what makes the numbers interesting.
As measured in sales dollars (total sales of $10.7 billion):
Granted, the numbers are only through August 2014 sales, but a comparison with the same eight months in 2013 shows book sales having grown by almost 6% year over year. Some genres, and some formats, are doing better than others, of course, and that's what makes the numbers interesting.
As measured in sales dollars (total sales of $10.7 billion):
- Children's / YA e-books Up 56.5%
- Adult e-books Down 0.1%
- Children's / YA board books Up 47.1%
- Children's / YA paperbacks Up 21.2%
- Children's / YA hardcovers Up 18.3%
- Adult paperbacks Down 0.7%
- Adult hardcovers Down 7.2%
- Mass Market Down 3.4%
- University press hardcovers Down 3.5%
- University press paperbacks Down 4.7%
- University press e-books Up 14.0%
- Physical audiobooks Down 13.4%
- Downloaded audiobooks Up 27.7%
I suppose the best news is that, while adults may be buying fewer books for themselves, they have increased what they are spending on books for their children at a healthy clip. As you can see from the numbers, all of the "Down" categories are in adult books - and all of the children's categories are "Up."
I find interesting, too, the obvious trend away from purchasing physical audio books to downloading them. And, in the category of "very good news," the percentage gain on downloaded audio is more than twice the amount lost on physical sales of the books.
(For those who really enjoy number-crunching: combined sales of "children's" categories were $1.08 billion, leaving $9.62 billion for all other categories. Of this $9.62 billion, $0.014 billion is for audiobook sales and $0.007 billion for University Press sales. So, despite being a mix of good news and bad news, the takeaway here is that Total Sales are up almost 6%. And that's a good thing.