Sunday, May 7, 2017

Reflections for the A to Z Challenge

As all good things must come to an end, so it is with the A to Z Blogging challenge. But it's not goodbye but a continuation, a continuation of our themes as extensions of ourselves. During this process, my first, I've extended my passion of books. Whether as a bookstore owner, a teacher, and executive, a business owner, a traveler, and more, it's always revolved around books. Just as I've seen the best and the worst in the industry, I saw ebbs and flows in my interest passion, and application that have given my life great meaning. And whether it's clients, or customers or colleagues, or students, I've extended that interest to them. I'd like to believe it's helped each of them, but at least it gave them something to think about and try, even if the results weren't consistent.
In this process, not only did I learn from myself, whether through success or failure, I learned much about my cohorts in this process, whether through their comments on my blog, or from my visits to theirs. I learned how passionate each of them were, and how driven they were to tell the world about things that fascinated them. They opened up to an new, broader audience of different interests, and I could see the consilience in their writings and findings as I could link each blog to another and another, no matter where they were from, no matter what their experience, no matter what their goals were. And I was was honored, and excited, and humbled by them opening their doorways for all to see the good and something Ike's even bad within their pathways as they sought the truth, and understanding and acceptance and success. 
It was fascinating to network with so many talented individuals and it increased my drive, because I'll be honest, some of the letters were challenges, even though mine was about books, which are basically a reorganization of the alphabet in new and fascinating ways. But I persevered, and reading their works, and my own experiences helped me. The deadlines helped me. And most importantly, the challenge challenged me, all for the best.
While I've always been passionate about books, this as allowed me to open up by my passion. I know I will continue to post on my blog and on Facebook. Through this process, my followers are already over 600 members and counting. It's been fun. It's been consuming. It's been honest. But most important, it's been me, and I'm sure the other bloggers would agree. Thank you all, and as I continue to read your posts, I look forward to the challenge next year, as well as the completion of this foundation into a book I've always wanted write about books. Thank you and book on!!!

Monday, April 24, 2017

Z: Zoo of Books - Favorites through the Letters

Z: Zoo of Books - Favorites through the Letters


All of which I recommend, many that I've used as examples throughout the other blog posts - enjoy! And I'm sure you have favorites well, so please share! While many titles seem to work with the post, I liked zoo, since each are separated by letter, in their own natural or perhaps unnatural dwelling, which made me think of a zoo! Each have influenced me to varying degrees over the year, but that doesn't make them tame by any means. Instead I'd like to think that while I may have a better understanding of each, I'd like to think they continue in the wild to be preyed upon by other readers hunting for a challenge, a companion, a guide, an assurance, and maybe just maybe a reliable tenant in their own zoo of authors to admire, and to apply to their experiences in their lives! 

A - Douglas Adams - Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy

B - Dan Brown - Da Vinci Code

C - Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) - Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn

D - Roald Dahl - James and the Giant Peach, Willy Wonka

E - Umberto Eco - Name of the Rose

F - Ken Follett - trilogy series

G - Neil Gaiman - American Gods, Sandman

H - Ernest Hemingway - Old Man and the Sea

I - John Irving - World According to Garp, Hotel New Hampshire

J - James Joyce - Ulysses, Dubliners

K - Stephen King - Duma Key, Dark Tower, IT, Stand

L - C S Lewis - Chronicles of Narnia

M - Haruki Murakami - On Music, classic tales

N - Vladimir Nabokov - Lolita

O - Bill O'Reilly - the Killing series

P - Edgar Allan Poe - Raven, Tales of Rue Morgue

Q - Anna Quindlen - one of the most honored in Non-Fiction and Fiction

R - Ayn Rand - Atlas Shrugged, Fountainhead

S - Dan Simmons - Drood, Terror

T - J R R Tolkien - Lord of the Rings, Hobbit

U - John Updike - Rabbit series

V - Kurt Vonnegut - Cat's Cradle, Welcome to the Monkey House, Sirens of Titan

W - Tom Wolfe - Bonfire of the Vanities

X - Malcolm X - writings and activism

Y - W B Yeats - poetry of which he won the Nobel Prize

Z - Carlos Ruiz Zafon - Shadow of the Wind
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_Ruiz_Zafón



Y: Young Adult Books for Readers of All Ages

Y: Young Adult Books for All Ages

What do you think of when you hear "Young adult"??? Not quite a child but not quite a mature adult. Or is it? Books within this genre are set for this target market, but their success has been demonstrated time and time again by the purchases of individuals of all ages. In the past, authors realized this with some even going door to door to sell their wares, like Mark Twain, or even having monthly inserts in weekly or monthly newspapers or magazines, like Charles Dickens. 




Today, books that appeal to a wide range of individual tastes and ages. An excellent example of this is J K Rowling, who while peddling her works to several publishers, offered Harry Potter as a Young Adult collection, knocking out the interest of several potential suitors. While the publishing house that accepted her work, Scholastic, is generally known for young adult and school age materials, they saw the potential appeal to all, and that why they bid. Other publishing houses sought the next big YA book to crossover, and the fruits of those endeavors have led to Hunger Games, Percy Jackson, and Twilight. Other books that were limited to the same age groups were expanded in scope and interest like Chronicles of Narnia and Lord of the Rings.







So while the hunt continues, find the book that appeals to you, and make sure you visit the YA page online or table in your favorite bookstore. You'll be pleasantly surprised!

X: X Marks the Spot - the Treasure in Collecting Books

X: X Marks the Spot - the Treasure in Collecting Books

I love books. But even more, I love collecting books. Not just each book that I'm interested in or may enjoy, the stacks in my TBR group, but also the Special Editions, the Advanced Reading Copies, and Signed Editions. And having currently amassed over 7500+ books, including nearly 1000 "special" books, as well having owned several bookstores, while appraising books for curiosity and Insurance sake, I've become pretty good at finding those gems in the rough.

Now I want to emphasize a caveat if you are thinking of collecting books, I recoomend doing this for passion or pleasure. Whenever I'd have speculators come in my store, asking what will be the next big thing for investment purposes, I'd always say, find something you will enjoy. Then if it goes up in value, that's a bonus.

Now let's collect. First, find the kinds of books (or other assets for that matter) that you would like to collect and why? Hopefully it's for your pleasure, but how do you know the value of the item over time. If it's a book, always check the first couple pages, to see if it's a First Edition, should say so. Some don't state that but in the long list of printing number, it starts with a 1. For older books, you may have to crack the spine slightly at the front, to see if there is a letter or number to help you determine which edition. Then check for the add-ons like gilt pages, or even art when spread, bookplates or pic plates throughout, check for damage, creasing tearing or even loose pages. Depending on the age of the book, that might not matter, but make sure it's intact, for the greatest possible value. 

Now find a consistent guide on pricing. Kovell's is one of the best, most consistent book, having been around a long time. Also check current prices in auction houses, or even going value on Amazon, Powell's, EBay, and Craigslist - but be careful! Let the buyer beware, be your guide. The condition can be in the eye of the beholder, and a VF or F from the sellers side, may not even qualify as a VG or G on the buyer's side. That's why I like to see the books, going to auction houses, estate sales, book stores, and even flea markets (you'd be amazed at the treasures you can find there).

Collecting has become so big, that there are even books about collecting that are collectible themselves. Price Guides from the past can be worth a great deal, depending on the publication run, which is typically low, though increasing as there is less competition, with the same demand. Joh Dunning, a successful bookseller from Colorado wrote a book, Booked to Die, which included in its plot, the value of certain books. It was a limited run in first printing, but it took off, with many more printings, so the first edition of a book about book collecting is a collectible, selling for as much as $1000 to the right buyer. 

Other classics include Gone with the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell. It was a limited run, but took off, even including a movie adaptation that won the Oscar for best picture. 1st edition, 1st printing can bring in as much as $100,000 - so valuable, but lesser printings are still worth quite a bit. I owned a 1st edition, 18th printing that I sold to another bookstore for $15,000 to be resold to Oprah Winfrey for $25,000 - everyone came out happy in that deal. The dime novels, if in excellent condition, from the 30s through 50s can summon a minimum of $50 upwards to thousands of dollars. Not bad for a book you paid a dime for. Stephen King's The Stand (Uncut) commands several thousand dollars and more depending on buyer, but if you sell the collect version you might make only $50, so make sure you know what you have. I had a Catcher in the Rye but mistook the edition which caused me to pay more, and make much less than I thought I had. But that's all part of the process. Another modern classic (very hot area right now, speculating the next big book) is the author who makes it big, and has a limited run on their very first book - example, John Grisham, who's book The Firm, put him on the map and in reader's hearts. Now try to find his first book, A Time To Kill, which is worth upwards to several thousand for the first edition. 

And a signed copy usually doubles the value of the book, but it also depends on the author. Grisham is doing his first book tour in 25 years, which will lower the value of his signed books, but before that, any signed edition was worth several hundred dollars. Stephen King is another. Some authors will sell their signed on their pages, and with the internet, little things like this have lowered the coast, but still make them investment worthy over time, depending on demand, their next big book, or their passing. I still collect signed books from my favorite books, with the value being the bonus, but special editions have even make this a challenge. And how much is an ARC (Advanced Reading Copy) worth? They are usually sent to bookstores and reviewers to drum up demand, so they should be available free, but in order to get an ARC of your favorite, expect to pay money, and don't complain -yes, they are supposed to be free but it's a way to get a book that otherwise may not be available.

So those are the basics on book collecting, but I must emphasize, HAVE FUN! Find something you love to collect, whether books or any other commodity - values fluctuate, but your love of the book, if done correctly, never will. Happy hunting!

W: World's Most Beautiful Libraries in My Eyes

W: World's Most Beautiful Libraries in My Eyes

I propose a road trip, or a bucket list, or a book list - if you love books as much as I do, I'm sure you've looked at various libraries, and perhaps visited a few, in you locale, or on vacation, and or even as a visit, at least in your mind, when you see pics of libraries around the world. I have chosen 10 by beauty alone, but I do have a bias. I love the old libraries. The modern libraries are functional, but there is something special about libraries built a long time ago, but still appreciated today. Of course, I would love to include the original Library of Alexandria, but due to its unfortunate demise, it's no longer available except in our dreams. So let's begin (using quotes from the experts on the design since they've been there, with my own observations on why I want to visit included)...


El Ateneo Grand Splendid, Buenos Aires – In a beautiful cross-pollination of the arts, one of the world's most stunning places to read isn't even a library -- it's a theater in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Designed by Pero and Torres Arngol, the El Ateneo Grand Splendid started life as a stage for the performing arts in 1919, then a cinema. Once upon a time live tango played from an orchestra underneath silent movies. Now it's a majestic bookstore, complete with frescoes, balconies and original red curtains.


Waanders In de Broeren, Zwolle, The Netherlands – If libraries are cathedrals of learning, then it's not a huge stretch to place a bookshop in a church. Waanders In de Broeren in Zwolle sits within a converted 15th century Dominican church. The refit builds in three floors but pays respect to the original vaulted ceiling, while architects BK. Architecten transformed the building's transepts into reading rooms, complete with stained glass windows.


3 Strahov Abbey library, Prague, Czech Republic – Dr James Campbell of Cambridge University and renowned architecture photographer Will Pryce have together compiled The Library: A World History, the most complete account of library buildings to date. Here Campbell and Pryce take us on a virtual journey through some of their favorites.


6 The Peabody Library, Baltimore, U.S. – Will Pryce: "This is an extraordinary space, a temple to the industrial age which creates an almost cathedral-like effect. There are thousands of books wherever you look and gorgeous ornate balustrades. Despite all the classical details it's actually made of iron and spans the weight of this huge library above the concert hall below."


8 Merton College Library, Oxford, UK – James Campbell: "Although the building was completed in 1373 and is one of the oldest academic libraries in the world still in continuous daily use, the fittings date from the late sixteenth century. It is less ornate than Rococo libraries in palace or monastery complexes, because universities did not have access to the same amount of money, but it is still extraordinarily beautiful."


10 The Bodleian Library, Oxford, UK – Will Pryce: "Arts End is one of most lovely corners of the group of libraries that constitute the Bodleian. Under the galleries there are little desks where readers face the bookshelves of one of the earliest wall-system libraries."


11 Admont Abbey library, Admont, Austria – James Campbell: "This is one of the largest monastic libraries ever built. The whole thing is a complete work of art. The corridors and staircase that leads to it is relatively simple, so when you enter this stunning space flooded with light there is almost a moment of revelation, a theatrical effect. There are no desks to work at because these library rooms were never intended for study, but for impressing visitors. The books were taken back to the monks' warm cells to be read. It was built in 1776, a piece de resistance of rococo design."


13 Biblioteca Joanina, Coimbra, Portugal – Will Pryce: "This is a very imposing library from a time when Portugal was extremely wealthy and powerful. It is very dark but features intricate gold leaf which gives it magical luminosity. The backs of the bookcases each have different color, and there are integrated ladders that pull out, and secret doors that lead to reading rooms."


14 The Escorial Library, San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Spain – Will Pryce: "This library was ground-breaking. It established the template of using books to decorate the walls of the library which we've been using ever since. The great hall is a harmonious combination of bookshelves, books and a wonderful painted ceiling. It was complete by 1585 and influenced everything that followed it."


15 Mafra Palace Library, Mafra, Portugal – James Campbell: "The Mafra Palace Library in Mafra, Portugal is at 88 meters the longest Rococo monastic library in the world. Sadly the original designs are lost but we think it would have been covered in gold leaf with an ornate painted ceiling. However, because the construction lasted from 1717 to 1771, by the time it was completed a simplified decoration was adopted. The library also hosts a colony of bats who come out at night to feed on the insects who would otherwise eat the books."

So there you have it, some of my favorite, most beautiful libraries in the world - I've the book, Beautiful Places to Read, as well as searches online over the years, hoping for that elusive road trip. And. Of course, there will be other libraries added, as inspiration for my passion to books. If you are interested, I'd love to have you tag along, and I promise we'll visit a few of your favorites as well!



V: V for Vendetta and Other Movies Made from Books

V: V for Vendetta and Other Movies made from Books

I love books! Did you know that? Well, I do! I find a book that captures my interest, and I'm set for the day, week, and even month, depending on the book, length and interest. But now comes the thorny issue. What if they decide to make it into a movie? Imagine everything we visualize and every emotion we feel, being recreated as a movie or series? It would be a challenge, but may not be insurmountable. Let's look at some possibilities.

From the title, you can see that I like V for Vendetta. Very much. I loved it as a graphic novel by Alan Moore, and I was pleasantly surprised by the movie adaptation. It had just the right mood established. The right tension, the action, the passion, the anarchy to create a viable visualization of the book. Another great movie was Watchmen, also created by Alan Moore. That became one of my favorite superhero films of all time. I could relate to the characters, just as I did in the graphic novels. I think it's an incredible challenge to take an author who is a favorite of many and try to bring their ideas to the screen. 

Two  of the most challenging, and possibly the best for different reasons at their adaptations, are Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter. While there Re detractors, the overwhelming odds of this nearly impossible recreation has been rewarded. For Lord of the Rings, Peter Jackson decided the best way to maintain consistency was to fill the entire series at one time, and release the three films over the next several years. As one of the most awarded adaptations of all time, it paid off. I'll admit the first time I saw each, I was overwhelmed by the story having it shown to me after reading it for many, many years. The "it can never be made into a movie" adage had been broken. Unfortunately, this formula didn't work for the Hobbit, attempting to extend one book to three movie when one or two would have worked better.

For Harry Potter, finding the right British cast was critical, as well as continuing their parts through eight films assisted it greatly. Who would have guessed it's international success, except that it followed the books carefully to make the reader and non reader alike comfortable with the story being told.

Unfortunately, this hasn't always worked. A prime example are Stephen King books - while many have enjoyed success on the screen, and some have even received several adaptations, the challenge is to get the author's vision, and the reader's imagination across the screen. Fingers are crossed as two more movies are coming out this year, IT and The Dark Tower. Hopefully with today's technology, and studio's budgets, they will accomplish what many haven't, though I enjoyed the original IT, Cujo, Christine, Misery, among others, but perhaps it's truly a matter of taste.

So here's to the continual debate. Keep enjoying your favorite novels, and some may come to fruition and your satisfaction, like To Kill a Mockingbird, while others may be a disaster waiting to happen, like atlas Shrugged. Two more of my favorite books, but only one received the proper celluloid treatment it deserved. What are your favorites? What were total disasters? I'd love to know. Meanwhile, I hope to see you at the movies!

U: Universal Design for Books

U: Universal Design for Books?

I teach in a lot of different fields, one being Interior Design - I would emphasize all kinds of design, whether graphic, computer, creative or universal designs. And that made me think, there is universal design for creating things/rooms/ environments so the most people can use them - a toothbrush no matter the company, as a similar design, a hair brush, or a phone would be other examples. Could this concept work with books? The basic premise would be to get the most people to use them, but how? 

Books have similar shapes and designs, but what would be the ultimate universal design, so that most people would want to read it. It could be the story, in whatever genre, but it would have to connect with the reader, and everyone has different tastes. It shouldn't be required, but could it have the appeal on its own to get people to try, to buy, or check out. All the different platforms would be taken into account, whether hardcover/paperback, ebook, audio, interactive, blended, large print, multimedia, etc. So what to do?

We could consider the most successful books in sales as a possible guide. The Bible is the largest selling book of all time. Should the book of our universal design involve faith? What about those who are areligious, or should this be a book of guidance for anyone considering or understanding faith? The largest number of books owned by people is Mao's Red Book. While it could. Be argued that this is a type of faith, isn't this actually the guidelines for a political structure and culture. It's also follows the point made about requiring a book since the books available were required of all citizens within its sphere of influence. For fictional works, the bestselling book of all time is DaVinci Code, by Dan Brown. Interestingly, it questioned faith as it tried to seek the clues to mysteries within the works of the Masters. There were those who went as far to compare readings of the Bible and the Code to understanding the keys to their beliefs. And there were those who eschewed one, two or all three of the works. 

So what is the best way to create a universal design for books? When it comes to a room, there have to be a certain structure in place so that individuals of all walks of life would be able to enjoy and live there. The book perhaps could be structured to include more of a potential demand, but could the interest be too specific for each, because of the cost? We can print on demand, could we establish a structure so that each person could choose what they want emphasized, or could there be a universal survey of what was wanted, and create books with the majority interest in mind? Then would it be 51% or greater? Would it be structured like a masters course in storytelling with a certain standard checklist of what must be covered - but wouldn't that take away from the author's creative spirit and vision? We write what we feel - who would have guessed a book about a boy wizard would be so successful, 23 publishers didn't think so - fortunately, the 24th did. Dystopian novels do well, but so do inspirational books - historical and historical fiction hold their own against each other, young adult novels are bought by people of all ages.

Maybe it comes down to this, that each of us on an individual basis, find that special book, so special, that we want to share it with someone else. And maybe' just maybe, they think it's so special, that they share it with another and so on. So maybe it's not that it has to be universal, but that it fits nicely in our sphere of influence and becomes part of ours, and our friends, and their friends, universe?? I'm good with that. So tell me that special book that you'd like to share - and let's make it ours, and maybe a few other's special books...