Tag Archive | "Publishing"

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411 on Writing Book Jacket Copy

Posted on 26 April 2010 by KarishaPrescott

Copy is one of the hardest things to write. Personally, I recommend sending this out. At the same time, I realize not everyone has the luxury.  So let’s go over some basic information when it comes to writing good Copy for your Book Jacket.

Your Copy IS your Sales Pitch

That is right; you are going to be your own salesman here. Get used to tooting your own horn, talking in third person and ignoring most of the story in hopes of sparking curiosity and luring in readers.

Should Use Specific Wording

There are specific ‘Key Words’ that copywriters and copyeditors look for when writing good copy. That is because your sales copy for your Jacket is doing more than describing your story, it is using a limited amount of space to elicit an emotion, a connection, spark a curiosity and a desire to find out more about the story. If a potential reader buys your book off a book shelf, you know the copy was good.

Length Matters

Depending on how much room you have to work with in the cover design, how much information is ‘just right’ and details like font type and size, you have a very important decision when it comes to length. It has to fit, be legible, not give away too much but also intrigue the reader in a short amount of time: usually only a paragraph or so.

Do NOT Put Spoilers in the Copy

This is the number one temptation of writers. Putting spoilers in the copy could destroy your chance of someone buying the book (because they don’t have to wonder what happens anymore) or worst yet, you could end up ruining the experience (Uh, because– you already spoiled it). So, NO Spoilers in the copy.

So you see, it’s all about Sales

Overall, your copy is your Sales Pitch. So all of these things, the length, the wording, the description, all have to SELL your story to a potential reader without OVER selling it, UNDER selling it or SPOILING any of the story or experience for the reader. This is why Sales Copy /Book Copy are so hard to write. This is why so many go out of their way to hire a good copy writer and *cross your fingers* and hope for the best.

That’s why I prefer to send the copy out. But be warned, just because you outsource it doesn’t mean you will get a great copy back. Be diligent and be picky. Just because you paid for a copy doesn’t mean you should use it, especially if it’s bad.

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Basics of a Short Author Bio

Posted on 23 April 2010 by KarishaPrescott

Your author biography should be a short paragraph about you, a small professional photograph of yourself, and anything else you feel might be relevant. This is a short bio, not a full length bio. That means you don’t want to put your entire life story down on paper, but you want to give some basic information. This basic information would look something like:

Who you are: Your Name.

What you write: Particularly your Genre and/or popular titles.

When you began writing, at what age, how long you have been writing.

What is your latest title and what is your next title?

For the most part this should be your basic, well written short author bio that goes on your Book Jacket with a nice professional photograph.

An example of an Author bio might be:

Karisha Prescott is a science-fiction writer. She started writing in the early 1990’s and is living in Scottsdale, Arizona. Her newest work, Past Mistakes, has been featured on many prominent blogs and her next work, Naked Pixels, is due late 2010.

Now, some of this is author bio is fiction but for the purposes of this example: this is a well rounded author bio for a Book Cover Jacket. This also works as a promotion for one of your last books and a quick sales pitch for your next book. Remember – the Cover is all about the sales pitch.

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Fiction Genres and Sub-Genres

Posted on 07 April 2010 by KarishaPrescott

There are two types of fiction. There is commercial fiction and literary fiction. What sets literary fiction apart from commercial fiction is the tendency to use a certain writing style. The work of literary fiction could be compared with the likes of authors Charles Frazier, Toni Morrison, and Barbara Kingsolver.

We’re going to be focusing on commercial fiction which has several genres and many sub-genres. You’ll see many more sub genres in the online world in comparison to the traditional brick-and-mortar bookstore and this is because of space constraints.

It’s a good idea to pick one main genre for the book you’re writing. You can pick several sub genres but it’s very important to choose the right main genre for your book so that it can be correctly categorized and found by readers. The main genre tells bookstores where to place your book and readers where to find your book.

So even though you have a love story between two lesser important characters, if your book is about solving a mystery you’ll want to label it as a mystery genre and not a romance.

It would be very easy for writers to get bad reviews and become skipped over on bookshelves simply from being mis-categorized in a genre.

If you just can’t figure out what your main genre is there’s nothing wrong with asking your test readers or friends and family. Taking a general poll will point you in the direction of the genre that your book will best fit.

Sub-genres are usually categorized by hyphenation. Such as mystery-thriller, paranormal-Romance, historical Romance, and similar listings.  Sub-genres are almost endless.

A quick overview: Most fiction is commercial fiction, with one main genre and one or more sub genres. The main genre is the overall theme of your novel where the sub genre has to do with strong subplot or underlying themes.

Common Genres:

Historical: Relative to dates in history (Historical-Romance is a popular sub-genre of Historical Novels)

Romance: One of the most popular Genres in the entire publishing industry.  Sub-genres are almost limitless, from Romantic-Comedy to Paranormal Romance.

Science Fiction/ Fantasy: Set in fictional worlds with fictional creatures is a more ‘catch-all’ way to look at science fiction and fantasy. Also, Sub-genres can be Romantic Fantasy to Science Fiction-Thriller.

Western: are commonly fitting into ‘Historical’ genres. This is a specific time period, for western ‘Cowboys and Indians’ themes. Western-Mystery is just one of many possible sub-genre combinations.

Mystery : Mysteries are often blended into other genres and vice versa. Mystery genres are some of the more popular genres next to romance. Romantic Mysteries, Mystery-Thrillers, and so on.

Thriller: Thrillers are action packed and fast paced. This is an easily integrated sub-plot while also subgenres of almost every category are easily added onto any well written thriller.

Horror: Most famous writer of horror is Stephen King. Also a well known category of writing, subgenres are commonly Horror-thrillers. I don’t think I have yet to see a Horror-Romance but I’m sure I will be surprised eventually.

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Thank you for visiting The Official Karisha Prescott Website! For more top posts, try the Featured Articles page or Writing page for more free tips. Like this article? Subscribe to my RSS feed in an RSS reader to keep up with my most recent posts.

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What’s New with my Writing?

Posted on 04 April 2010 by KarishaPrescott

Well, I can’t say life has been easy. I’m finally done moving and I am loving Scottsdale. I’m making my grades at Arizona State University and am looking forward to the summer.

My series is about to end up in my desk drawer, so to speak, as it looks like I butchered it with a lawnmower. (I cut the word count in half, down to 91K over the past 6 months)

That’s not to say I have stopped writing. I have several new ideas for my next project lined up and now all I have to do is pick. I have another round of University tests next week, I have finals a few weeks after that and I am thrilled the weather is holding as long as it has.

I have been away from my blog for some time trying to work on my novel and I regret that. I’m really excited for some fresh new takes, some interesting topics going on in the publishing world and am very excited for ‘precedents on the verge’ in the digital media sector.

I’m very happy to be back blogging and look forward to hearing from everyone. I’m excited to take a more active role after dropping off the radar for so long and miss all my twitter frenzies.

So here is to a Happy Easter for all and a great start into April!

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Thank you for visiting The Official Karisha Prescott Website! For more top posts, try the Featured Articles page or Writing page for more free tips. Like this article? Subscribe to my RSS feed in an RSS reader to keep up with my most recent posts.

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B is for Blogging and Authors

Posted on 03 April 2010 by KarishaPrescott

Cuarts Blog

If you’re an author or aspire to be then you should be blogging. This is a fairly new standard in the publishing industry. But before you start thinking that blogging doesn’t apply to you, especially if you’re self-publishing, think again and then start blogging.

There seems to be the common misconception that blogging is a lesser form of writing. To those people I say ‘You are wrong and you’re missing the point.’

Before you think anything about blogging you need to know its purpose. In its most basic form, blogging is about reaching out to people and showing that you yourself are a real person.

In the publishing world your number one priority is to reach people. You will commonly hear it referred to as “building a platform.” Building a platform is a stepping stone to building readership. It’s interesting because in the online community a platform is usually the type of software used to blog.

So, the term ‘building a platform’ could be translated into ‘building a blog.’  You build a blog to develop a readership, a following, or more commonly known ‘ a fan base.’

The second function of blogging, though still very important, is to deliver information. This can be information of a personal nature, which is why we have personal blogs, or about your profession also known as professional blog.

Looking at KarishaPrescott.com you’ll notice that it’s both a personal and professional blog. I write about writing and I write about being a writer but also about being me as a person.

Some would argue that taking a hobby and making it a lot of work that you won’t enjoy it anymore. But I argue if you love writing, all kinds of writing, it’s never a labor. But that’s something to remember in the writing world. Blogging is a form of writing, so if you don’t love to write all kinds of things from novels to blog, to query letters, to synopsizes, then you should probably be picking up authorship as a part-time hobby; because in the world of writing, you will do a lot of writing.

In our world, that should always include a blog.

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Thank you for visiting The Official Karisha Prescott Website! For more top posts, try the Featured Articles page or Writing page for more free tips. Like this article? Subscribe to my RSS feed in an RSS reader to keep up with my most recent posts.

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Writing a Novel: A Beginning to End Overview

Posted on 02 April 2010 by KarishaPrescott

There is no such thing as ‘Ten Easy Tips to Writing a Novel’ because it’s too complex. Now, I will still say that writing a novel is easy, but it can be complex in the fact that so many easy, little pieces need to fit together.

Let’s face it, the economy is slow, the publishing industry is ‘playing it safe’ so if you are a new writer you are self-financing or self/vanity publishing your works.

But we are getting ahead of ourselves. We are talking about the simplicity and complexities of actually writing your novel.

Let’s take an overall look at what is required in the novel writing process.

Time: more than anything else in the world, beyond your method of writing, the genre you choose or anything else, you need time to write and time to work on promoting your work. It can be as little as twenty minutes at the end of your day to all but four hours a day (sleep critical amount).

Time is fickle. The more time you put in, the faster you could possibly have your novel ready. Each novel is different to take into account length, difficulty, plot issues, etc.

Ability: I don’t push unnecessary education. I think anyone is able to tell a story, anyone could write a novel and the basic knowledge is all you need. The basic knowledge would be a Basic English 101 class on grammar, sentence structure, etc.

I don’t recommend creative writing classes and I have elaborated about this on my blog on several occasions. I just don’t think that creativity could or SHOULD be learned. I strongly believe creative writing alters the unique creative writing voice that so many let others dampen. So, of course, it’s at every writer’s discretion.

Forming a Solid Novel Idea: Any story can fail and the same story can succeed; the real determining factor is how it is told and at what point in the story the writer is focusing on. A story that focuses on the events leading up to the destruction of an American landmark is a completely different story from that where families learn to cope with loss arising from the same situation or heartbroken volunteers working to clear away the rubble and debris. In the World of Writing, we would call this the ‘take’ or the ‘angle’ of the story.

Structure of a Novel: You need to know how the story ends. (My opinion, some would argue against my view here) Knowing how the story ends means you know what your main character’s (protagonist) ultimate goal is and can keep them on track. If your character wanders off willy-nilly at every bump and pin-drop in the night your readers may think they are on a wild goose chase and ultimately give up as well. So when we look at structure, we look at having a beginning, middle and an ultimate end or conclusion to the story, and mapping out what those main scenes are.

Momentum: Almost the same as structure, but it is more in the style of writing. Instead of long internal dialogue, you want to keep your character IN ACTION, constantly moving toward that end result. You don’t want your character to constantly be pondering the movement of leaves and grass, you want your character swinging from branches and feeling alive…alive in action.

A Crisis: Your character needs a dilemma, a crisis, a purpose. A purpose that drives your character to the ultimate end; so if the government mistakenly filters the air with poisonous ‘air packs’ (basically plot from ‘Serenity’) and only one person on the planet knows about it, that one person should be your main character and your main characters crisis should be to warn the people of the world and prevent millions of deaths. THAT is a crisis. Crises can be different on different levels of importance in different ways, but have some sort of crisis, whether world-scale or personal-world-shattering that needs ACTION.

Ultimate End: you need an end. That is how most stories go. Even if the end leaves your reader feeling angry, distain, whatever, it needs to have an end that has a feeling and the reader says ‘No more?’ and what they take from it at that point is up in the air, for the most part.

Editing: Ah, you thought you were done with that novel? Not yet. This is only the beginning. However long you spent writing your novel, think about spending the same amount of time or double that time just in editing. That is, if you are self editing. You should edit more than once, move on to the ‘Beta Readers’ part and then move back to the ‘Editing’ phase again. You should go back and forth several times.

Beta Readers: You need testers. Test readers that actually LIKE the genre you are writing and are also willing to read your story several times through out your editing process and give you quality feedback. Finding good beta readers and understanding how to interact with beta readers is very important; you shouldn’t be grilling your beta readers before they have even had a chance to sit down. You should be silent and let them say whatever comes to mind. This way, you are not swaying the ‘results’ etc.

Consider a Publisher or Consider a Self-Publishing method: I am all for the self-publishing method because I understand the value in owning full rights to my work for the rest of my life. This means no advances, but it also means I get 100% free reign on how much to price it, how it will be released, cover design, where it will be sold, if there is a book tour, etc. Self-publishing is where I am at. Does that mean I would look at a million-dollar book deal with a traditional publisher and scoff? Not a chance…but I know that the state of my writing and success as it is now, I should be completely happy with the methods of the self-publishing world.

Traditional Publishing: I could write a book on the Traditional publishing methods. Oh wait, someone already has! Hundreds of times over! My blog still covers traditional publishing topics like query letters, advances, royalties, marketing, rights, book tours, etc.

Marketing and Advertising: Welcome to the world of independence. As a self-publishing/ed author, I don’t care what your day job is, you ARE the entrepreneur of the century. You are handling everything from creating an idea, writing a novel, handling editing, test readers, and now marketing and advertising! You will have to maintain blogs, twitter streams, social networking profiles, make connections, come up with color schemes and slogans, and everything else that the marketing and advertising teams would do for you in a traditional publishing house. Though, in all fairness, if you’re not Stephen King, you’re doing almost all your marketing and advertising yourself anyway. That includes setting up your own book tours.

Print: Eventually, you will have written, edited, designed, marketed, advertised, blogged and tweeted your little heart out. You are going to eventually have to decide how to deliver your precious bundle of joy to your audience. There are many options and many companies, but the two words synonymous with Self Publishing are ‘eBook’ and ‘Print on Demand’.  I cover both topics extraneously on my blog.

Rinse and Repeat: That’s right. You think you are finally done. You are exhausted, you don’t want to answer one more person ‘So, what is your novel about?’ and your brain hurts from learning marketing, advertising, editing, digital formatting, design layout, etc. in the span of what it took you to write your novel. It can be exhausting. But now that you’re done with your campaign trail it’s time to sit down, get cozy and write your next one.

Don’t worry, chances are that you were writing it while working on all the other stuff for the novel you already wrote. If you are Grade A multitasking madness, you should already be done with your second novel, working on advertising on it and be thinking about your third.

But if you don’t take one thing away from this overview, take this bit of advice:

THINK SEQUEL/ THINK SERIES.

That’s right. If you are going to put all this time, energy and heart into a book, at least have a few books lined up for the series.

Why is that so important?

* Novel idea and character creation is one of the hardest parts.

* 80% of your energy is going to be spent marketing your novel

* If you switch to a different novel you automatically lose all your marketing on just one novel. Capitalize on the marketing you have done: let it span a whole series and build momentum, a readership and hopefully a big fan base of some type.

This is essentially the entire blue print for how to write a novel from beginning to end. It looks complex if you look at all the pages, the long string of parts and roles you will play, but if you just look at doing one thing at a time, as it comes, then it is relatively simple. It’s all in time management and keeping your passion for writing alive.

So, do you think writing is still so hard? Is a Novel really so unattainable an achievement? Or are you excited to get your fingers clicking and your words on paper/screen?

Photo Credit: h.koppdelaney

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Thank you for visiting The Official Karisha Prescott Website! For more top posts, try the Featured Articles page or Writing page for more free tips. Like this article? Subscribe to my RSS feed in an RSS reader to keep up with my most recent posts.

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What is Vanity Publishing?

Posted on 02 March 2010 by KarishaPrescott

Vanity Press or Vanity Publishing as it is commonly referred is self-funded publishing of a book by an independent author. This means that no matter the quality of the book, as long as the author has the money to do so, the book gets put out ‘on the presses’ and offered to readers.

There are publishing houses that specifically do Vanity Publishing. These publishing houses make a majority of their money by offering package deals and services to assist in producing a more polished product for the author. Such services could be anything from cover jacket design, editing services to marketing campaigns and placement in particular book stores around the country or even the world.

A lot of vanity publishing also offer ‘Print on Demand’ for their clients now, so that the self-funding, independent author no longer has to pay thousands of dollars to have first-prints run and then stored until sold, but can simply print one book each time one is ordered and have it drop shipped directly to the customer.

There has been a lot of speculation about the quality of work that gets published through vanity publishing, but there has also been a type of hysteria through the publishing world as authors wise up to their profit potential.

As publishing houses require more and more self-marketing, self-promotion and a building large platforms before contracts are signed, authors are wondering what the point to a traditional publisher is any more.

Are there pros and cons to both vanity publishing and traditional publishing? Yes. Do I have a preference? Personally, I am going with vanity publishing. Just a personal choice.

It is all about personal preference. Are you going to sit back and wait for approval from conservative low-risk-taking publishing houses or are you going to go full-steam-ahead on the book you have put so much time and confidence in?

More times than not, Vanity publishing is winning.

Digital publishing is especially winning as more authors become aware of the low demand for housing books, no supply to control and the relative zero-cost for materials beyond the invested time in writing, editing and marketing their book.

So Vanity Publishing has its place in the publishing world and I don’t think it is going anywhere any time soon.

What do you think? Do you think Vanity Publishing is a good thing or a bad thing? Do you think Traditional Publishing houses are at risk now that the ‘power is in the hands of the authors’ of the world?

Thanks for reading! I hope you have a great day and I would love to hear more on your thoughts about Vanity publishing!

Thanks again!


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English Final: Digital Book Burning

Posted on 21 December 2009 by KarishaPrescott

for the love of books by chocolate geek

for the love of books by chocolate geek

Photo Credit: Chocolate Geek

The Following is the paper I turned in for my English 101 Final. Please respect my work. Do not plagiarize as the paper will come up in search results fairly easily. Cheating is wrong but above that, I know you have great ideas, great thoughts and you just need a little encouragement. This is me encouraging you. Everyone has a great paper in them. Write a paper you can be proud of and call your own. As always, thanks for reading!

Digital Book Burning

Book burning has spanned the ages but has never been more dangerous than today. From the 1700’s with the banning of literature supporting the United States rebellion against England, to book burning in support of Nazi regime, the most notable being May 10th, 1933 by German university students, books have been controlled most strictly where dictatorships have risen.

Dictators like Hitler knew the power that books held. By holding book burnings people attempt to stop the spread of ideas. Now we are upon an age, a digital age, when the books that hold the past are in danger. Not only is there the danger of books being eradicated with the push of a single button but the danger of our books becoming censored even as they sit on our digital book shelves. The numbing part is that no one will even know it is happening. This holds the most danger in experiments with institutions of higher learning switching from traditional textbooks to digital editions. (Mintz)

Traditionally, books would have to be sought out, gathered, piled and lit to burn publicly. There would always be a few copies that survived. These books were hidden away to provide insight into what was so terrible a threat to the authority that banned it. Sure, you could have had a knock at the door and a militant looking fellow could demand all copies be brought to a square, but it was somewhat easy to misplace or hide a copy.

Today, we are faced with a new threat. No longer will there be a knock at the door. Instead, the culprit will come through the window, thumb through your library and pick and choose what is appropriate. Sound outlandish? The same incident occurred on December 17, 2009, when corporate giant Amazon, who manages and distributes digital books, decided to go through a few selections on the Kindle reading devices owned around the world. Amazon deleted select titles without warning or notice. (Stone) “Justin Gawronski bought and was reading ‘1984′ as part of a summer assignment for school. Amazon deleted the book while he was reading it, causing him to see the ink disappear before the eyes as he was reading.” (Hood)

Digital piracy could mean something completely different in our time. Instead of thinking of a person stealing a bunch of music from a website, envision a website going through your library and automatically replacing a book you purchased with a ‘new, edited, cleaned’ version. Basically, you could go to sleep with one thing on your digital page and wake up to something entirely different. So the real threat is not in an entire edition disappearing, which is obvious and noticeable, but select passages altering without warning or reason. It is easy to see where something has been taken, but would you notice if the text in a section is just a little more to the left? Was something added or was something taken out?

The titles that were omitted from the libraries of every Kindle owner that had purchased them were none-other than Animal Farm and 1984 by George Orwell, as well as a few other titles. (Stone) The reason that this irony is an irony is that the book 1984 by George Orwell is about government totalitarian control, most especially over literature and books. It would, no doubt, leave a lasting impression on the young man, Gawronski, who was reading the title as it disappeared by the same situation the book was trying to shed light on. (Hood) The possibility of totalitarian control over literature is now a very real possibility and threat.

This all comes back to control and even government. A good example of this would be the book project spearheaded by conglomerate Google. Google Books is millions of books into a world-wide digitization project attempting a modern day replica of the Library of Alexandria from Greek history.

It is no surprise that France leads the fight against the spread of knowledge. “We won’t let ourselves be stripped of our heritage to the benefit of a big company, no matter how friendly, big or American it is,” were French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s thoughts on the matter. (Jarry) As Google continue to fight against accusations of attempting to build a perceived monopoly, you have to take a look at the market. Targeting public domain works and out-of-print works, Google is making books available to the world that would otherwise be forgotten in dusty, used bookstore stacks.

The future of books is a double edged sword. On the one hand we have the spread of knowledge, and on the other hand is the stifling and eradication of books. Both options grant complete control and great responsibility.

There may come precedents set by courts as time goes on, that slowly chisel the rights of publishers and there-by the rights of writers. As writers and journalists are attacked in the courtroom for things like slander, opinion, political views, and shedding light on atrocities, there will become a gradual shift. Instead of seeing an apology or retraction you won’t see anything. Things like court ordered edits that completely erase the initial intent of the author could become an unheard normalcy in the digital publishing world. That in mind, the latest endeavors of Amazon should worry the population far more than Google’s attempt at a mass library.

Over 200 universities, including Arizona State University, are in preliminary testing utilizing the same company that so casually deleted users’ books in the middle of the night, Amazon. In this experiment, students use a Kindle device which comes preloaded with their digital textbooks courtesy of Amazon, instead of their traditional books. A Kindle device may be lighter than traditional books and possibly less expensive in the long run but handing over control of educational texts to the company that readily pilfers digital libraries is not what I call a ‘great decision’. (Minz)

As companies and publishers begin serious contemplation about putting history books in collective digital archives, the population should be looking to authors. When it comes down to the integrity of a book, no one knows a book better than its author. Whether authors will defend their works at all costs or let laws censor and alter is yet to be seen. When the dust settles it would be nice to trust what you’re reading is what was originally written.

As far as digital books go, the whole threat is in not knowing the initial intent of the author. Government control on publishing houses, court orders to alter, edit or delete works with the push of a single button means that an original would be known only to the original author and no one else. The days of stowing away a book in hopes of saving it from the bon fire, appreciating the words that are feared by an authority and having the mind to save it for future lessons on literary control and abuse, would be days of the past.

Digital book burning is a very real situation, having already happened in the middle of the night and having gone almost unnoticed. (Stone) The contents of “1984″ are coming to potential prophecy less than a hundred years from when it was written and we may all be made fools by the end, having not heeded the warning. As book burning becomes a simple press of the delete key the world needs to look to the source, the author. The author is the only one that can say what was or was not intended. It is up to the authors to keep the integrity of their works. It is up to the author, and not much can be expected elsewhere, to keep the integrity of literature for the rest of the world.

Works Cited

Hood, Jon. “Amazon Faces Kindle Class Action.” ConsumerAffairs. 28

Jul 2009.

ConsumerAffairs.com Inc., Web. 12 Dec 2009. <http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2009/08/kindle_class.html>.

Jarry, Emmanuel. “France’s Sarkozy takes on Google in books

dispute.”

Reuters. 08 Dec 2009. Thomas Reuters, Web. 12 Dec 2009. <http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSGEE5B029F20091208?type=marketsNews>.

Mintz, Jessica. “Kindle lightens textbook load, but flaws remain.” The

Seattle Times. 14 Oct 2009. The Seattle Times

Company, Web. 12 Dec 2009. <http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2010056619_apusteckindleoncampus.html>.

Traveling exhibit on Nazi book burnings will open at

State Library Aug. 27.” AllBusiness. 23 Aug 2009. LexisNexis,

Web. 12 Dec 2009. <http://www.allbusiness.com/trends-

events/historical-events-world-war-ii/12719888-1.html>.

Stone, Brad. “Amazon Erases Orwell Books From Kindle.” The New York

Times. 17 Jul

2009. The New York Times Company, Web. 12 Dec 2009. <http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/18/technology/companies/18amazon.html?_r=2>.


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Danger of a Single Story

Posted on 09 December 2009 by KarishaPrescott

Banned Books Week Banner by DML East Branch

Banned Books Week Banner by DML East Branch

Photo Credit: DML East Branch

“When we reject the single story, when we realize that there is never a single story about any place, we regain a kind of paradise,” – Novelist Chimamanda Adichie

The above quote is from the video embedded below from Novelist Chimamanda Adichie.

If you know me, by now you know I am a fan of TEDTalks. If you don’t know what TEDTalks are go ahead and just watch the video I embedded below.

Mostly, I love TEDTalks because it opens me up to the ideas and thoughts of great minds around the world. I like stuff that gets me thinking.

In Adichie’s TEDTalk, embedded below, she goes on to talk about her experiences moving through life and the perspectives of people as she compares to her perspectives from the first books she read and wrote.

She dissects a sort of disconnect she had as a youth and the disconnect that occurs in a variety of cultures and people around the world as a result of only hearing one story. I would love to hear your comments and ideas about this concept and would love to know if I have converted anyone to becoming a TEDTalks viewer.

If it’s midnight…I may be on YouTube but chances are I am on the TEDTalks Channel!

Thanks for reading! I hope you enjoy the video. Be sure to check TED.com for lots of great talks they have archived through out their site for easy viewing and the spread of ideas. TEDTalks2009 was held in India this year and I believe TEDTalks are being held in California next year.

Chimamanda Adichie : The Danger of a Single Story

Video Length: 18:49 minutes

TED.com or TEDTalks Channel on YouTube



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Calander

September 2010
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