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The Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America has responded to the Amazon/Independent Publishers Group (IPG)  contract lapse by removing Amazon links for books on its website

The site now links to other retailers, including Indiebound.org, Powell’s and Barnes & Noble.

SFWA explains the move on its site: “SFWA is redirecting Amazon.com links from the organization’s website  to other booksellers because we would prefer to send traffic to stores where the books can actually be purchased.” SF books that are only available through Amazon will remain linked to the Amazon product page. continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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Should more poets self publish? We caught up with poet Susie DeFord to find out why she chose to self-publish Dogs of Brooklyn this year.

In an interview with GalleyCat, the poet shared the unique problems poets face when self-publishing. For years, this poet has built her Susie’s Pet Care business while writing poems about the furry, funny creatures she works with every day.

DeFord reflected on her choice in the interview: “I probably wouldn’t wait so long to consider self-publishing. I paid to submit to first book contests for almost two years, so I lost money and time trying to do it the old-fashioned way. I suppose that time spent revising/ editing/ swearing/ and feeling rejected made for a better book and some character building, but there are so many cool easy ways to self-publish and get your work out there from blogs to books.”

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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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A group of authors, publishers and organizations (including the Association of American Publishers) have created a book caravan to bring “contraband” books back into Tuscon, Arizona schools.

Beginning March 12th, the Librotraficante (featured in the video embedded above) will caravan from Houston to Tucson handing out banned books. Follow this link if you want to donate to the cause.

Last year, Arizona passed the controversial H.B. 2281, a bill banning school curriculum “designed primarily for pupils of a particular ethnic group.” Along with the bill, a number of ethnic studies books have been removed from school district shelves (list follows below).

 

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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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Here are some handpicked titles from our New Books section. Want to include your book? Just read our Facebook Your New or Upcoming Book post. Don’t forget to include your title’s exact release date and a link.

Austentatious by Alyssa Goodnight: “It started innocently enough. While browsing in one of Austin’s funky little shops, Nicola James is intrigued by a blank vintage journal she finds hidden among a set of Jane Austen novels. Even though Nic is a straight-laced engineer, she’s still a sucker for anything Austen-esque. But her enthusiasm quickly turns to disbelief once she starts writing in the journal—because somehow, it’s writing her back…” (January 2012)

The Flowers of War by Geling Yan and translated by Nicky Harman: “Based on true events, this powerful novel is set in December 1937 after the Japanese have taken Nanking. A group of terrified schoolgirls hide in the compound of a Catholic church run by Father Engelmann, an American priest who has been in China for many years. The church is supposedly neutral ground in the war between China and Japan. But it becomes clear the Japanese are not obeying the international rules of engagement.” (January 2012)

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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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Ron Hogan Unveils Beatrice App on Kickstarter

Posted February 29th, 2012. Filed under Kickstarter

Former GalleyCat editor Ron Hogan hopes to raise $4,500 on Kickstarter to launch an app version of his author interview blog, “Beatrice.” The funds will allow Hogan to make the app available free of charge.

Here’s more about the project: “I’d been looking at the app format for a while, with an eye towards recording interviews on video, selecting highlights from each conversation to stream alongside feature-length transcripts, then bundling two, three, maybe four interviews into thematic “issues” of a Beatrice app which could be priced something like $1.99 or $2.99 apiece. It’d be cool to be able to give the interviews away for free, but I didn’t see how I could afford to do it. Until now.”

If the fundraiser is successful, Hogan will unveil the Beatrice app at BookExpo America in June. The premiere issue, titled “Life Stories,” will feature interviews with three memoirists, including Half a Life author Darin Strauss, Revolution author Deb Olin Unferth and You Must Go and Win author Alina Simone.

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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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bosk

Posted February 29th, 2012. Filed under Uncategorized

Merriam-Webster’s Word of the Day for February 29, 2012 is:

bosky • \BAH-skee\  • adjective
1 : having abundant trees or shrubs 2 : of or relating to a woods

Examples:
As we drove away from the city, apartment buildings gave way to homes with yards, then at last to a bosky landscape dominated by tall pines.

"In 1863, when two brothers were abducted by armed gangsters and marched into a forest, their appeal to a local saint resulted in their abductors letting them go. Amusingly, though, the artist’s skill extends only to the most crucial details: the blindfold, the guns, the bosky scene."—From an article by Jenny Gilbert in The Independent (London), November 20, 2011

Did you know?
"Bosk," "busk," "bush"—in Middle English these were all variant spellings of a word meaning "shrub." "Bush" is still familiar to the modern ear, and "busk" can still be heard in a few places in the dialects of northern Britain. "Bosk" too survived in English dialects, although it disappeared from the written language, and in the early 17th century it provided the root for the woodsy adjective "bosky." Since its formation, "bosky" has been firmly rooted in our language, and its widespread popularity seems to have resurrected its parental form. By 1815 "bosk" (also spelled "bosque") had reappeared in writing, but this time with the meaning "a small wooded area."

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Media Tuesday: Special Edition – The Oscar Hangover

Posted February 29th, 2012. Filed under Uncategorized

Images

Well, I stayed up to watch the Oscars, and before I knew it I didn't have time for Media Monday. Hence, Media Tuesday: Special Edition.

Despite a significant numerical advantage, the Oscar for Best Picture did not go to a movie that started out as a book. Still, there were some book winners and, all in all, it was a good night for the French everyone. Maybe The Hunger Games will sweep the awards next year. (Feel free to add your 2013 predictions in the comments below or on Facebook.)

 

The Washington Post

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    Suki Casanave has a review of Eric Klinenberg's Going Solo: The Extraordinary Rise and Surprising Appeal of Living Alone, which opens by citing "a dramatic demographic trend: the startling increase in adults living alone." She understatedly notes that "Exile once ranked as the severest form of punishment — a fate worse than death," before continuing that "many people interviewed for Klinenberg’s study, however — from young professionals to divorced middle agers to independent seniors — attest to the benefits of solo living. They describe feelings of complete freedom, the joy of being able to follow your own schedule, indulge your own habits and focus on your own growth and development instead of always considering or caring for someone else. No compromises. No sacrifices. No attachments. These upbeat singles typically find themselves more socially active, not less." Sounds great to me. I am seriously considering reading this book over the weekend, after my wife and son go to sleep.

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    Justin Moyer, in his review of Evelyn Toynton's "trim biography" Jackson Pollock, points to her line from the book, "There is something particularly thrilling about watching an artist destroy himself." And Pollock was good at it. Moyer writes, "There was no shortage of aggression and nihilism in Pollock’s short life, captured by Toynton, who has also published a novel based on the painter’s doomed marriage to fellow artist Lee Krassner." In summary, this book "ably chronicles Pollock’s gambol over the edge."

  • Here's one of those think pieces that winds up in book review sections sometimes. Susan Okie starts the article by asking, "What makes human beings unique? What accounts for our species’ planetary dominance, for our self-consciousness and awareness of our mortality, for our impulses to create art, to help others, to cling to our memories of childhood, to believe in a deity, to seek riches or fame?" She then goes on to talk about two books that provide different answers. They are Mark Pagel's Wired for Culture: Origins of the Human Social Mind and Sebastian Seung's Connectome: How the Brain's Wiring Makes Us Who We Are.

    Speaking of Mark Pagel, at John Brockman's Edge.org, you can listen to Pagel talk evolutionary biology. Personally, I really enjoyed this, even if he was kind of insulting my entire species.


 

The Los Angeles Times

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  • The story goes that Mark Salzman was working on a long overdue novel, which had been rejected three times (and maybe for good?), when he started getting nervous and developed his experiences of nerves and not-good-enough writing into a performance piece. That piece was called The Man in the Empty Boat, which also happens to be the name of the e-book that came out of it. In the review, David L. Ulin gives the flavor of the book: "'If the Salzman family had a coat of arms,' he writes in his new memoir The Man in the Empty Boat, the story of his year in the emotional wilderness, 'it would be a shield with a face on it and the face would look worried.' As an example, he describes an encounter just after he dropped out of college in the middle of his junior year. Distraught over what he 'considered to be the meaninglessness of existence,' Salzman went to his father, a social worker, for advice. 'After he'd listened for an hour or so without interrupting,' he writes, '… [my father] pushed his reading glasses a bit higher on his nose, and looked at me for a long time. At last, he gave me a sad little smile and said, 'Welcome.'" Welcome, indeed.

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    Finally, a novel to talk about. Ellen Ullman's By Blood gets a great review by the LA Times, which calls it "a literary inquiry into identity and legacy" and "a gripping mystery — remarkable, considering that little more happens than a man eavesdrops on a woman's therapy sessions taking place next door." As you may imagine, there's a little bit more that happens than simple eavesdropping. A whole lot more.

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There's also a short excerpt of Kwasi Kwarteng's Ghosts of Empire: Britain's Legacies in the Modern World.

 

 

 

The New York Times

 

Galley Cat

  • Speaking of babies, there will be a Flying Babies book. (I wonder, can French babies can't fly?) Explore more here.

 

NPR

 

Jacket Copy

  • The Los Angeles Times book prize finalists were announced last week. Winners will be announced on the morning of March 26th.

 

The Guardian

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Brain Pickings

 

Abe Books

 

YouTube

  • Finally, I admittedly posted this earlier today, but for those who missed it, here's your 2012 Oscar Winner for Best Animated Short.



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10 Types of Numerical Terms

Posted February 29th, 2012. Filed under Vocabulary



How many categories of numerals are there, and what are their functions? No, you haven’t stumbled onto DailyMathTips.com by mistake; this post helps sort out the ways you can refer to numbers and under which circumstances, with nary a digit or operational sign in sight. Ready? One, two, three . . .

1. Cardinal Numbers

Cardinal numbers — one, two, three, or the numeric equivalents, and so on — represent simple quantity (though, as shown in the previous paragraph, they can also be employed in a countdown — or, in that case, a countup). The names of English numerals are all derived from Old English, as are the suffixes -teen, which derives from a form of ten and means “ten more than,” and -ty, which means “ten.” Hundred and thousand are also derived from old English, but million and other terms for orders of magnitude come from Latin by way of French.

2. Collective Numerals

Collective numerals represent sets. There are various subcategories — kinship terms such as twin and triplet, and musical terms like duo and trio – and, well, singletons, like that word, pair, dozen, and so on. Language origin varies among these assorted words.

3. Composite Numbers

Composite numbers — unary, binary, ternary, and so on — represent composition (what something is composed of). Binary is the only one of these Latin-derived terms commonly used, though quaternary was applied to a geological age.

4. Distributive Numerals

Distributive numerals represent alternating patterns. In some languages (like Latin, which has singuli and bini, for example, to mean “one by one” or “two by two” respectively), these numerals are represented by a single term, are usually described in English in phrases such as “each day,” “every other week,” and “every third month.” However, English also has one-word examples such as centennial and its multiplied variants, descended from Latin terms.

5. Multiplicative Numbers

Multiplicative numbers — once, twice, thrice — represent repetition. The ancestors of these words are variations on the Old English words for one, two, and three. Among the categories listed in this post, the multiplicative group is the only one that does not represent any value higher than three. (The reason for this lack is unknown, though perhaps it’s because it’s rarely necessary to describe an attempt or action beyond several previous efforts.)

6. Ordinal Numbers

Ordinal numbers — first, second, third, and so on — represent sequential order. Second is anomalous in that it alone comes from Latin rather than Old English; it supplanted the ambiguous English word other (still used in this sense in the phrase “every other”). There was never a twoth — or a onth, for that matter; that latter vacancy was filled by a form of fore, while third and so on are derived from the cardinal numbers.)

This is a good place to remind writers to deactivate the function on their computer that, by default, creates superscript ordinal indicators (miniature renditions of st, nd, rd, and th perched on the right shoulders of numerals). The perverse persistence of this Victorian affectation in state-of-the-art word-processing programs is a puzzler — and an annoyance to editors, who have to convert such aberrant symbols into baseline indicators before production.

7. Partitive Numbers

Partitive numbers — half, thirds, fourths, and so on — represent fractions. Half, which is from Old English, originally meant merely “part.” (Behalf, meaning “on the part of,” retains this imprecise meaning.) The others are just variations on Old English terms for the associated numbers.

8. Ranking Numerals

Ranking numerals – primary, secondary, tertiary, and so on (this class shares quaternary and higher values with the composite-numbers category) — represent degrees of importance or relevance. These terms are ultimately Latin in origin.

9. Reproductive Numbers

Reproductive numbers — single, double, triple, and so on, plus the generic multiple — represent replication. Single and double are from Latin by way of French; the higher values are all directly from Latin.

10. Miscellaneous Terms

Deuce, from the similarly pronounced precursor to French deux, is an old-fashioned synonym for two that persists in sports and gambling references. The mild oath “What the deuce,” a euphemism for “What the devil?” probably comes from association with deuce as a low score and therefore the outcome of bad luck.

Trinity, from Latin through French, and triad, directly from Latin, both mean “a group or set of three.” Triplicate, meaning “threefold,” is from Latin; -fold is from the Old English cognate of -plus, which is where we got the element -ple and its extension -plicate. Treble is the French form of triple; both come from the Latin triplus. Trice, used in the phrase “in a trice,” meaning “quickly,” is unrelated to thrice (“three times”); it’s of nautical origin, from a Middle English word borrowed from a Dutch term meaning “pull, hoist.”


Original Post: 10 Types of Numerical Terms

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Fauzia Burke: PR Is Stressful, But You Don’t Have to be a Stress Monster

Posted February 28th, 2012. Filed under Uncategorized

I love my job. I know it’s important. I find joy in doing it well… but unless I am risking my life or the lives of others, my job cannot be that stressful.

Read more: Book Publishing, Book Publicity, Publicity, Work, Pr, Stress Reduction, Public Relations, Business News

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The Royal Shakespeare Company will bring its production of “Matilda the Musical,” based on the Roald Dahl children’s book and now running in London, to Broadway next year.

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