splash

Posted By CL on January 4th, 2010

http://litsisters.com/2010/01/04/litsisters-in-the-news/

I am so thrilled to post this. I have to say, being a part of LitSisters has changed my life in the most amazing way. And we are starting 2010 off with a bang! Not only did our boutique publishing house, LitSisters Publishing, launch today, but we also were featured on the home page of [...]

 

Posts Tagged ‘book’

The Writing Life II

Posted By Christine on July 14th, 2010

http://litsisters.com/2010/07/14/the-writing-life-ii/

Earlier this month I sent off the manuscript for the 2nd edition of my travel guide (due out December 2010).  It was a lovely feeling to have it off my plate, for the time being anyhow.  Having been through this process before, I knew what was coming…the editing process.  And it began today with an email from my editor.

Now, with a non-fiction book, there is great importance placed on how the book is organized.  With a travel book this may be even more important.  How you’re organizing entries by type, geography, etc. needs to be consistent throughout the book.  But, one of the biggest things I struggle with when writing my book is “seeing” how it will look in the end.  I’m a very visual person, so I need to see things before they can make sense to me.  The 2nd edition of this book has a brand new format (and less words, try downsizing from 90K to 50K, but that’s another blog topic!) and so not only did I need to “see” a new layout for my book, I didn’t have another format to look at.  Needless to say, it was a tough process.  So, now, in addition to editing content, I’m also helping to re-organize material in a more reader-friendly way.

Ahhh…the joys of writing!  But, it will look so good when it’s done and then, after all of the hard work, someone can write on Amazon that it reads like a very boring high school essay.  Well, pooh.

The End of Print?

Posted By Audrey RL Wyatt on November 25th, 2009

http://litsisters.com/2009/11/25/the-end-of-print/

Every now and again an expert sounds the death knell of some item or other that we mere mortals can’t imagine living without. Inevitably they’re wrong. This week the object in question is the book. Frankly, I just don’t see it.

There were several stories in the trades this past week that draw the reader to an inescapable conclusion: the paper book is antiquated. The new way to read is with an e-reader. If there’s anyone out there who is still unfamiliar with the term, e-readers like the Kindle, Sony Reader and the Nook are hand-held electronic devices with very readable screens, adjustable font sizes and a glow similar to a back-light.

They are available for purchase in the $200-400 range. For around $10 you can download most any book onto it. In fact, many classics are available for free. E-readers hold about 1500 books and some have expandable memory beyond that. This way you could load your entire summer reading list and then some onto a hand-held device the weight of a mass-market paperback. Given its convenience and portability, digital books are a clear winner, right? Maybe.

Certainly there is room for e-readers in the book world of tomorrow. In fact, the fastest growing purchasing demographic of these devices is 55 to 65, likely because of the font and lighting features I mentioned earlier. There are prolific readers who are happily freed from toting numerous books on vacation and frugal readers who are tearing through Austen and Dumas gratis or enjoying the lower, paper-free price of a download.

But for all that, there are people like me. I love the feeling of a book in my hands. The smell of it. I like to curl up with it on the couch or stretch out on a chaise in my garden and smell the bougainvillea. As I sit in my office writing this, I”m surrounded by books. They’re my friends. In this new world, what would be on my shelves? I have a first edition of Tess of the D’Urbervilles that’s 120 years old. It doesn’t matter if I can read it on a Kindle. Solzhenitsyn can’t sign my Nook like he signed my copy of The First Circle.

No, paper books will never die. We readers become attached to them as children and that’s a love affair for the ages. As a writer, I celebrate the concept of making literature more available to people and I am happy for their ability to get it in whatever medium they want. But you’ll find me forever haunting the stacks, looking for the next paper-bound adventure to strike my fancy.

Related Posts with Thumbnails