Posts Tagged ‘Book World News’

If you’re anything like me, you are likely a collector of some thing or another.  Anyone who has helped me move can tell you that the two things I collect (almost obsessively, and certainly compulsively) are books and movies.  There’s just something about owning a library that anyone who isn’t a book lover may not understand.  Maybe it’s the smell of a new book or the smell of an antique book–both are specific and unique, and a seasoned bibliophile can tell the general age of a book by this alone. 

I buy some books to complete a collection of a series by a particular author.  I collect other books because they are editions of the same book with different commentaries and appendices.  Some of my books are worn and tattered from use and sharing, and some of those contain notes in the margins from myself and some books have marginalia from others who read the book after I did–a running commentary, if you will, with a “mini-review” on the blank pages containing thoughts, impressions, and opinions regarding the book or subject matter.  I treasure these books above others for the impressions as much as the shared experiences.

Other books I have for my “show” library.  A conversation I once had with a close colleague comes to mind, and for the longest time I argued with him about the purpose of owning a personal library and placing books where people could see them.  He contended that personal libraries are only fractionally about collecting and more about visually demonstrating and expressing the breadth of your intellectual capacity and “polarity” to others without delving into those kinds of (snobby and “boorish”) conversations.  To him, personal libraries were about stereotyping yourself and portraying various aspects of your personality based on what books you chose to display for others to see.  A shelf lined with Existentialist thinkers, 20th century Russian classics, Renaissance Literature, and various collections of “canonical” poetry would (according to him) be owned by someone far different from a person whose shelves were lined with Danielle Steel and “Oprah’s Book Club” covers. 

Not until Amazon crept in to the Kindles of 1984 and Animal Farm owners in the dark of night to snatch back the bought and paid for copies of those e-books without alerting those Kindle owners, did I realize he might be right.  Amazon claimed that those copies of the Orwell books were “boot-legged” and uploaded by a third party application and added to the Kindle Store by a party who did not have the rights to do so.  Perhaps the irony of the deleted books being two of Orwell’s greatest social commentaries about social control, “Big Brother” interfering in independent, unique thoughts, and propaganda monitored by the powers-that-be caused Amazon to pledge to never do that again, or whether they’re just providing an apology to quiet the Kindle users up in arms, at least the issue is being discussed.  (Apparently Orwell wasn’t the only author whose works went missing–Ayn Rand’s trilogy and J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books also had been removed in the past few months.) 

Fair enough.  If you don’t own the rights, you don’t get to sell, use, or profit from a work.  I have no problem with that.

I DO have a problem with Amazon sweeping in and deleting something I bought (meaning I handed over cash–be it digitally or with the antiquated paper and metal stuff) without my permission or my knowing why.  Big Brother Amazon just took it upon themselves to remove the product (I.E. the e-books) without first informing the customers of what the issue was or why.  What they did was akin to Louis B. Mayer or George Lucas breaking in to my home in the  middle of the night with a crowbar and taking back a movie I paid for and leaving me a check or some equivalent dollar amount on my nightstand.

Their refund doesn’t make it right.

If you read Amazon’s Kindle terms of service it states that: “Amazon grants you the non-exclusive right to keep a permanent copy of the applicable Digital Content and to view, use, and display such Digital Content an unlimited number of times…”

Non-exclusive.  So you can “buy” all the e-books you want for your new “digital” library to show off on your public page on Amazon, Facebook, Goodreads, LibraryThing, or wherever the new social media equivalent to your personal library collection might be today, but you should also know that Non-Exclusive means that, in essence, you’re merely renting it.  Amazon is selling the illusion of purchasing and owning something. 

When you buy a physical book, you own it.  Period.  When you rent a movie, you don’t own it, you’re paying for the right to watch that movie over and over again for a finite amount of time (assuming you return it without late fees, and you’re not a Netflix subscriber.  Think old school Late Fees here).  So you don’t “own” anything when you rent.  But no other “rental” company gives customers the illusion of ownership.  When you rent a U-hall, you don’t assume you then own the truck until someone comes and takes it away when you aren’t looking.  When you rent ice-skates at the skating rink, you don’t assume you’ve just purchased those skates permanently.  When you buy a movie, audio book, e-book, or CD, customers naturally equate this process to that of their former experience.  They assume they own it and can do with it what they will (within legal standards).  Amazon has just opened the eyes of quite a few people regarding transitioning their personal libraries online and in digital format by erasing these e-books from the readers.  You already can’t sell used books, give away your already read books, or buy used copies of books with the Kindle, and now you can’t technically own the ones you did “buy.”

I considered transitioning some of my library to a digital format seeing as my virtual bookshelves are more visited and more readily accessible online through social media than they are in my home, and I have been talking myself in and out of buying a Kindle since they were launched.  This stunt just guaranteed that I’ll continue collecting traditional (analog) books.  I’d only buy the digital e-book version of a book I don’t care about losing, and only if it’s on sale…. and only if Amazon drops a gift wrapped Kindle in my lap overnight when it sneaks in to my bedroom to steal back my hard copies of Sixty Years Later.

Tags: , , , , ,

If you remember just a little while ago I posted about J.D. Salinger’s recent lawsuit to stop publication of Fredrik Colting’s novel Sixty Years Later: coming through the rye.  The same day I posted that, a good friend of mine located a copy of the book and had it sent to me.  Yesterday, Judge Deborah A. Batts issued a preliminary injunction based on her review of the documents, the book itself, and the cases presented that indefinitely bans the publication, advertising, or distribution of Sixty Years Later in the US.  Colting has already stated that he and his lawyers plan to appeal. 

Yesterday I also opened my mailbox to find a brand new, first edition, pristine copy of Sixty Years Later  along with the original Media PR sheet (which, interestingly enough, promotes the book as the long awaited sequel to Catcher in the Rye.  But that’s not what they said in the US court.  Oops.

Talk about timing!

I have a new copy of Catcher in the Rye to read over, and the hot little Sixty Years Later to follow it up with, and you can believe I’ll be posting a review and weigh in on the situation as soon as I’m finished!

As a side note, some oddities regarding the publisher (Windupbird Press) which is owned by Nicotext, which also owns SCB Distributor, the publisher/distributor in the US who was planning on printing and releasing the text this fall, seem to have gone unnoticed or unconsidered, except for the folks at Galleycat and Anne Trubek from Good.  For a company that publishes joke books and advertises that it seeks to thumb its nose at the literati, publishing under a newly “formed” company like Windupbird would make sense.  Oh, and just guess who is one of the founders?  You got it… Fredrik Colting.

We’re supposed to take Sixty Years Later seriously.  That was the reason behind the shell game with the publisher names.  And now their US “shell” was removed from the game.  We’ll see if it was worth it. 

Can’t wait to dig in to this book…

Tags: , , , , , , ,

I’m surprised it took this long to happen. 

This weekend author Alice Hoffman took Roberta Silman’s book review to heart and attacked the Boston Globe reviewer through Social Media.  On Sunday night (apparently at about 4 am) Hoffman began a 27 tweet string of vitriol-laced updates to her Twitter account (which was deleted as of this morning) blasting the reviewer and attacking her credibility, her position, and even the reviewer herself.  One of the more shocking tactics that Hoffman used was publishing Silman’s email and phone number for “fans” to respond to the critic in a Tweet that read:

“If you want to tell Roberta Silman off her phone is (redacted). (Email redacted). Tell her what you think of snarky critics.”

 

Since the account was deleted, the string went into the void along with it, but the author didn’t move fast enough.  You can still read her string of attacks, along with interesting takes on the events, at Gawker, Mediabistro, Entertainment Weekly, The National Post, and the NY Times Entertainment section.  It’s clear that Hoffman realized that she, perhaps, went too far and whether it was through the advice of colleagues, lawyers, or agents, she deleted her Twitter account (@AliceHof).  Smart move, perhaps, but the damage was done.  In this age of instant gratification information systems, her attacks were read and re-posted and re-tweeted almost instantly, and everyone knows that once you open Pandora’s box you can’t delete the box and hope the bad things (i.e. personal attacks, off color humor/statements, unprofessional behavior, etc.) you let out disappear on their own.  No can do, sister.

So what’s the big deal?  Authors have been raging against critics for ages.  Very few, however, took to open forums to attack a critic for doing her job.  The review itself is far for scathing, and Silman mentions her admiration for Hoffman’s previous works.  So the review wasn’t what Hoffman wanted to read.  So what….

In another Tweet, Hoffman lashes out:

“Now any idiot can be a critic. Writers used to review writers. My second novel was reviewed by Ann Tyler. So who is Roberta Silman?”

….Newsflash, Alice….

Idiots “Average people”–otherwise known as YOUR READERS–have always levied criticism of their own.  The difference now is that with the explosion and ease of blogging and social networking sites like LibraryThing and even Facebook, EVERYONE is a critic, and EVERYONE can post reviews for the world to read.  But instead of embracing this opportunity, authors are finding this threatening.  More opinions can be heard.  More negative reviews can be posted.  Forget that more positive reviews can be posted too, and that fan page after fan page can be posted.  Forget that this gives authors, agents, and publishers a unique insight into the worlds and minds of the readers.  None of that matters when compared to the fragile ego of the author. 

Writers used to review writers?  True.  But there have always been literary critics who weren’t commercial fiction writers, or writers at all.  Do you seriously think that all film critics or all food critics made movies or were 5 star chefs?  Get a grip and come down from your pretentious high horse.  You’re not writing academic criticism for a small, very specific group of readers.  You’re writing for the masses.  To make money.  Your objective is to write what people will buy (and want to buy) for a living.  Everyone, artists included, receive criticism on a daily basis and the reality is that it’s not always sunshine and puppies.  You can’t please everyone, and when you lash out it makes you look like a child.  It makes other reviewers not want to read your books for reviews–good or bad–and what happens then?  You fall into obscurity or you are driven to go ask those “idiots” online to give you a review, any review, for the love of all that is holy I need my work to be talked about to sell copies!!!  And guess what… When you come knocking to the doors of people who watched you attack a critic publicly, and personally… no one is going to answer.

And for the record, Roberta Silman is a writer, in every sense.  She’s a critic and published author.

Tags: , , , , , ,

I’m not going to lie.  I’m torn about this one. 

If you haven’t already heard, reclusive author J. D. Salinger is suing “John David California,” aka Fredrik Colting, to stop the U.S. publication of his novel, Sixty Years Later: Coming Through the Rye.   It boils down to these issues:

  • Salinger claims that Sixty Years Later is a “rip off” of his classic Catcher in the Rye and filed suit to stop it’s publication in the US citing copyright infringement on his character (Holden Caufiled) and story.
  • Salinger has famously guarded the use of the story since publication and has even put a stop to film versions suggested by Spielberg and Zemeckis.
  • Salinger claims that Sixty Years Later is an unauthorized sequel to Catcher in the Rye, and therefore infringes on his copyright.
  • The text of Sixty Years Later features an elderly “Mr. C” escaping from an institution and wandering around the streets of New York and visiting locations that Catcher in the Rye fans will undoubtedly recognize, along with a few characters from Catcher, but also many new ones.

The problem here is that Colting has filed his own 33 page defense, claiming that his Sixty Years Later  is not a sequel, but a parody of the original and an examination of the interaction between creator (Salinger) and the creation that became the obsession for the majority of his life (Holden Caulfield).  At one point, “Mr. C” escapes after alluding to his past in a mental institution (ala Catcher in the Rye) and wanders around the streets of New York… when he starts to hear the typing of his creator who is seeking out ways to kill him off. 

Uhm… Stranger than Fiction, anyone?

Regardless of whether the writing is good or not, Colting is arguing that his work is protected under the 1st Amendment.  Currently a judge is reviewing the text to decide whether it bears enough weight and difference to be deemed a “parody” or whether it will be stopped in the U.S. because it infringes on Salinger’s copyright of the story, and of the character Holden Caulfield–a notion that isn’t all together set in stone in terms of the law.  Formerly copyrightable characters were primarily visual, and it will be up to this judge to decide whether or not Holden Caulfield is a distinguishable enough character as written by Salinger, to be considered covered under copyright.

I desperately wish I had my hands on a copy of this book, but it’s not available in the U.S. and it’s already sold out on Amazon in the UK. 

Should a new novel that takes a meta-commentary perspective on the interaction between an author and his most notable creation be squashed?  Salinger has succeeded in killing other projects that had to do with Catcher, so why not this one too? 

This differs greatly from the J.K. Rowling debacle (which she won, by the way), in that Colting’s work is another work of fiction… a stand-alone work of fiction (but one could argue that Sixty Years Later, in fact, couldn’t  stand alone without the subject matter having existed).  The descriptions of Sixty Years Later portray the text as a far more intellectually challenging, almost academic, look at the relationship between author and character, but does that give him the right to use a character as well known as Holden Caulfield (even though he never actually names him)?

Part of me understands exactly why Salinger intervened.  I would be angry too if someone took one of my characters and just started writing away without my consent.  That’s why Fan fiction bothers so many authors.  If Colting were writing an academic analysis of the relationship between Salinger and Caulfield, I would say that Salinger has no place stepping forward to stop it.  But that’s not what Sixty Years Later is about.  Is there really that big of a difference between analysis and creative writing?  Should there be?

What about works like the Wind Done Gone, Wicked (any of his adaptations, for that matter), American McGee’s “Alice” video game?  What about Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead?   Should it matter that the author of the original has been dead for hundreds of years?  Or that copyright expired?  There needs to be a definitive clarification…

I still don’t know where I stand, even after thinking it through.  What’s your perspective on this issue?

Tags: , , , ,