Wednesday 27 February 2013

Can we afford to lose the value of the book as a symbol?

I’ve been following an interesting discussion thread on the Tools of Change for Publishing LinkedIn page. The topic, Losing the book as a symbol, was started by Paris-based Francois Joseph de Kermadec, a self-described “professional word-wrestler.”

The gist of his post is this: with the advent of digital technologies, books have changed from a “tangible, brick-shaped presence” to something fluid that can be poured into any device fit for reading. That much is obvious—when we now say “the book” we usually mean the text, not the physical object.

In doing so, argues de Kermadec, “this convenience comes at the cost of a grave loss: that of the book as symbol, as an artifact of leaning, wisdom and moral fortitude” – and yes, he does really write like that. Books, he says, have “talismanic” value and by losing them we lose a way to encapsulate and convey such things as status and “a reassuring promise of humanity.”

“A portrait of a man with his iPhone may evoke digital literacy or modernity, but it hardly conveys knowledge. Nor do we pile up Kindle Fires on our occasional tables to subtly hint at our learned civility.”

Hyperbole aside, he does have a point, and others agree that new symbols are needed, symbols adapted to the digital age.

Just as scrolls made way for the book (see the great video in my earlier post), so the book is disappearing. But need it? Surely old-time books are ideal formats for art books and other subjects where the feel – texture, weight, etc.-- of the object is almost as important as what is on the page. Many books are works of art in and of themselves .

I am particularly fond of pop-up books that unfold entire worlds on their pages. And while 3-D graphics can do much the same (and probably more), they fail to amaze me by their artistry, by what can be rendered in a fragile medium.

What do you think?

Tuesday 26 February 2013

Getting your readers to read your content

In my social media class, we've focused on strategy development, monitoring and measurement. We've talked less about content itself, mainly because we're all  working on different blogs and sites, with a variety of topics, audiences, and objectives.
 
Any search about social media quickly reveals that "Content is king-- or queen", a trite but true claim. And the key is quality, we are told. A recent study from nRelate with Harris Interactive, reported in the January/February issue of EContent magazine, offers some pointers of how to get the content in front of your readers.

What they found:
  • 76% of US adults clicked on links to related stories for more information-- these are links at the bottom of the story or in a sidebar, not embedded links. This beats out content links recommended by friends or social networks.
  • 62% of people first look for traditional media news stories rather than images, videos, blogs, etc.
  • After reading a story, more people click on a link to amother article rather than to a video (34% vs 15%).
  • 39% are more likely to click on an article if there is an image associated with it.
Online consumers also defined what they meant by quality content:
  • it is from a source already known in the offline world
  • it includes images
  • it includes an author image and byline
  • it includes an embedded video.

They also said they read and click on content pushed to them via email newsleters from brands whose products and services they use.

Titled Behavior Shift: Getting Content in Front of Consumers, it's worth a read.

Tuesday 19 February 2013

Canadian authors bare it all

Looks like Allegra Young, a classical music producer, and author Amanda Leduc finally saw Calendar Girls, a 2003 comedy about a Women's Institute chapter's fundraising effort for a local hospital by posing nude for a calendar. And they were inspired, as their photo below well shows.

This time, though, the monthly models are Canadian authors,  men and women, and the "fig leaves" are books. Pen Canada will benefit from the sales of the inaugural Bare It for Books calendar, reports today's National Post. "When you buy a Bare It For Books calendar, you’ll support the fight for free speech, and show solidarity with all writers, readers, and thinkers worldwide," says Pen's website.

Young and Leduc hatched the idea through tweets. They then recruited the models via email: Angie Abdou, Trevor Cole, Farzana Doctor, Dave Bidini, Miranda Hill, Daniel MacIvor, Yasuko Thanh, Terry Fallis, Sachiko Murakami, Vincent Lam, Saleema Nawaz and Yann Martel. You can pick out your favourite month on the Bare it for Books website.


Leduc and young pose naked with books
Amanda Leduc and  Allegra  Young

"It’s a risky venture,” Leduc says. “A naked calendar isn’t something that you see everyday.” But it's something you see far too often in my view, with everyone from firefighters to Peterborough's octagenarians getting into the picture -- but I'm OK with the firefighters. After all, they do protect us.

The calendars go on sale in October. Remains to be seen if the books and authors being promoted make it onto next year's CBC Canada Reads list.

Tuesday 12 February 2013

Read this book and call me in the morning

This may what British GPs may soon be telling patients with mental health issues. According to Hannah Furness, writing in The Telegraph, 30 books have been found effective against such conditions as anxiety, depression, and relationship problems—even bulimia.

And no, this initiative was not launched by the publishers of self-help books, but by the Reading Agency, a “charity whose mission is to give everyone an equal change in life, by helping people become confident and enthusiastic readers. Because everything changes when we read.” -- I’m not kidding here. -- They announced the Books on Prescription scheme on January 28: the books will be in special sections of libraries in May.

If it sounds a little, well, nutty, the scheme has the backing of the Royal Colleges of GPs, Nursing and Psychiatry, the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies and the Department of Health. Funding is being provided by the Arts Council England. The Society of Chief Librarians is in league, of course.

A little research shows this is not a first: biblotherapy programs exist all over the UK and have for some time. Warwickshire even put out a really boring video about it.


In addition to the 30 prescribed books, this year's program is also recommending “mood-busting books”—novels, poems, and short stories to cheer you up. Of course, not everyone is convinced of the medicinal efficacy of cheery books. Also writing in The Telegraph, online culture editor Martin Chilton ponders whether MDs would be better prescribing depressing books as a literary shock treatment: just so you know others have it worse than you. He provides a list of 20 bleak reads to get you started.

I’ve never read a self-help book, but am tempted to try a dieting book to see if I lose weight. Or maybe a book on exercise will tone me up. Can you recommend any titles?