October 10, 2016
by Neelima
0 comments

The Extraterrestrial and Time @ BYOB Party in September 2016 (Part 3)

Science was not far behind in the BYOB Party this time.

threebody-problemSudharsan read the book The Three Body Problem by Chinese author Cixin Liu . It’s sci-fi or end of the world dystopian fiction, part philosophy, part fantasy, he decides. The book deals with the ultimate sci-fi question: What happens when humans come into contact with the extraterrestrial or the opposite. What happens when extraterrestrials come in contact with humans? The primary characters in the book are Ye Wenjie, who has a haunted past, and Wang Miao who is swept into a virtual reality online game. The book requires a lot of focus but once you get into the flow of things, it becomes a compulsive read. It has been translated by Ken Liu, a writer of a popular book series himself.

a-brief-history-of-timeChaitanya brought along the bestseller A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking, a bestseller science book that has sold nine million copies and been translated into forty languages. This book also has the dubious distinction of being one of the books that everyone starts and no one finishes.

This book introduces the reader to the theory of relativity, quantum physics, particle physics, gravity and the fourth dimension. He also explores how  Einstein’s ideas changed physics forever. The book is written very simply, Chaitanya confirmed, and there are no equations to put off the mathematically uninclined. The book brought alive a discussion about the Matrix and the role of man in a world where he is merely a pawn.

October 6, 2016
by Neelima
0 comments

Algorithms and the Bestseller @ Link Wanderlust

Susanne Althoff asks a pertinent question in her essay in Wired, Algorithms could save book publishing but ruin novels, about what makes a novel like The Da Vinci Code sell 80 million copies. There have been some breakthroughs at the Stanford Literary Lab that can help you find the answer to that one. Jodie Archers and Mathew J. Lockers fed their computers with 5000 titles just to decode what went on behind the plot.

“ Young, strong heroines who are also misfits (the type found in The Girl on the Train, Gone Girl, and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo). No sex, just “human closeness.” Frequent use of the verb “need.” Lots of contractions. Not a lot of exclamation marks. Dogs, yes; cats, meh. In all, the “bestseller-ometer” has identified 2,799 features strongly associated with bestsellers.”

This kind of software almost eliminates the need for a good editor who can take a chance on a manuscript. There are already apps that tell you how far into a book readers go or how soon they abandon it.  Many contemporary editors don’t buy algorithmic wisdom but some books which would otherwise have been ignored are getting their due because technology sees what publishing houses aren’t seeing. This idea extends to books that haven’t been written yet, but should be as the market is looking for such books.

So are algorithms the new toy publishers will have to play with? Let’s wait and watch.

 

 

October 3, 2016
by Neelima
0 comments

Shantaram and A Street Cat @ BYOB Party in September 2016 (Part 2)

openIn Part 1, the discussion involved Intellectual Property and plagiarism.  The discussion also  meandered to ghost writers. Usually autobiographies of celebrities have a ghost writer author. This may or may not be the case with the book Open by the tennis player Andre Agassi. Supriya loved the book and felt it read like a breezy love story.

“Whatever one’s public persona is, the personal insecurities are the same, irrespective of perception,” she said. Agassi was a tennis player whom everyone admired in his day. “Even if the book is ghost written, what does it matter?” Rajeev said. “Some stories have to be told.”

The book describes Agassi’s training as a child, his adolescence in a Florida tennis camp, his rebellious nature and raw talent. He talks about important matches, relationships, physical pain and true love.

Other sports persons’ biographies discussed were Sachin’s biography and an upcoming movie called M.S.Dhoni: The Untold Story.

shantaramThere were quite a few biographies at this BYOB Party. Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts is no different. Chaitanya found this book riveting and of course, it really needs no introduction. The novel spans the real events in the life of the author. Roberts is convicted to a nineteen year imprisonment in Australia but he escapes to Mumbai. There he begins a new life, makes new friends, works with the socially downtrodden, and eventually finds his way back into the criminal circuit. There is a saving grace at the end of the novel.

“Even if we remove the protagonist from the book, Mumbai would stand out as the strongest protagonist,” Chaitanya said. Undoubtedly. Shantaram is said to have done a lot for Mumbai tourism as well. Consider the Shantaram Walking tour.

Speaking of books about Mumbai, there are many others like Suketu Mehta’s Maximum City and City Adrift by Naresh Fernandes.

a-street-cat-named-bob_Piya got a light book in the true sense.  “You can read it any difficult street junction; it takes just two hours.” The book called A Street cat named Bob by James Bowen tells his own tale. He is a recovering drug addict, homeless and penniless. He’s pretty much at the end of it all, when he meets Bob who turns things around for him. From that moment of nursing the sick cat to health, Bowen’s experiences as a busker change for the better.

Just as Shantaram depicts Mumbai, A Street Cat named Bob shows the London of the streets. No manicured gardens for you. The book has sold one million copies in the UK and is now being adapted into a motion picture.

 

the-ditchdiggers-daughtersNeha got a book called The Ditch Digger’s Daughters . A write-up in The Reader’s Digest caught her eye when she was young and Neha was pleased to finally get to read the book she so coveted. It did not disappoint. The story is set in East Harlem in the US and tells the story of a father with six daughters during the Great Depression. He is an ambitious man and wants all his daughters to become doctors. He goes to great length to achieve this, even cordoning them off from other kids who could be potential bad influences. Even when his daughters created a successful band, he frowned upon the frivolities of a short-term success. “What stood out for me was the Maslow’s hierarchy imprinted in the Father’s head. He chose the security of his daughters above all else,” Neha said.

“Do we have an Indian equivalent to this?” Ralph said.

The discussion then went around to the dearth of such stories in a country where there are only such stories. Everyone could identify with the Father’s struggle in the book. Some books like Kalam’s Wings of Fire and Karmayogi about E. Sreedharan came to mind, but there doesn’t seem to be a book that chronicles the true life of an utterly downtrodden person in popular memory. Websites like Upworthy and Humans of Mumbai/New York are alternatives.

And on a lighter note for individual stories, Goats of Bangladesh.

September 30, 2016
by InstaScribe
0 comments

Visual Friday: The Secret Life of the Writer’s Cat

Visual Friday: The Secret Life of the Writer's Cat

Want to embed this post on your blog or website? Use the following code.

<div style="text-align: center; margin: auto;"><a href="http://instascribe.com">
<img src="https://instascribe.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/thesecretlife-02.jpg" alt="Visual Friday: The Secret Life of the Writer's Cat"/>
By InstaScribe
</a></div>

September 29, 2016
by Neelima
0 comments

Broke Writers @ Link Wanderlust

In I Published My Debut Novel to Critical Acclaim—and Then I Promptly Went Broke, Merritt Tierce talks about the financial reality of being an author. Her book Love me Back received a great deal of critical acclaim. Before this success she worked in a non-profit organization. She’s also worked as a waiter. But her heart has always been in writing.

Two weeks before her book came out she quit her job. She didn’t have two book deal. And the bills kept coming. They don’t stop even if your book has a good first run.

“Basically John Grisham and Stephen King and JK Rowling are bankrolling the entire publishing industry, and deals for debut authors like me are slot-machine pulls. My book has sold over 12,000 copies, but that’s nowhere close to earning back my advance (which is when you can start earning royalties). In fact, I wonder if my publisher considers 12,000 a failure, commercially, and won’t want to pull the slot machine handle on me again.”

Tierce really didn’t have much of an option except to go back to the work force. This will affect her writing and she thinks this is unfair. It is terribly unfair that so few writers can really live off what they do. Things have to change. Until then, keep the day job.

September 28, 2016
by InstaScribe
0 comments

Quotes Wednesday

People have two deaths: the first at the end of their lives, when they go away, and the second at the end of the memory of their lives, when all who remember them are gone.

By InstaScribe

Want to embed this quote on your blog or website? Use the following code.


<div style="text-align: center; padding: 25px; background: #eeeeee; margin: auto;">
<a href="http://instascribe.com">
<img src="https://instascribe.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Quote99.jpg" alt="People have two deaths: the first at the end of their lives, when they go away, and the second at the end of the memory of their lives, when all who remember them are gone."/>
By InstaScribe
</a></div>

September 26, 2016
by Neelima
0 comments

23-word Sentences and Intellectual Property @ BYOB Party in September 2016 (Part 1)

This time the BYOB Party was hosted with Sunny at his office in Bangalore. The spirit of the party was more in lines with autobiography, though we start with a different kind of reading material.

Ralph talked about Philosophy of Intellectual Property by Peter Drahos.  The hard cover version  is available at Amazon. This is a downloadable book and as such Ralph does not recommend downloading books as it is an overly strenuous exercise and should be avoided in light of practical difficulties. The sentences are very long, ’23 word sentences’, as he puts it and one must read slowly if one is to assimilate. The treatise as such is extremely topical and relevant, and the gist of it would be  that as far as copyright goes, Drahos argues for instrumentalism as opposed to proprietorism.

Jaya broke it down for us. The idea of copyright itself is a relatively new idea, maybe a century old. The idea behind copyright, contrary to the belief prevalent right now, was to incentivize creation to enhance the greater good. What has happened now is that proprietorism or ownership is given leverage and the reason that copyright came into being in the first place has been forgotten.

She pointed out about the recent High Court ruling in India that enabled teachers and students to  photocopy textbooks prescribed by an educational institution. Already libraries are doing this, but this ruling is a blow to academic publishers. The conversation meandered to citations, very different from plagiarism, and stayed on plagiarism cited in a First Lady aspirant’s speech and  long passages plagiarized in a book called How Opal Mehta got Kissed. Another aspect of book-related ethics discussed was book packaging and ghost writing.

More on that in Part 2.