December 10, 2015
by Neelima
2 Comments

Self-Help and NaNoWriMo @ BYOB Party in November 2015 (Part 1)

zenpencilsThis time, the BYOB party welcomed an overwhelmingly large number of individuals who work in the software space.

Nilesh Trivedi the engineer who has made it to all our BYOB Parties so far, talked about Zen Pencils, a departure from the usual heavy stuff he reads like philosophy. He showed me a couple of panels that reflect the writer’s conundrum. Gavin Aung Than, the creator of this comic strip, used to read biographies of of people whom he thought had more interesting lives than he did; this inspired him to use his flair for cartooning to illustrate quotes from the greats. His story is very interesting. Read it here.

 

the apple revolutionRalph A decided to skip the self-help and talk about a very tech book called The Apple Revolution: Steve Jobs, the counterculture and how the crazy ones took over the world by Luke Dormehl. It’s a non-ficional account of how the hipster hackers of the 1970s generation in California mastered capitalism. Ralph reads extensively and he felt lucky that he fell upon this little known book, a relatively new one at that, published in 2012. A movie Abhaya watched called Pirates of the Silicon Valley explains the Microsoft and Apple story too, in case you are interested.

 

becomign a writerI talked about Dorothea Brande’s book Becoming a Writer, which I reviewed for our Review and a Half Segment(Parts 1 and 2 here). It seemed like a good choice considering it was NaNoWriMo month. Is a book that does not advocate MFAs and rather helps the writer deconstruct herself.  Close to self-help? The question arose. Brande mentions many interesting tips like writing every day at a prescribed time, completing a short story, meditating on the character and plot (it helps!). I agreed with her assertions- a writer must learn when to be an uncensored writer and when to be a very ruthless critic of her own work. But does this book help with the malaise of the age that a writer faces the most? No, distraction is a recent issue and no book has yet been written that can distract the writer from social media entirely.

The Last LectureJaseem Abid, a platform engineer at Fybr, talked about his taste for more simple books. He read the Lord of the Rings in a month dedicated exclusively to fantasy bingeing. He finds the classics impossible to read, though he is reading Lolita. Inevitably, he arrived at a book he really liked, a self-help book called The Last Lecture, which is more the wisdom of one’s last moments than a self-help book though it is a work that teaches you to value the small things with immense effect. He is not a fan of self-help books and was unhappy that Steve Jobs recommended a book such as Autobiography of a Yogi, an autobiography of Paramahansa Yogananda, a spiritual book with an element of the self-help quotient.

 

WrongTo end the debate, Abhaya mentioned a book called Wrong: Why experts keep failing us–and how to know when not to trust them. In a world where the flow of information is dictated by gurus of all kinds from the science, finance and health sectors, there is still an immense lack of perfection and even fraudulence. Self-help books written in the dozen can not help people; even experts fail us. Solutions are the need of the hour but these elude as constantly.

In a world where self-help is looked upon with increasing skepticism, this was an illuminating session.

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December 9, 2015
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

I doubt it matters where you die, but it matters where you live.

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December 8, 2015
by punjacked
1 Comment

Readers Can’t Digest – Week 65 (30-Nov to 06-Dec)

1. Hitler’s Mein Kampf to be republished in Germany

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. Crunchyroll Signs a Distribution Deal with Discotek for Anime Movies

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. Smashwords generated $25 Million in e-book sales in one year

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4. The Reader’s Digest Website has been hacked

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. Adichie’s Feminism Essay Given to Every 16-Year-Old in Sweden

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

December 7, 2015
by Neelima
0 comments

On the Unbundling of Publishing

The Bookseller has an illustrious history and is one of the UK’s longest-standing magazines.   Jaya Jha’s manifesto was featured here as part of the series “Five-Minute Manifestos” for The Future of the Book Business .  She believes that publishers need to create business models based on the reality of the  ‘unbundling of publishing’. Now publishers are no longer the gateway for all things publishing.

 

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“Once upon a time, a publisher needed to own a printing press, employ editors, designers and all the other experts needed to bring out a book; invest in a decent print run for each book and maintain access to distribution. It was a tall order. Few had access to all these resources and therefore publishers were the ultimate gatekeepers of the industry.

Things have changed. Printing had been unbundled long ago. Now it turns out that other “services” that publishers provide are being unbundled too.

  • Print on Demand (POD) has made printing even more accessible.
  • eBooks and e-commerce have brought distribution within everyone’s reach.
  • Access to good editors or designers is also not limited to publishing houses.

Publishing, therefore, will have to discover new business models that work in this unbundled world.”

She also talks about the value of curation- with surplus titles, curation is one way that a publisher can capture a reader’s interest. She is already experimenting with curation at Worth a Read. For more about the Unbundling of Publishing and the necessity of Curation, read the story here.

December 4, 2015
by InstaScribe
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Visual Friday: What Writers Don’t Want to Hear

What Writers Don't Want to Hear

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December 3, 2015
by Neelima
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Zen in the Art of Writing by Ray Bradbury (Part 2)

Bradbury makes intoxication an elixir. Did you read Part 1?

“You need to be drunk on writing- ready to go and then endorsements from tall figures will be no rarity. The drunkenness must come first though. And you don’t need to be embarrassed by what you love- love poetry, write it, read it with others who do!”

Like Stephen King, Bradbury talks about how he started out writing, got rejected, accepted and climbed the rungs of authorship and actually began cashing in on his writing ability: “For ten years I wrote at least one short story a week, somehow guessing that a day would finally come when I truly got out of the way and let it happen.”

It wasn’t that he had all the means to dedicate his life to writing. A hot topic of writing wannabes nowadays is getting the right ‘place’ to write. We all dream of that magic table where our ideas begin to shape themselves. Bradbury found a spot too: “I located just the place, the typing room in the basement of the library at the University of California at Los Angeles. There, in neat rows, were a score or more of old Remington or Underwood typewriters which rented out at a dime a half hour. You thrust your dime in, the clock ticked madly, and you typed wildly, to finish before the half hour ran out.” Nine day draft!”

This was how he wrote Fahrenheit 451, the book that catapulted him into fame.

fahrenheit 451

Have you ever been able to write like that? As though there is never ever a red light in your head and you just go on as though you are on fire. Keeping this little book by your side can give you the inspiration, the shame, the gratitude, the high to write without fear, without stopping.

Bradbury wrote about his life and family in Illinois, things he knew and experienced first hand. But he also wrote about life on Mars. He wrote for children and he wrote plays for theater goers. He was a screen writer too. Directors sought him out. So a writer should be comfortable writing in the media of the time- a writer today should be comfortable on twitter and facebook too.

What can spoil things for someone who writes is self-consciousness. When someone writes, it’s not about the person who writes at all, but the ideas that pop into her head. It’s hard to phrase this better than Bradbury:

You treat ideas like cats: you make them follow you. If you try to approach a cat and pick it up, hell, it won’t let you do it. You’ve got to say, “Well, to hell with you.” And the cat says, “Wait a minute. He’s not behaving the way most humans do.” Then the cat follows you out of curiosity: “Well, what’s wrong with you that you don’t love me?”

Plot keeps changing, but really a writer waits for things to happen on the page. It’s as Zen as Zen can ever get.

 

December 2, 2015
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

Knowledge can be imparted, but not wisdom.

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December 1, 2015
by punjacked
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Readers Can’t Digest – Week 64 (23-Nov to 29-Nov)

1.Amazon sells 86 items per second on Black Friday

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2. Goosebumps stage show planned for next year

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3. Audible is having a Black Friday Audiobook Sale

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4. Brad Pitt’s Plan B and Warner Bros to adapt Illuminae

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5. Amazon is forcing users to change their passwords

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November 30, 2015
by Neelima
3 Comments

Zen in the Art of Writing by Ray Bradbury (Part 1)

How’s the NaNoWriMo-ing doing?

Zen in the Art of Writing by Ray Bradbury is probably one of my favorite books on writing. It’s also the first book I ever read on the subject. Although nowadays the how to write industry stands on its own, there was a time when books about the elusive muse and a writer’s trials and tribulations were all so few and far between. It is hard to appreciate a book at all in this excess. So how does a writer stand out in the noise?

Zenintheartofwriting_

 

Bradbury seems to know the secret.

Have you watched his talk?

In this slim volume, we have a series of essays, compiled from his articles on the subject over a period of thirty years.  He makes the writing process sound so simple, writer that he is of essays, short stories, novels, plays and screenplays. He isn’t afraid to write long titles like RUN FAST, STAND STILL, OR,THE THING AT THE TOP OF THE STAIRS, OR, NEW GHOSTS FROM OLD MINDS, and he believes that writers shouldn’t be afraid. They should be perpetually excited, filled with gusto.

Remember what Dorothea Brande said about using the conscious aspect and unconscious aspect while writing? Well, Bradbury is all about the subterranean thought processes that will heat up the keyboard by thirty degrees. Writers should feel more than everyone else- that’s why they are writers and that’s how they can get the feeling like a virus across to others.

“Be a chameleon, ink-blend, chromosome change with the landscape. Be a pet rock, lie with the dust, rest in the rainwater in the filled barrel by the drainspout outside your grandparents’ window long ago,” he says. Okay, if you can write like that, maybe you are on the right track after all. Bradbury tells us how he wrote 1000 words everyday since he was 12 and that the first good story he wrote was 10 years later. If that isn’t inspiring, what is?

He has a little exercise that you might like. Consider a list of words-preferably nouns- and use those nouns as prompts. Word association activated his muse like nothing else. Have you tried it? This slender book is so good, I might write some more parts. If you haven’t read it  yet, well please don’t procrastinate!

 

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November 27, 2015
by InstaScribe
2 Comments

Visual Friday: If my Editor were a Cat

If my Editor were a Cat

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