July 7, 2015
by punjacked
1 Comment

Readers Can’t Digest – Week 45 (29-Jun to 05-Jul)

1. Apple Ordered to Pay $450 Million for e-Book Refundsgiphy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. Scribd Starts to Banish Indie Authors from its Catalog

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3. Fifty Shades of Grey author EL James now worth £37m

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4.  Amazon UK has launched Prime Now in London, which will allow customers to receive purchases within one hour of ordering them

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5. Graphic Novel, Comics Market Rises to $935 Million in 2014

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July 6, 2015
by Neelima
1 Comment

5 Reasons to Write Books in Multiple POV

If you are itching to write in multiple POV or by using various points of view, STOP! Says Zen Scribe. It’s a risky proposition.

It’s not a good idea if it is your first book and if you are trying very hard to impress your readers with your ability to create hundreds of characters. The narrative could end up being very hard to follow and your readers may get confused. The worst part is when you work so hard on various points of view and your reader identifies wiith only one character, the one you probably banked on the least.

So when do use Multiple POV?

#1.When you are writing the world’s next Epic: The most common use of Multiple POV can be seen in epics. So you have Homer cleverly writing Odyssey and Iliad using different points of view. In India’s greatest epic, the Mahabharata, there is the story of the five Pandavas and their rivals the Kauravas—each character has a story and then this extends its finger to another branch of the story tree that seems to be a never-ending handing out.

 

The five Pandava brothers of the Mahabharata i...

The five Pandava brothers of the Mahabharata in the Javanese wayang kulit, Indonesia (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

G.R.R.Martin uses this method with good effect.

#2.When you want to show the other side: Single POV is limited and the canvas is smaller. Multiple POV works when you want to tell different sides of the story. Take for instance Faulkner’s story, The Sound and the Fury.One of the characters Benjy is mentally handicapped and Faulkner uses the stream of consciousness method to narrate his point of view. The story becomes clearer when the other characters reveal themselves; so a single point of view wouldn’t make sense.

#3.When conflict is an important part of your story: Nothing like one character who misunderstands the other and doesn’t know why. When the reader gets an insight into each character’s mind, he plays insider and this is what every reader wants- to be part of a larger narrative from which she can come and go at will. Game of Thrones works because all characters are very human, with a lot of grey areas. By changing points of view, readers get greater insight into the rivalries at play. Knowing the minds of protagonist and antagonist is a thrill a single POV book can’t provide.

#4.When you decide to write a series: Take Fifty Shades of Grey, a book written in Anastasia’s perspective, now written through Christian’s eyes. Alternate points of view provide enough meat for an entire book series if you have the rest of landscape for the book ready.

#5. When you are a planner: We don’t live in the forest anymore. We don’t pass down folk tales as we sit eyes semi-shut beneath a banyan tree with adoring children looking to us for knowledge. We write in a world where one story is submerged in another one thousand fb updates—all stories and pictures of family, friends and our favorite pages. So if you are good at planning a story, including scenes, cliffhangers, beginnings and endings, then you could contemplate writing a multi POV novel. If like to freewrite, it may take a long, long while before those characters come up with  points of view delicious enough to arrest the distracted reader.

Have you dared try the multi-POV approach? Tell us why or why not.

July 3, 2015
by InstaScribe
0 comments

Visual Friday: Self Help Books – Help Yourself

Self Help Books - Help Yourself

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July 1, 2015
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

A ruler who hides behind paid executioners soon forgets what death is.

By InstaScribe

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June 30, 2015
by punjacked
1 Comment

Readers Can’t Digest – Week 44 (22-Jun to 28-Jun)

1.  Australia has just passed a new law that would require internet service providers to block websites that show pirated material, such as e-books

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2. Marvel launches mixed race Spider-Man

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3. Erotic e-Books can Only be sold After 10 PM in Germany

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4.  Hoopla Digital is expanding its recently announced comics and graphic novel offerings after reaching a new agreement with DC Comics.

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5.  Author J K Rowling has confirmed that a Harry Potter play, entitled “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child”, will open in the West End next year.

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June 29, 2015
by Jandré
0 comments

New, Sweet and Cheap(ish): The Kindle Paperwhite 2015

Amazon has recently announced that they will start selling the new Kindle Paperwhite on the 30th of June 2015.

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Source: http://g-ec2.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/kindle/dp/2012/KC/popup-paperwhite-diff.jpg

This is news. At a reduced price of only $119, it is a real candidate in the heavy weight class. The current Amazon eBook Reader flagship is the Kindle Voyage and it is available at $199.

Voyage is a great eBook Reader with a myriad of sensors, lights, bells and whistles that make it worth every dollar.What we love about the new Paperwhite is that it has a lot of the Voyage features, for way less money.

Display

At 300 ppi or pixels per inch, nearly double that of the still available 2014 model, the text is much crisper and clearer. The Voyage also offers 300 ppi.

Zenscribe observed that that the print is so clear in Voyage, it is as though, they stuck real paper in there.

For the sake of perspective, I am still using my old Kindle Touch which only has 167 ppi. I can still read it clearly and easily, and it is not as if I suffer from burning eye-syndrome after reading a quick 8 hours to finish a 20 book series, The Aubrey-Maturin series by Patrick O’Brian, to be more precise.

I cannot argue that the higher amount of pixels per display makes the text “easier to see” but I also wonder to what extent it makes any material difference for an average reader. Could higher ppi have just become a marketing war? Remember the Kobo Aura HD also has a 300 ppi display. This gave Kobo the upper hand in the marketing games.

Bookerly Font

The new Paperwhite is the first Kindle to feature Amazon’s especially designed Bookerly font. Amazon has this to say about their new font:

Kindle Paperwhite now offers Bookerly, an exclusive font designed from the ground up for reading on digital screens. Warm and contemporary, Bookerly is inspired by the artistry of the best fonts in modern print books, but is hand-crafted for great readability at any size. It introduces a lighter, more graceful look and outperforms other digital reading fonts to help you read faster with less eyestrain.

We look forward to that. And hope that they make the same font available in older devices too!

More Specs

Like the Kobo Glo HD, its main rival, the Paperwhite 2015 has 4 GB of internal memory, a touch screen and a front light.

Conclusion

The Kindle Paperwhite 2015 is better than the 2014 version. Yes it is also better than my Touch, especially when it comes to page turning.

Kobo or Paperwhite? This is more a philosophical question than a factual question. Technically the two are much the same, although the Kobo Glo HD will set you back $10 more, at $129.

June 26, 2015
by InstaScribe
0 comments

Visual Friday: To DRM or Not To DRM

To DRM or Not To DRM

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June 25, 2015
by Neelima
0 comments

Soap! : Writing and Surviving Television in India by Venita Coelho: Part 2

As promised in Part 1 of this review I got to talk to a writer in the TV series space in India.

This is the only book of its kind in India,” Kirtida Gautam, a former student of the Film and Television Institute(FTII), Pune, said when I asked her whether she had read Soap! She’s a screenplay writer who has worked on three TV shows, including a historical drama called Jodha Akbar for Zee TV. “Pretty much everything in Soap!  is an effective portrayal of how the TV industry works in India.”

Once the concept and characters are etched out, you get down to writing the screenplay, which in India means a step by step outline or ‘cold-blooded organization’ of the story. Then the scenes, which are the basic unit of the soap, are written down. Kirtida talked about how it was the channel’s prerogative to instruct the writer about the number of scenes and also how to move the plot towards what audiences positively responded to. So like Coelho says the writer does not dictate what the audience sees; it’s the other way round.

I asked Kirtida about what she thought writers who wanted to do a stint in Television  in India should do. It’s a great opportunity to write in television solely because you learn to write even when there is no muse and the only reason you write is a deadline obsessed Creative Director breathing down your neck. This kind of urgency plus the possibility of turning into Ekta Kapoor’s favorite writer is motivation enough.(For the record Ekta Kapoor is a very successful TV and film producer.)

Source: Wikipedia

Ekta Kapoor (Source: Wikipedia)

Says Kirtida, “I advise any aspiring TV writer to go to Mumbai, study at a good television institute, and work with Senior writers. In fact, as a junior writer, you can ghost write a bit for a while. You won’t get credits but you will garner experience. You also have to be a fighter. When you have written a concept, make sure you get the credit; you have to fight for it.” Kirtida reiterates what Coelho says is every writer’s humble duty-  FIGHT!

Besides the hazards of frozen shoulder and Repetitive Stress Syndrome from overstraining those nimble fingers, another hazard of the TV industry is the money. Coelho explains about the importance of signing a contract that has details like work definition, amount payable in full and the cancellation amount if the producer changes his mind, the signing amount, the amount on delivery of the first, second, third and final draft, amount payable after episode airs, the credit period, copyright, exit clause, etc. She has even inserted a sample contract at the end of the book, so the junior writer at least knows what she is to ask for.

What is most heartening about this book is how the author shares so much information and debunks so many myths about creative writing. There is no muse or any such thing. It’s a job like any other, and no crazy maker or deadline breaker stands a chance in tinsel town. Wear your boxing gloves and fight; just make sure that you write right as well.

The world of TV is a refreshing deviation from books. What do you have to say about television writing? Have you read any good books that could help you crack the small screen big time?

June 24, 2015
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

Without doubt there can be no tolerance, and the history of tolerance is the history of doubt

By InstaScribe

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