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Thursday, 16 August 2012

Pick N Mix

Here are a few of my favourite internet trawl results from the last two months. Enjoy.

8 Lovely Bookshops I never get tired looking at bookshops. I prefer to be in them with money and time to spend, but for now pictures will have to do.

13 Bookends  I wonder if people use bookends anymore? I love the idea but my bookshelves are rarely empty enough for books to require the support of a bookend.

Library Cats  I sorry if you hate cats... for me books and cats are part of my DNA 

Paintings with Books  OK this guy is an artist but obviously has way too much time on his hands!


Monday, 13 August 2012

Many Writers, One Story

If you haven't seen it yet there is a fantastic project taking place on Twitter for the Brisbane Writer's Festival . Individual writers contribute 160 characters at a time to build on the story once a day.
http://www.bwf.org.au/default.asp?PageID=99&n=Gallery
 Check out the tag #BWF50

Sunday, 12 August 2012

Book Recycling

What happens to all those millions of books worldwide which people don't want to read anymore?
Like most booklovers I regard the mistreatment of the book as an affront to civilisation but there is no doubt that many books aren't worth the shelf space. Pulping, burning (dictators' favourite choice), and dumping in landfill, are effective, if unimaginative options for the destruction of the more humble book. I've become a collector of book repurposing options.

Chris Scott
 One of my favourites and easily the most beautiful examples, involves an unknown artist in Edinburgh who used books to create a series of sculptures with literary themes. They were left anonymously with attached thankyou notes explaining the artist's work.
Enjoy :)
Updated 16/08 : this is the article Mysterious Paper Sculptures which originally informed this post. I couldn't find it earlier!

Thursday, 9 August 2012

The Rise of the Book Trailer


OK at the risk of sounding totally out of touch with 21st century book culture, I hereby announce I have never read an ebook and I don’t own an ereader. Yes, yes I know, where have I been?

I appreciate all the advantages ebooks give the modern reader, ease of storage and transport of thousands of titles; cheaper access to new books the ability to increase font size for the visually impaired etc…. I just don’t want those advantages enough to give up the physical reality and tactile pleasure of print on paper.

However one aspect of the ebook revolution does inspire me and this is the book trailer. Publishers and authors have been creating small videos to promote new books since the early noughties and they bring the visual pleasure of the traditional book cover into the digital age.  With the seeming decline in physical bookshops the opportunity for publishers to reach readers and market their wares is disappearing.  Book trailers have started to fill that space. They vary in quality and the content ranges from the author statically reading sections of the book to elaborate multimedia presentations complete with animations and music score. In an article from The Guardian, Lindsay Irvine asks whether book trailers are useful and suggests how they may change the very nature of the book as we know it.
Google ‘book trailers’ and you’ll find any number of sites specialising in providing a space for authors to post promotional ‘vids’ many of which give some stunning teasers to the content.  BookTrailers for Readers is a wiki created by teacher-librarian, Michelle Harclerode which contains many professional and student produced book trailers of children’s and YA fiction. Book trailers are being used to promote adult fiction and non-fiction as well but the obvious attraction of the book trailer is to encourage people to read more.
Author A.J Walkley gives some insight into the benefits of book trailers to authors in her blog on Huffington Post.
I’d be interested to hear comments from those who use ereaders and their experience with book trailers. Do you use them to select your next read?

Friday, 3 August 2012

Bookish Events and Lists



I thought I’d share some bookish stuff which is happening this month.

3/08  Percy Shelley’s Birthday is today 1792-1822)- Happy 220th Percy!

9/08  Throne of Glass by Sarah J Maas released today.

14/08 The Forsaken by Lisa Stasse released

15/08 Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) was born today in Edinburgh- he wrote Ivanhoe and Rob Roy but that’s not all!

18-19/08 Mudgee Readers Festival- definitely on my list to do one day and if anyone goes please let me know what it’s like. Looks like an excellent line up of speakers and there's a secondhand book fair!

25/08 The Reading Hour at 6pm  a bit like Earth Hour but hopefully with more light.

26/08 Hannah & Emil by Belinda Castle, new release today.


30/08 Mary Shelley’s birthday (1797-1851) is today. She wrote and published Frankenstein at the age of 21 and was married to Percy Shelley.

Finally RIP to these authors:
Maeve Binchy died 30/07/2012 age 72 and
Gore Vidal died 31/07/2012 age 86

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

1-One=First


I thought it appropriate as this is the ‘First Page Book’ blog to make my first ever post about first novels read as a child. Yes it’s a post about firsts!

I asked my uni facebook friends to contribute and as our ages range from Gen Y to baby boomer I got some familiar and some (to me) completely unknown  responses. I think what fascinated me most was the similarity in our reading experiences and the obvious love we all have for reading. Not surprising I guess since we are all embarked on a degree in Librarianship! Some of us started reading ‘chapter books’ at the quite early age of 5 or 6. Little Golden Books and Dr Seuss featured as popular first reads.  Enid Blyton also featured prominently from Famous Five and The Magic Faraway Tree to Tales of Brave Adventure.

I have to confess to a 3 year obsession with Famous Five. I read the entire series of 21 books many times between the age of six and nine. I read Five go to Kirren Island (involving an intensely exciting day from after breakfast to late afternoon)around the age of six. I wanted to be George the tomboy wandering the countryside with a dog, having wonderful adventures.  I really only started growing out of them when I was given a box set of the Narnia series for my ninth birthday and I entered a whole new series of adventures in other worlds.

Other examples of ‘first reads’ were Nancy Drew, Hardy Boys, Trixie Beldon, Judy Blume, Shirley Barber and Mary O’Hara. Some collected and devoured the Babysitter club series others read the mystery books where you could select the path the characters could take in the story. Whether you started with Grimms Fairy Tales or the Lion King picture book, it seems most of us were seeking adventure and mystery from our reading as kids.

Novels aside, our first read is usually our reception primer. Mine was The Happy Venture Readers which we had to read as a class out loud… do they still do that?  I can still remember  40 years later, the cadence and drone  of thirty odd 6 year olds reading…
 “Here is Dick. Run, Dick, run. Nip is a dog. Nip, run to Dick. See Dora run.”
So what was your first real experience of reading for yourself? How did it influence your reading as you grew up? If you have children do you read the same books to them?