Friday, December 31, 2010

The 10 Best Books of 2010

New York Times:
FICTION
Freedom 
by Jonathan Franzen

The New Yorker Stories
by Ann Beatie

 Room
by Emma Donoghue
 Selected Stories
by William Trevor

A Visit from the Goon Squad
by Jennifer Egan

NONFICTION

Apollo's Angels: A History of Ballet
Jennifer Homans

Cleopatra: A Life
by Stacy Schiff

The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer
by Siddhartha Mukherjee

Finishing the Hat: Collected Lyrics (1954-1981)
by Stephen Sondheim

The Warms of Other Suns: Epic Story of American's Great Migration
by Isabel Wilkerson 

TIME
Top 10 Fiction Books
Freedom
by Jonathan Franzen

A Visit From the Goon Squad
by Jennifer Egan

Skippy Dies
Paul Murray

The thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet
David Mitchell

Lord of Misrule
Jaimy Gordon

Wilson
Daniel Cloves

Matterhorn
Karl Marlantes

How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe
Charles Yu

The Passage
Justin Cronin

Faithful Place
Tana French

New York Times
Best Illustrated Children's Books 2010
 

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

The 10 Things You Can Do to Promote Your Books in 2011
























These tips are from John Kremer, Bookmarket:

1  90% of marketing efforts are wasted. This is not a bad thing. Learn how to use this insight to set better priorities.

2  Book marketing is all about creating relationships.
The only reason to hire a publicist is to hire them for their relationships. Ask, “Who do you know?” It’s all about creating friends.

3 You can’t do everything. Prioritize what you do best.

4  Packaging is important. If a book isn’t packaged well, it won’t sell. An instant judgment on your book is based on the packaging. Packaging not only includes the cover, but also the title, the contents, and the interior design.

5  Build a brand with your books. For example, consider the Dummies brand or Chicken Soup of the Soul.

6  We are in the business of creating and selling rights. Licensing rights can make the difference between a profitable publishing operation and a losing operation.

7  Remember that small presses can create bestsellers. In fact, they’ve created more than 400 bestsellers in the past 20 years. See http://www.bookmarket.com/bests.htm.

8  New standards are coming for submitting info to booksellers. You need ONIX compliant data. Get familiar with it. This information allows retailers to pull up information immediately about your book.

ONIX for Books is an XML format for storing and sharing bibliographic data pertaining to both traditional books and eBooks.

ONIX Users Directory: http://www.bisg.org/what-we-do-21-140-onix-users-directory.php

9  What was your strength can become your weakness. For example, New York publishers depend on chains and have almost lost touch with the independents.

10  Make no little plans, because they have no power to move the hearts of men and women. So many books are published that don’t come to their potential because the publisher didn’t have the confidence. Let your vision shine through. Don’t let the media sell you short.

Read more at: http://www.bookmarket.com/bookpromotion.htm

Book Trailer (6): Atmospheric Disturbances

You don't really get an idea of the contents of the novel, but I like this drawed book trailer of Atmospheric Disturbances, written by Rivka Galchen. The trailer and the cover slot together perfectly.

Find out more about the book: www.galchen.net



Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Book Trailer (5): The Heart and the Bottle

Oh, I love this book trailer. It's a small documentary about writer and illustrator Oliver Jeffers, and the making of the book. Great film work as well! Watch it!


Also look at the iPad picture book App. Wonderful too: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wc3fghSJvBM


The Best Free Fonts of 2010























Find them here: http://www.thecssawards.com/blog/best-free-fonts-of-2010.html

Pixar Artist Josh Cooley’s Golden Book 'Movies R Fun'










I'm a big fan of the Little Golden Books and I just saw that Pixar Animation Story Artist Josh Cooley (Ratatouille, Up) has made this awesome 'Lil’ Inappropriate Golden Book' titled Movies R Fun. A fantastic book for all film lovers, because the illustrations reference film classics such as Godfather, Goodfellas, A Clockwork Orange, Se7en, The Graduate, Silence of the Lambs, and The Big Lebowski
Can you spot them yourself?


















Read more about it on Josh Colley's blog: http://cooleycooley.blogspot.com/

Do schools kill creativity?

This is another lecture of Sir Ken Robinson at TEDx: Do schools kill creativity? I wish we could think more like this when making educational books.

Animation Changing Education Paradigms

For all those who write and publish educational books and magazines, like I am, here some food for the mind from Sir Ken Robinson - world-renowned education and creativity expert and recipient of the RSA's Benjamin Franklin award - about the need to change our view of future education.  


For more information on Sir Ken's work visit: http://www.sirkenrobinson.com

Thursday, December 23, 2010

It's blood, sweat and tears, believe me

If you have a writersblock, watch this beautiful made video on which screenwriter and filmmaker Billy Wilder gives some great tips. Writing is hard work.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Book trailer (4): Stitches

In this trailer of Stitches, the graphic memoir by David Small (2009, W. W. Norton), the voice-over is spoken by the writer himself. That makes it quite emotional. See and hear for yourself.


Monday, December 20, 2010

Book trailer (3): Bad Girls Don't Die

I like this trailer about the young adult thriller Bad Girls Don't Die written by Katie Alender. It makes you curious about the book, it's stretching and different from all the slide show trailers that are made about books.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Writing a Strong Lead Is Half the Battle

In this Wall Street Journal article John McPhee - a Pulitzer Prize winner, writes for the New Yorker, teaches at Princeton and has penned 28 books - shows the importance of a good lead and how to write it.
You're wading around in your notes, getting nowhere. You don't see a structure for the piece you're trying to write. You don't know what to do. So you stop everything and hunt through your mind for a good beginning, a good way to scissor in.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703727804576017594187325256.html

Book trailer (2): Superstitious?

This is a pop-up book animation made by David Magnier, and a good example of how you can show a book.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Book trailer (1): Leviathan

A few years now you have this new phenomenon: the book trailer. What are the trends? Coming month on this blog: the book trailer of the day. Today: Leviathan.

Virginia Woolf On Writing


 


 




The last months I was wondering: Why is the Dutch media just following the talk of the day - even the newspapers that used to be good?

This is what Virginia Woolf says about writing.

How can we combine the old words in a new order? So that they survive and create a new beauty. So that they tell the truth. That is the question. Think what it means (...) every newspaper will tell the truth, or would create beauty. (...) Words don't live in the dictionary, they live in the mind. (...) they are much lesser bound with ceremony and conviction than we are. Royal words meets with common words, English words merry French words, German words, Indian words and negro words. (..) Think before you use them, and feel before you use them, (...) They are highly democratic too, they believe one word is as good as another. (...) They hate being useful, they hate making money or lectured about in public. Perhaps there is one reason why we have no great poets, novelists or critic writers today, we pin the words down for one meaning, there useful meaning.

So now I know the answer of my question: They are not telling the truth or create beauty, they are bound, they don't live in the mind, they don't think before they use the words, they don't feel before they use them, they are not democratic, they are only using them useful and to make money. So in Virginia's words: it's bad writing.

Listen for yourself.

Redesigned Harry Potter Book Covers

After watching Harry Potter and the deathly hallows I saw these marvelous redesigned Harry Potter book covers, from designer M.S. Corley. They look like classic Penguin Books.



















An other designer did the same with these classic videaogames. What a difference between these and the real ones!

The Fiction Project

The Fiction Project is an opportunity to tell stories in a different way by fusing text and visual art. You can add your voice to the coast-to-coast tour and create new work grounded in the act of writing. After traveling across the country, the Fiction Project will enter into the Brooklyn Art Library's narrative collection, archiving your stories to share them with the public.

When you join the project (20 dollar) you get the ruled Moleskine Cahier journal to work in, so each artist use the same book.

Here you can see some excamples of last year. 
http://arthousecoop.com/projects/fiction




Look at the ABC3D

What a creative way to use the ABC. You can exploit the thought in interactive media as well.

Where good ideas come from

Watch this when you have a writersblock (or another lack of ideas)!