Old books and new tech

Published by KSMITH on 31 Mar 2008 at 8:47 pm under BookRabbit

Books at bedtimeGreat article highlighted by Book2book this morning from the NYT about couple’s books . Currently on mine and Sharon’s bedside is my H P Lovecraft’s ‘Selected Letters’ and Sharon’s ‘Things I want my Daughters to Know’ by Elizabeth Noble. Not sure what this says about us!

Interestingly one of the things people say about BookRabbit is how great it would be for dating. I’ll be interested to see if that actually is the case. I can see that bookcases are a rather unique window into someone’s interests - there are some real questions to be asked about what people mightlook for though.

We’ve been working on an easier to use bookcase application for the last week and this will go live tomorrow morning we’re hoping that it will be a whole lot easier to use and identify different editions of the same title. You can see a screen shot below.

Bookcase

This is still prior to our launch of Automatic Bookcase which is still being frantically developed.

Book of Jade

I’ve just added a new book to the BookRabbit database which I’m rather pleased with, my copy arrived from California this morning, and I’ve been coveting a copy for some years, ever since it was mentioned in the now defunct Lovecraftian ‘zine Dagon. The book is called ‘The Book of Jade’ and 600 copies were printed at the turn of the century by a bookseller in New York, it was an anonymous book of ‘decadent poetry’ which was later revealed to be by a writer called David Park Barnitz (1878-1901) who died under mysterious circumstances later the year of publication (presumed suicide). It was mentioned in H P Lovecraft’s letters, hence my bedtime reading. The copy I’ve bought is in great condition - which is lucky as there were no pictures available, and it wasn’t cheap.

Anyone can add books (and supporting graphics) to the BookRabbit site on the fly - picture on the right included. So even wired titles like this can have a product page and connect with other bookcases, I’d be fascinated to know how many more exist out there!

Book of Jade product page

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Books of the week

Published by KSMITH on 29 Mar 2008 at 10:09 pm under BookRabbit, Bookselling

Pile of books

Books I’ve bought this week & why:

1. ‘Holes’ by Louis Sachar - it kept appearing on people’s bookcases on BookRabbit and they said it was good, so I’m now two thirds of the way through it and yes it is good. It’s a ‘teen’ title and it shows but enjoyable nonetheless.

2. ‘Once Upon a Time In the North’ Philip Pullman - limited signed edition. I was a sucker for the ‘His Dark Materials’ trilogy and can’t resist a special edition so this Waterstone’s exclusive was a must, scarce already due to speculators but I think Hatchards still have some - update no they don’t.

3. Chomsky’s ‘Hegemony or Survival’ - the only Penguin Celebration title I’ve bought, I like a good polemic and Chomsky’s voice is so familiar to me now due to all those wonderful CDs AK produce he’s like an old (slightly grumpy) friend.

4. ‘Here Comes Everybody’ by Clay Shirky, I read the first chapter of this in a Penguin sampler for new non fiction and it’s a very readable and anecdote heavy approach to defining the new social space. Also a good review in the Telegraph last week which tipped me over to buying it (BTW I do not normally buy the Telegraph but I had to because of BookRabbit coverage - just so we are clear).

5. ‘The Big Switch’ by Nicholas Carr. Nicholas wrote a great piece for the Harvard Business Review a few years back called ‘IT Doesn’t Matter‘ which I once sent an anonymous copy of to the (now former) IT Director of GAME in the internal mail, although as the only person in the entire building likely to be reading the HBR it was pretty easy to work out who sent it.

Carr followed this up with a slightly more softly titled book ‘Does IT Matter?‘ but no less controversial. ‘The Big Switch‘ is his new book and I have high hopes of some good insights from him. Write up in Wired positive too (well I t-h-i-n-k it’s positive).

The Wired story is worth looking at to see the photo they have of Nicholas looking very stern in front of a bookcase - I’d like to run it through our bookcase OCR but I think it is too low res so I’ll have to make do with the human eye - and I can only make out Catch-22 which is great, but a small prize to anyone who can identify two more books!

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Secrets of the 4th estate

Published by KSMITH on 15 Feb 2008 at 7:44 pm under Uncategorized

Good meeting with our new PR agency today. They have a very orange office, which actually adds a gloss to ours (with no natural light), so now if anyone complains at least I can reply - well it’s not orange!

We have media training booked for the week after next. Bit like lion taming but more dangerous (sorry obviously a lie) reminds me that The Fourth Hand was an excellent book though - read it!

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