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Book jackets and others from aklateklat: crafts for the enlightened

Thursday, August 16, 2007 by W

We now carry these finely crafted book jackets, bookmarks, magnetic clips and letter openers from aklateklat.

AklatEklat products

The leather book jackets come in different types of leather, including suede, and will fit a mass market or trade paperback. What is a book jacket for? It keeps your book safe and easy to carry around. It also makes a nice gift for any book lover. (I would certainly want someone to surprise me with one.) Each comes with a string bookmark weighed down with either murano glass, shells, hand-painted stones, wood, beads, etc. and no two accessories are alike. Each book jacket is unique!

The bookmarks, magnetic clips, and letter openers are carved from wood and adorned with resin moldings.

All aklateklat products are handcrafted in the Philippines.

Free stuff

Tuesday, March 6, 2007 by W

Baen Free Library

Baen, a leading publisher of speculative fiction has made available for free some of its titles through the Baen Free Library. The home page, if you are interested, has an extensive discussion on book piracy and how the library came to be. Contributing authors to the library are well-known science fiction and fantasy authors like Mercedes Lackey, Lois McMaster Bujold, Eric Flint, Larry Niven…

LibraryThing

It’s like a library thing, you know, a way to catalog your personal library and arrange your books on virtual shelves. And then it’s also more than that because their BookSuggester gives you recommendations for books similar to books in your library. Strangely enough, they also have a device called the Unsuggester which will give you “humorous recommendations of books you probably wouldn’t enjoy.” You can also meet other members with the same interests by forming communities like the 50 Book Challenge group or the Read YA Lit group. Take their tour of the site to find out more.

The Best Book Ever

Tuesday, March 6, 2007 by W

The Best Book Ever is many a writer’s dream.  Watch this short animated film on writing “The Best Book Ever” from Lev Yilmaz.

Book News

Tuesday, January 9, 2007 by W

George Clooney has bought the movie rights for John Grisham’s The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town. The book is the story of former baseball player Ron Williamson who was charged with a crime he did not commit and sent to death row. Grisham was supposed to have been paid a seven-figure sum for the deal.
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Steven Spielberg is producing a limited series adaptation of The Talisman, a novel written by Stephen King and Peter Straub. The Talisman is the story of 12-year old Jack Sawyer who is on a quest that takes him through our world and a parallel world known as the Territories. He must acquire a talisman to save his mother’s life as well as the life of her “twinner,” the Queen of the Territories.
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Get a free copy of the current bestseller document (on its fourth week on the New York Times bestseller list) The Iraq Study Group Report from the USIP website. The report is “a forward-looking, independent assessment of the current and prospective situation on the ground in Iraq and how it affects the surrounding region as well as U.S. interests.”  An important and timely examination of America’s involvement in the Iraq War with key recommendations for moving forward.

Reading The Digest of Philippine Genre Stories

Tuesday, January 2, 2007 by W

Last month, it was mentioned on this blog that we were carrying a new publication called The Digest of Philippine Genre Stories. We’ve taken a closer look at it and have decided that we like it. And since it is a new publication and we do want to see it in print for issue #2, at least, we thought we’d mention it again.

For Readers and Writers

Every story is introduced by the editor. In his introductions, the editor tries to give you something to think about. In one it is about fate, in another it is about how the author may have come up with his story. Some of you might find this unnecessary but given a Filipino audience of which most have yet to be introduced to genre stories, this can actually be very helpful in guiding the reader. (Genre stories are those that fit into specific genres like science fiction, fantasy, mystery, crime, horror, detective, etc. It’s really a big group of different kinds of stories if you think about it so you will most likely find something you like.)

The magazine doesn’t just give you good stories to read in a handy and affordable digest format, it also encourages you to write. At the end of each story is a short description of the author and a few words from the author about writing his story. The short profile also includes an e-mail address so you can tell the author what you thought of the story or maybe ask questions about it. This focus on the authors and interacting with authors will hopefully inspire many of you who have always thought of writing to actually sit down and write. You will see these authors are just like you, they go to school or they go to work, but they also write. Write to your favorite author. Ask him how he started writing. Ask him how long it took him to write ten pages of fiction. Ask what inspires him.

Near the end of a magazine is a story prompt. In the first issue we are given a photograph. Write a story based on the photograph and submit it and you could win a free issue of the digest. There is also, of course, information on how you can submit your own story to the magazine for publication. I believe that authors are paid for their stories.

At the end is the story of how the magazine came to be. Here you get the impression that the publisher without guarantees and with all the risks jumped in and went to press anyway because he wanted to make something good and readable.

The magazine is very affordable at P100. You don’t have to be very careful with it. You can roll it up and put it in your back pocket if you like. Take it with you on the MRT. Read it during your break. Pass it on to your friends.

The Feature Story

Our favorite story for the first issue has to be the feature story, The Middle Prince, by Dean Francis Alfar. It gives you humor, whimsy, and that feeling of wanting to know what will happen next. It’s also a story that many middle princes out there will find familiar. What’s a middle prince (or princess)? I happen to be one. Find out for yourself when you read the story.

Something About Writing and Publishing in the Philippines

Why is it so important to us that we encourage people to write? Because there is so much to write about and hardly anyone is doing any writing. We will not be talking about important it is to read or write here because we all know that already. One of the reasons people don’t write is that, for most, it’s just not a career that will pay the bills. What can we do to change this?

We can support publications like The Digest of Philippine Genre Stories. Brave efforts like this need our help. We can help by reading their stories, telling them what we think of their stories and what stories we would like to see, writing our own stories and publishing them even if just for a small fee because we all have to start with little steps.

Support the National Book Development Trust Fund Bill or HB 1531, which, if passed, will give local authors grants that will give them some financial leeway so they can produce manuscripts for publication. When you attend RodCon 2007 this February, please make sure to sign your name as a supporter of the bill before you leave the event.

Encourage the youth to read and write. When we attended the launch of Philippine Speculative Fiction Volume 2 last month, we were pleasantly surprised that some of the contributing authors were teenagers! Thank you and congratulations to their parents who taught their children to read and allowed them to write.

Sign up for Harry Potter updates

Wednesday, November 15, 2006 by W

We have had numerous e-mails from readers asking us to reserve a copy of the 7th and last Harry Potter book for them. As of this time, J.K. Rowling has actually not finished the book yet (as of September she was at about 750 pages already). A title has not even been announced because the author is still deciding between two good titles. Publishers of the Harry Potter books say that a 2007 release is “likely.”

We know you’re very excited about book 7 so we promise you that once we have news on the latest Harry Potter book, we will let you know, just as we did when the news broke out the last time about the sixth book. To make sure you don’t miss any Harry Potter news, you can sign up for Harry Potter updates by submitting your e-mail address to us using the form on the left side of our site.

Hopefully the long wait will soon be over. (And then there are those who dread the day the last book is released because it also means the end of their Harry Potter reading.)

How to write a novel in 30 days

Monday, November 6, 2006 by Booktopia

NaNoWriMo comic
It’s not too late to join NaNoWriMo or National Novel Writing Month. It’s an online project that comes to life November of each year that uses “the magical power of deadlines.” The site claims that if you give someone a deadline — say, someone who has always wanted to write that great Filipino novel one day — miracles can happen. So it’s not about churning out a quality novel in 30 days (30 days!), but it’s about getting it done and encouraging you to get it done because you’re getting it done with more than 60,000 people from all over the world. (They started out back in 1999 with only 21 participants.) Anyone who finishes a novel of at least 50,000 words by the end of the month is a NaNoWriMo winner.

And if you think quantity over quality won’t get you anywhere, past NaNoWriMo winners have actually had their works published.

The deadline to finish a novel is November 30. Register to write your novel now at the NaNoWriMo site.

Charles Darwin is online

Monday, October 23, 2006 by W

Charles Darwin, 1878
Excerpted from a press release:

The largest collection of Darwin’s writings ever published will appear on the website The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online (http://darwin-online.org.uk/) on 19 October 2006. Never before has so much Darwin material, and so many rare and widely dispersed items, been brought together in one place and made available free of charge. This site currently offers more than 50,000 pages of searchable text and 40,000 images of both publications and transcribed manuscripts. Most of the materials are available both as fully formatted electronic text and colour images of the originals. Darwin’s works are also available as free machine-read audio mp3 files.

As vast as the collection now is, there is much still to come. The site currently contains about 50% of the materials that will be provided by 2009, the bicentenary of Darwin’s birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of the Origin of species. Forthcoming materials include further editions and translations, images of the majority of the Darwin Archive at Cambridge University Library, more editorial introductions, notes, transcriptions and technical facilities for printing and larger images. New content is continually being added.

Reading campaign and 575,000 books

Saturday, October 21, 2006 by W

The Netherlands ReadsFrom October 20 to November 17, the Dutch will be reading one book together.

During a campaign called “The Netherlands Reads,” the Dutch government will be giving away 575,000 copies of the novel Dubbelspel by Frank Martinus Arion to library patrons. Based on the latest census, that’s about one book for every 28 persons. Readers are then encouraged to discuss the book with each other, effectively turning the nation into one big book club.

The campaign was inspired by “One Book” reading programs in the US, the first of which happened in Chicago in 2001 with Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. “One Book, One Chicago” made the well-loved classic a bestseller all over again and inspired cities in America and in Europe to launch their own city/nationwide reading programs.

Wouldn’t it be great if we had our own “One Book” campaign? Just imagine, Filipinos reading one book and talking about it. For once, maybe politics and personalities can take a backseat to a book. If you are someone who can do something like this (or if you know someone, please let them know) and if you think we can help, we’ll be glad to help.

About the book:
Dubbelspel (Double Play), was a bestseller back in 1973 by then first-time novelist Arion. Here is a description of the book taken from babelguides.com –

The title of Arion’s large and powerful Caribbean novel refers to an epic open-air game of dominoes, which lasts all afternoon and into the evening. Though it is ostensibly a relaxed and friendly occasion, underlying suspicions, jealousies and conflicts gradually surface. The game culminates in murder and suicide under the glare of public attention.

The two men on the winning team, Janchi and Chamon, are involved in adulterous relationships with the wives of their opponents, the host Bubu Fiel, a taxi-driver, and Manchi, a pompous bailiff. With great skill Arion reveals the past history and underlying motivations of the four players at the same time as creating a convincing atmosphere of heat and squalor and painting an affectionate but critical picture of Curaçao society.

The book is dedicated significantly to ‘women of courage’. In the novel it is Solema, who eventually leaves Manchi for Janchi Pau, who most clearly represents the courage, vision and energy required to emancipate the island from the colonial yoke and subservience to multinational oil companies. However, Bubu’s wife Nora, with her determination to secure an education at any cost for her bright son and constant desperate efforts to ward off impending financial disaster, exhibits her own, humbler kind of heroism.

The characters are stereotypes but effectively drawn and the explicit post-colonial political agenda (the Caribbean island of Curaçao is a Dutch dependency, and Dutch is still an official language there) does not detract from the liveliness of the action. The author’s deliberately formal style contrasts with the snatches of his native creole, Papiamento. It gives a unique flavour to the book, whose classical force the author has yet to surpass in any of its successors.

Darth Who?

Thursday, October 19, 2006 by Booktopia

Publishers of the Star Wars novels are offering fans the privilege of naming the next Sith Lord. The winning name will be used as the official character name in the book Star Wars: Sacrifice (Legacy of Force series) by Karen Traviss. The winner will also be mentioned in the acknowledgment page of the book. A true fan’s dream.

Wait, what’s that? Sorry, it looks like the official rules say only legal residents of the US are eligible to enter. Awww… It would have been fun to see a “Darth (Tagalog word)” in the Star Wars universe.

Visit the contest page if you don’t mind spoilers.

LINK TO CONTEST

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