Scribbles & Wanderlust
  • Home
  • About
  • Clients and Representation
  • Book Reviews
    • Reviews 2012
    • Reviews 2013
    • Reviews 2014
    • Reviews 2015
    • Reviews 2016
    • Reviews 2017
    • Reviews 2018
    • Reviews 2019
    • Reviews 2020
    • Reviews 2021
    • Reviews 2022
    • Reviews 2023
    • Reviews 2024
    • Reviews 2025
  • Features
    • Deal Announcement
    • End of Year Book Survey
    • If We Were Having Coffee
    • This Season’s Rewind
  • Discover a New Read
    • Adult
    • Young Adult
    • Middle Grade
  • Tag: technology

    • Wary but Determined, Publishers are Preparing for the Digital Future – PW

      Posted at 10:59 am by Laura, on January 25, 2012

      Wary but Determined, Publishers are Preparing for the Digital Future – Publisher’s Weekly – Calvin Reid

      While publishers may be a bit daunted, they are rapidly organizing their firms for digital: 75% of publishers have an executive level person responsible for digital; 63% report that digital skills are formally integrated into all departments; 69% of the publishers expect to increase digital staffing in 2012, while 22% expect overall company staffing to go down in 2012.

      For the statistically inclined.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 1 Comment | Tagged ebooks, magazine, news, publishing, technology
    • Publishers and Booksellers See a ‘Predatory’ Amazon – NPR

      Posted at 6:21 pm by Laura, on January 23, 2012

      Publishers and Booksellers See a ‘Predatory’ Amazon – National Public Radio – Lynn Neary

      Publishers have long complained about Amazon’s pricing policies; it sold e-books at cut-rate prices in order to win customers for the Kindle. Now, explains Joe Wikert, general manager and publisher at O’Reilly Media, Amazon is undercutting competitors by selling e-readers, like the new Kindle Fire, at a loss.

      Amazon has power, yes. What we don’t know is how long they can hold that power.

      Posted in Link | 2 Comments | Tagged news, publishing, radio, technology
    • Enhanced E-Books: Blowing Up the Book – WSJ

      Posted at 6:26 pm by Laura, on January 20, 2012

      Enhanced E-Books: Blowing Up the Book – The Wall Street Journal – Alexandra Alter

      The new novel “Chopsticks” tells the story of a troubled young piano prodigy—using family photos, letters, documents, instant messages and YouTube videos. It’s a love story, a mystery and a parable about creativity and madness.

      It’s also an experiment, one that could have far-reaching implications for the book industry, as publishers stretch the definition of what constitutes a book. “Chopsticks” straddles the digital divide that is transforming the publishing world—it’s both a novel and a digital app.

      My mind is screaming “no!” We already have videos and apps and ads and media bombardment everywhere else. I can see this becoming a useful tool to children, possibly, but not for adults in my opinion. Even with children, there’s still a need for touch – to feel the fuzzy sheep, to touch the rough sandpaper – when they’re reading (or being read to). That’s something an ebook cannot provide. But, to continue…

      “The consumer is not asking for this,” said Jane Friedman, CEO of Open Road Media, an e-book publisher that is experimenting with enhanced titles. “It takes it from being a reading experience to something else, and we are publishers.“

      Thank you, Friedman! Let’s be friends.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, ebooks, ereaders, news, newspaper, publishing, technology
    • Will the Tablet Kill the Novel? – Huffington Post

      Posted at 4:26 pm by Laura, on January 19, 2012

      Will the Tablet Kill the Novel? – Huffington Post – Warren Adler

      Technological advances have enhanced our ability to create a moving record of our lives through video and still photography, helped us connect to people, locally, nationally and internationally, and have improved our research skills and medical diagnosis abilities. It has enhanced our ability to react to events, bring people swiftly together to enlist their cooperation in various causes, air our grievances, and accomplish a thousand other tasks that might have taken past generations days, weeks or months longer to realize.

      Such alleged progress cannot be ignored, but neither can the concept of deep, personal reflection, thoughtful concentration, philosophical cogitation, creative imagination and aspects of insight that one can glean from literature which can only be conveyed through the privacy of immersion into a parallel world best dramatized in the imagination through storytelling.

      Not quite an ebook v traditional book debate as it’s technology v novel, but he does bring up some good points. Would you rather read classics by flipping paper, or punching buttons? As an owner of a Nook, I still prefer paper to technology, so I can see each side of the argument Adler proposes. Read this – what do you think about the future of the novel?

      Posted in books, Link | 2 Comments | Tagged books, ebooks, news, publishing, technology
    • OverDrive Adds Foreign Language Titles – PW

      Posted at 2:39 pm by Laura, on January 18, 2012

      OverDrive Adds Foreign Language Titles – Publisher’s Weekly

      Are you aware of that handy little app? It just got better.

      Digital library distributor OverDrive has added “thousands” of foreign language titles to its catalog by signing a number of new publishing clients. The company’s online catalog has books in over 50 languages and the new titles include ones in Russian, Swedish, Portuguese, Italian, and Turkish with Spanish titles coming. The addition of the foreign titles brings OverDrive e-book catalog to 700,000.

      Posted in books, library, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, ebooks, library, magazine, news, technology
    • Why Authors Tweet – NYTimes

      Posted at 11:44 am by Laura, on January 9, 2012

      Why Authors Tweet – New York Times – Anne Trubek

      W. B. Yeats remarked that the poet “is never the bundle of accident and incoherence that sits down to breakfast.” T. S. Eliot further argued that “the progress of an artist is . . . a continual extinction of personality”; forget about getting to know the figure behind the words: “Honest criticism and sensitive appreciation is directed not upon the poet but upon the poetry.” On his Facebook page, created by his publisher, Jeffrey Eugenides recently expressed similar sentiments. In “A Note From Jeffrey Eugenides to Readers,” he described his joy at meeting them, but concluded by saying he doesn’t know when or if he’ll post on the page again: “It’s better, I think, for readers not to communicate too directly with an author because the author is, strangely enough, beside the point.”

      But readers are not heeding Eugenides’s advice, nor are many writers. Why? For one thing, publishers are pushing authors to hobnob with readers on Twitter and Facebook in the hope they will sell more copies. But there’s another reason: Many authors have little use for the pretension of hermetic distance and never accepted a historically specific idea of what it means to be a writer.

      To tweet or not to tweet? Be sure to read the full the two pages!

      Posted in Link | 0 Comments | Tagged authors, news, newspaper, technology
    Newer posts →
    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
    • Search the Blog

    • Currently Reading

    • Book Review Rating Key

      ★★★ — It’s good
      ★★★★ — It’s great
      ★★★★★ — OMG LOVE!!!

    • Recent Posts

      • MSWL for 2026
      • Favorite Reads of 2025
      • Deal Announcement: Nina Moreno, YA Romance
      • Deal Announcement: Sharon Choe, YA Fantasy
      • Deal Announcement: Hanna R. Neier, MG Historical/Contemporary

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Scribbles & Wanderlust
    • Join 1,203 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Scribbles & Wanderlust
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar