Publishing’s Plenitude & Pitfalls

Do you remember the 1982 sci-fi movie Tron? It’s about a computer programmer who is transported inside the software world of a mainframe computer, where he interacts with various programs as he tries to get back out. I feel like that programmer nearly every time I start working at my computer. An endless universe of cyber-choices, with tentacles reaching out, sucks me into a virtual vortex, devouring real time.

This dizzying experience happened again as I started preparing my blog about Self-Publishing. My original goal was to provide an update of industry statistics about newly published titles in 2012 and show the value of Booked as an innovative marketing concept. I started with Bowker, the official ISBN agency for the U.S. and its territories. “ISBN” stands for “International Standard Book Number”. An ISBN is a number that uniquely identifies a published book or book-like product, facilitating the sale of the product to booksellers and libraries.

Bowker’s report for 2012 says ISBNs show nearly 60% more self-published works than in 2011. Self-published titles in 2012 jumped to more than 391,000, up an astonishing 422% over 2007. Just one year earlier, Bowker had reported nearly 346,000 new titles published (traditional plus self-published), of which self-published titles accounted for 43%. Ebooks continue to gain on print, comprising 40 percent of the ISBNs that were self-published in 2012, up from just 11 percent in 2007.

Critics of Bowker claim the figures should be far higher because an increasing number of books are coming into the marketplace as direct author-to-reader sales without the ISBN numbers that enable tracking. That means self-published titles are even higher than reported!

The bottom line for authors is that it is easier than ever to get published but harder than ever to compete for sales and readership. This is true for traditionally published books but much more so for self-published works. Authors can no longer view themselves purely as artists creating literary works. They now have to also don the hat of business owner; the business is selling their book.

Our rapidly evolving literary marketplace has created a new service infrastructure in publishing to fill the needs of authors with books to sell. In addition to companies that actually produce print, digital or audio books, companies offer a variety of post-production services. For the uninformed author, the new infrastructure is a dangerous minefield. As I wrote on this Blog back in February, authors need to be aware of “the good, the bad and the ugly about self-publishing.”

And so we return to Tron, trolling the internet, seeking information about resources for authors and feeling overwhelmed with choices. It has never been easier for authors to get published, or to be separated from money without getting adequate help to sell their books.

If you have written a book you want to publish, whether you pursue traditional or self-publishing, print or digital, traditional booksellers or direct to reader, tread carefully! “Biggest” is not always best and “cheapest” is rarely a bargain.

Get a first, second and possibly third opinion from people with experience at successfully producing and marketing books in your genre. Join writing groups, attend conferences, talk with consultants and network. Read leading industry magazines, take classes, read the insides of books to look for names of publishers, editors, agents and others who helped bring the book to you. Get to know published authors. Immerse yourself in the literary world, including both the writing craft and the marketing know-how. Read the Booked blog! Feel free to contact me for more information. You may feel overwhelmed at times but, like the programmer in Tron, you will emerge victorious.

Shout-Out

No relationship to Booked but I want to congratulate my son, SPC. Ian V. Delmar, on earning the Distinguished Honor Graduate designation from the U.S. Army Advanced Individual Training, Class 15-13. Top of the class!

Thank-full-ness

There is one day that is ours. Thanksgiving Day is the one day that is purely American. — O Henry

After a good dinner one can forgive anybody, even one’s own relatives. – Oscar Wilde

As we approach the quintessential American family holiday – Thanksgiving – I started to search for samples of Thanksgiving representations in literature. You’d think that the holiday would be ripe for comedy, drama, poetry, a touch of weirdness perhaps, and certainly a cornucopia of memories. But you’d be challenged to find a bounty of books whose titles or authors you’d recognize.

While there are passing references to Thanksgiving in various novels by such authors as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Mark Twain and Philip Roth, you have to go back to 1882 and the novella An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving by Louisa May Alcott to find a classic story placed in the holiday. It’s a cute story that may remind you of the movie Home Alone, when children are left to fill their parents’ role in the household with comic results. While getting a taste of life in those long-ago times, we can relate to the spirit of the family-oriented holiday.

How authors view Thanksgiving reflects the time in which the author lives and the story is told. Such is the case with Rick Moody’s 1994 novel, The Ice Storm. Set in the 1970s, the dark story reveals the underlying dysfunction of two seemingly attractive upper-class suburban families, breaking apart under the weight of contemporary cultural pressures.

Most of us have Thanksgiving recollections that fall somewhere between Alcott’s version and Moody’s. Those of us “of a certain age” also recall the first verse of a melodic poem called Over the River and Through the Woods, learned in elementary school. Did you know that when you go past the first verse, it turns out to be about Thanksgiving? The original title of the poem (later adapted into a song and a play) by Lydia Maria Child was A Boy’s Thanksgiving Day. Now you have a piece of trivia to pass around with the turkey and stuffing at your Thanksgiving table!

The Ultimate Editor

There could be nothing so important as a book can be. – Maxwell Perkins

In all the arts, perhaps no collaboration is more underappreciated than that between a book’s author and its editor. Other than the rarely read acknowledgements page, you’re unlikely to connect an editor with the book you love or hate. Yet the editor often makes or breaks a book. One editor who is nearly as celebrated as the authors he worked with is Max Perkins.

Considered by many to be the best editor ever, Max Perkins (September 20, 1884 – June 17, 1947) was the guiding hand behind such literary luminaries as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, James Jones, Ring Lardner, Erskine Caldwell, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Alan Paton and Thomas Wolfe. Working for the highly esteemed publisher Charles Scribner’s Sons, Perkins respected his writers. He said, “I believe the writer… should always be the final judge. I have always held to that position and have sometimes seen books hurt thereby, but at least as often helped. The book belongs to the author.”

Perkins’ writing skills are evident in letters he exchanged with the authors he mentored, promoted and befriended. He advised them, “If you are not discouraged about your writing on a regular basis, you may not be trying hard enough. Any challenging pursuit will encounter frequent patches of frustration. Writing is nothing if not challenging.” Perkins’ special gift was his ability to see where an author needed to take his or her work and to illuminate a path the author had not seen.

Perkins was also a fierce advocate of untested talent, often fighting the bosses at Scribner’s on behalf of young, fledgling, sometimes controversial authors. Scribner’s rejected Fitzgerald’s first novel with the working title, The Romantic Egotist. Perkins worked with Fitzgerald to revise the manuscript, which was renamed This Side of Paradise. After much coaxing, he convinced Scribner’s to publish the best-selling novel in 1920, launching Fitzgerald’s remarkable literary career and a new literary generation.

Perkins’ visionary approach, along with an extraordinary ability to understand the intent of the authors he worked with, attracted writers. Rawlings’ Pulitzer Prize-winning The Yearling (1938) was born of suggestions from Perkins. Perkins guided Jones away from the novel he was working on and set him on the path to what would become From Here to Eternity (1951). With gratitude for their many collaborations, Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea (1952), was dedicated posthumously to Perkins’ memory.

In today’s literary marketplace, with traditional publishers appearing to be more interested in numbers than in letters, and with the incursion of self-publishing, how likely are we to see another editor of Max Perkins’ spirit, talent and vision?

The next time you read a book that moves, informs, enlightens or greatly entertains you, find out who the editor was. And say a quiet “thank you.”

Recommended

MAX PERKINS: Editor of Genius by A. Scott Berg is the National Book Award winner and best-selling biography of the man many refer to as “the most admired editor in the world.” In the words of Newsweek, this is “an admirable biography of a wholly admirable man.”

Editor to Author: The Letters of Maxwell E. Perkins is a compilation of correspondence showing the genius of Max Perkins. It was published by the Charles Scribner’s Sons in 1950, three years after Perkins’ death.

Kindling

The dictionary offers two definitions for “kindling”. The most common use is the noun, meaning easily combustible small sticks or twigs used for starting a fire. In science jargon, it is a verb that means a process by which a seizure or other brain event is both initiated and its recurrence made more likely. I think it’s time to add a third definition: Kindling is the debut publication of a book solely via Kindle.

When Kindle and other eReaders first arrived on the market, they were used to bring print-publication books to readers in a conveniently portable, less expensive digital form. As the Kindle gained in popularity, publishers realized they could bring new books swiftly and more economically to eReaders, bypassing traditional print publication altogether. Now, some books publish first in eReader format and, if reader demand justifies a publisher’s investment, proceed to print publication.

From traditional publishing houses producing direct-to-Kindle book, it was a natural progression to authors self-publishing on Kindle as their first step in producing their books.

On the bright side, the confluence of eReader technology and self-publishing availability makes it easier than for authors to get their work published and offers readers more choices than ever. On the dark side, it is getting harder than ever for authors to compete for readers’ attention and sustained interest while readers will have a harder time discerning what’s worth reading. I want to share with you an excellent example of self-publishing a direct-to-Kindle book: The Survival Girls.

(From the Amazon website) “In the summer of 2011, writer, artist, and development worker Ming Holden journeyed to Kenya with the goal of creating a performance with refugee girls for World Refugee Day. At the end of her seven weeks there, she had founded the Survival Girls, a theater group comprised of six Congolese refugee women ages 18-23 living in a Nairobi slum. The Survival Girls have stayed together since then, an independent and self-sustaining women’s empowerment and artistic expression group that has doubled in membership, competed in local competitions, and been contracted by the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees to perform all over Nairobi about female genital mutilation and other social issues.

The Survival Girls is a literary nonfiction book fully illustrated by Seattle artist Jody Joldersma. Proceeds benefit university education for the Survival Girls in Nairobi. Written in the first person by Ming, this is just one story of the group’s genesis, a story of how the concept and enactment of ‘safe space’ to assist with trauma recovery impacted women’s empowerment in the refugee community in Nairobi’s slums.”

The Survival Girls has been warmly endorsed by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

While hoping to find a traditional publisher, the creators of The Survival Girls invested their own time and money to bring the book to readers by self-publishing in Kindle format. Hopefully, good sales will also attract a print publisher who can advance this well-written, compelling book to the form it deserves.

Recommended

The holidays are coming, a great opportunity to give the gift of books! In addition to The Survival Girls, you can learn about a variety of wonderful books at the Booked website. Visit the Book Excerpts page to read a snippet from each book and watch interviews with the authors in the Archives. From the Booked site, you’ll even find an easy link to order any book listed.

Footnotes

Amazon’s latest generation of E-readers, the Kindle Fire HDX got a rave review at NYTimes.com, noting improved battery life, lighter weight and sharply defined images. PCMag.com takes you through a comparison of the current top eReaders.

Congratulations to 451 Degrees, the book club at Chicago’s Lane Tech High School that I mentioned in my March 31, 2013 blog. They recently won the Illinois Library Association’s Intellectual Freedom Award for leading a protest after the book was banned from Chicago public schools and libraries. The clubs efforts via traditional and social media gained enough supporters that the ban was rescinded. 451 Degrees founder Levi Todd said, “A lot of books banned are really good books. They make for great discussions.”

Spreading the Love

Learning to read is probably the most difficult and revolutionary thing that happens to the human brain and if you don’t believe that, watch an illiterate adult try to do it. – John Steinbeck

It was disheartening to learn that a study conducted in late April by the U.S. Department of Education and the National Institute of Literacy found that 32 million adults – 14 percent of the population — in our nation can’t read. Among high school graduates, 19 percent can’t read; and 21 percent of adults in the U.S. read below a 5th grade level. Only 29 percent displayed a “basic” reading level. The U.S. illiteracy rate hasn’t changed in 10 years.

Illiteracy impacts so many aspects of society in general and countless individual lives. It denies people economic security, access to health care, and the ability to actively participate in civic life. Illiteracy is often a legacy handed down from one generation to another; parents who don’t read are much more likely to have children who don’t read.

For those of us who love reading, it may seem unimaginable that others are so diminished by their inability to read. What we need to understand is that, like many skills, there is an optimal period of brain maturation in which to develop reading skills. For many reasons, children may miss learning to read during this period, finding themselves illiterate by the time they graduate from high school. Having lost the chance to fall in love with reading at a young age, they may feel unable to learn this crucial skill and lack the motivation to take on the challenge.

Schools and libraries have developed programs to encourage reading and to help those struggling to become literate. As booklovers, there are some things each of us can do to support literacy. We can read to the children in our lives. We can volunteer at schools, libraries, houses of worship and other places that offer literacy mentorships. We can also get involved with World Book Night, an annual celebration dedicated to spreading the love of reading, person to person.

Each year on April 23 –Shakespeare’s birthday– tens of thousands of people in the U.S. go out into their communities and give a total of half a million free World Book Night paperbacks to light and non-readers. World Book Day is celebrated in the UK and Ireland by giving schoolchildren a book token. World Book Night was introduced in 2011 in the UK and Ireland to bring attention to books for adult readers.

With its launch in 2012, World Book Night U.S. chose to continue the focus on adult readers,
with a few books for teens and middle readers included. Many, many other wonderful programs already exist to get books to young children, and they are essential. But World Book Night U.S. fills another important need: Encouraging reading in the teen and adult population, especially those who may not have access to printed books for reasons of means or geography.

The goal of World Book Night is to seek out adult readers wherever they are, in towns and cities, in public settings or in places from nursing homes to food pantries, low-income schools to mass transit. We owe it to our society to help lift others out of illiteracy. As booklovers – readers, writers, editors, agents, publishers, booksellers, librarians and teachers – we can join World Book Night to spread the love.

Footnotes

There’s encouraging news for those of us who value our local independent bookstores. The American Booksellers Association, a non-profit industry association founded in 1900 that promotes independent bookstores in North America, reports that its membership rolls have gone up every year since 2009, from 1,401 four years ago to 1,632 this year.

At the same time, the National Endowment for the Arts reports that only 47% of Americans say they read a book for pleasure last year. Read my Spreading the Love blog post to learn how you can help improve this statistic.

Be-witch-ing Books

After all the ghost, gremlins and goblins have come to my door trick-or-treating, I like to snuggle down with the leftover candy and a spooktacular book on Halloween night. There’s no shortage of wickedly good books to choose from. When my children were young, they enjoyed hearing me read Linda Williams’ The Little Old Lady Who Was Not Afraid of Anything. It wasn’t long before we graduated to Washington Irving’s classic, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. On my own time, I gravitate to such haunting books as The Exorcist, Rosemary’s Baby, The Haunting of Hill House, the early novels of Stephen King and anything by Edgar Allan Poe.

What is it that attracts us to horror stories designed to capture our imagination in the creepiest, most terrifying ways? Danish researcher Mathias Clasen claims it’s in our DNA to want our fill of thrill. “When our ancestors lived as hunter-gatherers in the East African savannah, it was important that they were prepared for possible attacks by predators and vermin,” says Clasen, who presented his PhD thesis on horror at the Department of Aesthetics and Communication – English, Aarhus University (Denmark).

Dracula may have been inspired by the real Vlad The Impaler, a cruel Romanian Prince who lived in the 1400s. But, according to Clasen, our fear of creatures with fangs began when some of our ancestors were possible blue plate specials for lions and other sharp-toothed creatures of prey. In order to survive, our early predecessors “had to train their reactions to stressful situations, and the desire to do so became stored in their DNA – which we still carry today.”

Likewise, the ancient real fear of the danger of eating rotten meat may be at the core of our horrified disgust with zombies. When watching a horror movie or reading a horror book, says Clasen, “We’re training our danger preparedness.”

In horror stories, characters and plots may also address topical concerns. Bram Stoker’s Dracula, published in 1897, reflects Victorian views of women, sex and colonialism. William Peter Blatty’s 1973 shocker, The Exorcist, plays on contemporary themes of questioning established religion and the generation gap felt between parents and their children. “We use fiction as an ‘emotional simulator’ to broaden our horizons,” says Clasen. “Horror fiction exercises our reactions to what’s terrible and frightening.”

Perhaps the biggest attraction to horror fiction is the reader’s awareness that the nightmare can be ended with the simple closing of a book. Of course, that does not guarantee that the fear will leave you. As you shake and shiver your way through a nightmarish book this Halloween, know that the tingling in your spine is more than your imagination. It’s the DNA message from beyond the grave!

Recommended

The First Indie Authors Book Fair (expected to become an annual event) will be held on November 2 from 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. at Re-Event Gallery in Lake Forest, IL. Visitors can meet the authors, buy some holiday gifts, get their books signed and hear snippets of the works read throughout the day. Books range from children’s picture books through young adult and adult fiction and nonfiction. Light refreshments, kid friendly.

The 2013 Chicago Book Expo will be held on Sunday, November 24, 11am-5pm in Uptown at St. Augustine College (1345 W. Argyle). The centerpiece of the event will be the expo of the Chicago area’s independent publishers in St. Augustine Hall. Authors and publishers are invited to rent exhibitor tables at very reasonable prices to sell books and promote work. There will be several literary events around Uptown in the week leading up to the Expo.

Sequels: Where Do We Go From Here?

Who among us has never been spooked by one of Stephen King’s novels? In a previous blog post, I wrote that Salem’s Lot disturbed me so much that I locked the book outside my apartment every night; then devoured the story in tasty bites during daylight hours. King’s latest novel, Dr. Sleep, is a sequel to one of his most revered books, The Shining, which was published in 1980 and adapted to an iconic horror movie . Featuring an adult Danny Torrance, the telepathic child from the original book, Dr. Sleep is an instant bestseller. Most reviews are favorable but the naysayers – many of them King fans – are very vocal in their disappointment. Perhaps King anticipated the criticism when, in an author’s note, he wrote, “Nothing can live up to the memory of a good scare, especially if administered to one who is young and impressionable.” Instead, he said, his intention was to tell “a kick-ass story.”

Writing a sequel can be easy work. Writing a good sequel is very hard. On the one hand, the author has already successfully created memorable characters in believable settings; a built-in fan base has invested in the story. On the other hand, the success of the first book creates expectations that must be met or exceeded in the follow-up. If the author didn’t already have a continuing story in mind when writing the original, it’s a bit like trying to conceive a second child that is as accomplished as the first: at once similar and different, both seeking our love and praise. Each child needs to stand on its own while connected to each other.

Sequel, prequel or something else entirely? When a follow-up to an original story sets characters or plots back in time, it is called a prequel. When the follow-up gets a follow-up, it is called a trilogy (example: Lord of the Rings). More than three connected books are considered a serial; either with established characters but few references to past events (example: Hardy Boys or references to earlier plots that rely on the reader to follow the series chronologically (example: Harry Potter).

Unlike movies and TV shows where commercial successes spawn hopeful successors, bestselling books don’t guarantee a sequel; at least not from the original author. Other writers may take up the pen, carrying the original story forward or using established characters or plot to suggest a new vision. Sequels to Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind include Scarlett, written by Alexandra Ripley and authorized by Mitchell’s estate. The book was excoriated by literary reviewers and had mixed responses among general readers. At the other end of the spectrum is Jean Rhys’ highly acclaimed Wide Sargasso Sea, written more than 100 years after Charlotte Bronte’s classic, Jane Eyre. Rhys’s award-winning novel takes a character referred to but never seen in Bronte’s story – the insane first wife of Jane Eyre’s love, Mr. Rochester – and reimagines the wife’s viewpoint of the cause of her insanity, casting Mr. Rochester in a very different light. Brilliant!

It’s hard to make a second kiss as exciting and rewarding as a first kiss. Most sequels fall short. Those that succeed enhance our appreciation of the original while savoring the second.

Recommended

The 2013 Nobel Prize winner in literature, Alice Munro, just announced her retirement at age 82. The author of 14 books was also the 2009 winner of the Man Booker International Prize for her body of work. Several of her short stories have been translated into movies. The wonderful 2006 film Away From Her was adapted from Munro’s The Bear Came Over the Mountain, which originally appeared in The New Yorker in 1999, was reprinted and is available for reading in their October 21, 2013 issue.

Books, A Documentary

It’s not uncommon for movies to be adapted from books. It’s far less common for a movie to be made about books. And even less common for that movie to be a documentary. One that comes to mind is the 2002 film, Stone Reader, produced by Barnes & Noble about the 1972 novel Stones of Summer (referred to in my February 17th Blog posts, “Language Vs. Plot” and “Recommended”).

Another documentary about books is in the works and I’m looking forward to its debut. The title is simply Books, A Documentary but I don’t expect it to be a simple movie. It is the story of one man’s passion for books. That man is Larry McMurtry, American novelist, essayist, bookseller and screenwriter, a prolific writer best known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Lonesome Dove.

What is less known about McMurtry is that he is so passionate about books that for more than 40 years he amassed a collection of 450,000 second-hand books by rescuing the inventory of 26 failing bookstores and more than 200 personal libraries. Those books filled four converted warehouses that comprised his Archer City, Texas, bookstore, aptly called “Booked Up.”

McMurtry lamented the loss of independent bookstores that couldn’t compete with discounters and internet marketers. “It’s tragic,” he said. “It’s just clear that bookselling as it’s been basically since Gutenberg — a form of dispensing culture, if you will — is clearly passing away. I don’t think we have a reading culture anymore. Five years ago, I would have thought I was leaving my son and my grandson a great asset, and now I’m not sure I am.”

In August 2012, Booked Up auctioned more than 300,000 antiquarian books from its inventory. Through the personal story of McMurtry’s life-time love affair with books and his 40-year journey as a collector-seller, Books, A Documentary promises to be a compelling look at the past, present and future of the American antiquarian book trade.

Transforming Without Changing

A dear friend of mine with a biographical book that was published in Italy, is now planning to publish the English translation in the United States. With an intimate knowledge of her subject and fluency in English as well as Italian, translation was relatively easy. The spirit and flow of the book remains delightfully intact. Most authors do not have these advantages. They must rely on others to translate their books.

Unlike translations we might hear at the United Nations, in a corporate setting or in a textbook, translation of literature is a special craft. Beyond getting the words right, literary translators must climb into the mind and soul of the author, accurately conveying the imagination, the intentions and the artistry of the original work. Translations of poetic works must also maintain the cadence, and in many instances choose rhyming words.

Some translations work beautifully. Some don’t. Some books have been translated multiple times with mixed results. The most obvious is the Bible. The United Bible Society has tallied 1,257 languages into which the New Testament has been translated. Along with religious books, children’s books stand high in the ranks of most-frequently translated literature. They include such works as The Little Prince (originally written in French, translated into 216 languages), Andersen’s Fairy Tales (Swedish into 153 languages), Pinocchio (Italian into 100 languages) and Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (English into 97 languages).

Mark Twain noted, “The difference between the right word and the almost right word is really a large matter — it’s the difference between a lightning bug and the lightning.” So if you’re thinking of reading a book that was translated from another language, it is worth doing some research to be sure you get the best possible version. Huffington Post recently released A Literature In Translation Starter Kit, listing “14 absolutely indispensable in-translation books to get you started.”

Renown author and essayist Salman Rushdie said “It is normally supposed that something always gets lost in translation; I cling, obstinately to the notion that something can also be gained.” So why are only 3% or less of the books published in the United States translations? A majority of the 400 or so original translations of fiction and poetry books published annually in the States already achieved success in their own country. That leaves countless excellent translations of lesser known quality books out of the realm of public awareness.

Kudos to Chad W. Post, director of Open Letter Books, which specializes in great books in translation, as well as the web site Three Percent. In a recent post on the Publishers Weekly website, he wrote about this unfortunate oversight. Based on his experience and expertise, he shared his list of the 20 best books in translation that you probably never heard of before.

Footnotes

The literary world lost another highly regarded best-selling author with the death of Tom Clancy on October 1st. His books, often translated into French, German and Dutch, elevated military and espionage thrillers to new technological heights. Several of his books were also translated into movies.

First Love

Do you remember your first favorite book? Was it one of the original 12 Little Golden Books like Pokey Little Puppy (the top-selling children’s book until Harry Potter came along)? Perhaps it was a picture book like Goodnight Moon or The Hungry, Hungry Caterpillar, an introduction to rhyming through Green Eggs and Ham, a collection of morality tales like Aesop’s Fables, or a book of short stories based on lovable characters like Peter Rabbit and Winnie the Pooh?

Scholars have differing opinions about when books started to be written specifically for children but they agree that today’s children’s literature (also known as juvenile literature) evolved from the contributions of many cultures. Even before the invention of books, adults told tales to children. Many children’s tales in modern times have their origins in the spoken narratives of ancient storytellers. Every corner of the world traces its storytelling and books to its particular history and culture, through evolution and revolution across the ages.

The first book published in what would become the United States was a catechism written in verse for children, known as Spiritual Milk for Boston Babes. The author was Puritan John Cotton. The book was published in Boston in 1646. By the 1800s, classic children’s literature from many other countries was translated into English for American children. Examples include The Swiss Family Robinson (Switzerland), Grimm’s Fairy Tales (Germany) and The Adventures of Pinocchio (Italy). From England came Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, The Jungle Book and Wendy and Peter (known here as Peter Pan). The 1800s also saw wonderful children’s literature written and published in the U.S. Examples are Little Women and Tom Sawyer.

While the period between WW I and WW II saw a noticeable decline in children’s literature in Europe, libraries in North America spurred growth by creating demand and opportunity to bring children and books together. Publishers followed with reviews and events geared toward children’s books. This period saw the introduction of book series from such authors as Laura Ingalls Wilder (Little House on the Prairie) and Dr. Seuss.

As Baby Boomers came of reading age in the 1950s, they ignited a boom in juvenile literature. In addition to such books as Charlotte’s Web and the imaginatively illustrated books by Maurice Sendak, non-fiction books flourished in the children’s market.

It’s no surprise that the Harry Potter series, launched in 1997, became the best-selling children’s book series of all time. The plot and writing have drawn legions of admirers among adults as well as children because J.K. Rowling respected readers of all ages.

The growing popularity of eReaders (Kindle, Book, Kobo, etc.) raises questions and concerns about juvenile literature. While such devices make it easier to access books, they take away the physical pleasures associated with traditional books. Books on eReaders will never grow old with us; never greet us as we enter our homes, saluting us from bookshelves, inviting our fingers to dance through pages that evoke the memories of where and when we first met.

As holidays approach and you’re wondering what gift to give a special child in your life, give a book. Make it a real, physical book. Save the eReaders for later. If you really love that child, don’t wait for the holidays. Celebrate now by introducing your special child to a book that could become their first love.

Footnote

Everybody has a favorite children’s book. I mention several throughout my post First Love. If I missed mentioning yours, let me know by clicking on “Click Here to Leave a Comment.” Let me know the title, author and why it’s your favorite and I’ll share it in a future post.

Why Writers Write

I recently chatted with two writer friends about why we write. This is a question I’ve pondered frequently since becoming aware of The Reason I Jump by Naoki Higashida, recently published in English by Random House. What makes this best-selling book especially intriguing is that the author (only 13 years old at the time of first publication in Japan in 2007) is autistic and his autism built steeps walls over which it seemed impossible to express his thoughts or feelings.

The translator of the book into English is bestselling novelist (Cloud Atlas) David Mitchell, whose son also has autism. Mitchell has noted that the physical and mental challenges Naoki faced in writing a book is a powerful testament to the human need for connection. In a Slate Book Review, Mitchell compared the writing challenge Naoki has to how “the act of carrying water in cupped palms across a bustling Times Square or Piccadilly Circus would be to you or me.”

In a Publisher Weekly article, Mitchell said, “Naoki does have autism, and pretty severe autism at that. And yet, he both experiences and analyzes emotions, even if he can’t express these in direct speech, and has to type about them. If we ‘neurotypicals’ don’t think this is possible, I believe it shows the paucity of our imaginations and understanding.”

Naoki Higashida still writes. He keeps a nearly daily blog and has become a respected autism advocate. He continues to face – and overcome – formidable obstacles to writing.

Which brings me back to the question: why do writers write? It is probably for the same reason dancers dance, singers sing, visual artists paint, draw or sculpt, and musicians play instruments. It begins with the need to express our humanness. We say we are compelled to do it; we give birth to a brainchild (or brainchildren), much as one must give birth to physical children once they have formed within us. And though we would likely do it even if no one paid attention, we are most gratified when people do notice, especially if they respond positively.

From the art of prehistoric cave dwellers to Twitter fans today, we need to leave an imprint that claims our moment in time. That says, I was here and I had value.

Ask a writer why he or she writes and you’ll invite any number of answers. I think it comes down to survival. We write in order to connect something within ourselves to something bigger than ourselves. We write to feel a sense of belonging to something beyond ourselves. To belong means to not be alone. To not be alone improves our chance to survive. Finally, to write means to “survive” beyond our mortality; to continue speaking. To hope there will be at least one person listening.

Rejoice, Bookworms!

Have you seen those ads for Lumosity, MyBrainTrainer and other “brain gyms,” where you can fork over $15 or more every month to keep your brain youthful? The fear of Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia in later life is as common as the fear of heart attacks and strokes. While some of us head off to the fitness center, others are investing in online brain games. Mental exercises, say “the experts,” can keep you sharp in old age, just as physical exercises keep your body fit through the years.

Time to break out the confetti and rejoice, fellow bookworms! According to research findings reported this past July in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, reading books and writing can do as much for you as ready-made mind exercises.

Findings from a six-year research study, supported by the National Institute on Aging and the Illinois Department of Public Health, are remarkable. Memory decline was reduced 32 percent in bookworms who continued reading into old age, compared to engaging in average mental activity. Those who neither read nor wrote frequently experienced a 48 percent decline in memory. “We shouldn’t underestimate the effects of everyday activities, such as reading and writing, on our children, ourselves and our parents or grandparents,” says study author Robert S. Wilson, a neuropsychologist at the Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

Save your online “brain gym” membership fees and pick up a book instead. Don’t waste another moment. Just like physical exercise, the sooner you start and maintain a regimen, the better you’ll be in the long run. A seven-year study of 2,000 healthy individuals aged 18 to 60 found that mental agility peaks at 22. By 27, mental processes like reasoning, spatial visualization and speed of thought began to decline.

So let your mind take leaps and bounds. Let it take flight. Delight your synapses. Read a book. Then share it with a friend.

Books Will Defeat Terrorism

“Courage is the most important of all the virtues because without courage, you can’t practice any other virtue consistently.” ― Maya Angelou

Malala Yousafzai was only 12 when she wrote a blog under a pseudonym promoting education for girls. She became a women’s rights activist in a region known for Taliban attempts to ban girls from attending school. By 13, her real name and face were well-known from interviews and a documentary film about her life. On October 9, 2012, the 15-year-old Pakistani student was critically shot in the head and neck by an Islamic extremist as she sat on a school bus, targeted for speaking out against laws that would restrict girls’ access to education.

Miraculously, Malala survived but she continues to face threats of death against her and her father by the Taliban. Giving a face to courage, she refuses to cower to the threats, choosing to defend books and the right of all people to freely read.

This year, Malala Yousafzai was featured on Time magazine’s front cover as one of “The 100 Most Influential People in the World”. She won Pakistan’s first National Youth Peace Prize and was nominated for the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize. On her 16th birthday in July, she appeared before the UN, calling for worldwide access to education. Speaking at a ceremony in The Hague where she was awarded the 2013 International Children’s Peace Prize, Malala vowed to continue her campaign for education.

It seems fitting that in England, where Malala has been residing since her medical treatment and recovery, she presided over the opening of Europe’s largest library on September 3rd. During the ceremony at the Library of Birmingham, Malala announced, ”I have challenged myself that I will read thousands of books and I will empower myself with knowledge. Pens and books are the weapons that defeat terrorism.” She added, “There is no better way to explain the importance of books than say that even God chose the medium of a book to send his message to his people.”

Perhaps drawing from her own life, Malala observed, “Let us not forget that even one book, one pen, one child and one teacher can change the world.”

Malala, and others like her, are prepared to sacrifice their lives for the right to pick up a book and read. It reminds us of the true value of books are in our lives. Books are life transformed and they have the power to transform life. Even a young child knows this.

“I know what I want, I have a goal, an opinion, I have a religion and love. Let me be myself and then I am satisfied. I know that I’m a woman, a woman with inward strength and plenty of courage.” ― Anne Frank, The Diary of a Young Girl

Footnotes

The voice of Indian author Sushmita Banerjee was silenced on September 5th, when she was slain by Afghan militants for her 1997 memoir, A Kabuliwala’s Bengali Wife, describing life under the Taliban. The book gained wider notice when it was turned into a Bollywood movie, Escape from Taliban, in 2003. Her publisher, Swapan Biswas, said Banarjee had returned to Afghanistan to collect materials for her next book.

Those who would suppress humanity are willing to kill free thought. Those who defend humanity are courageously putting their lives on the line. Both sides of the battle understand the enduring power of books to transform lives and change history.

All Roads Are Connected

No single decision you ever made has led in a straight line to where you find yourself now. You peeked down some roads and took a few steps before turning back. You followed some roads that came to a dead end and others that got lost at too many intersections. Ultimately, all roads are connected to all other roads. – Dr. Deepak Chopra, Physician, author, teacher and businessman.

A vision I had just over one year ago, for an innovative way to connect authors and their books with booklovers, became reality on July 8th, when Booked launched the debut of my webcast shows. The shows are the third and brightest jewel in the Booked crown, joining my eight-month-old website that offers Book Excerpts, a weekly Blog, useful links and other features.

In just eight weeks, Booked webcasts quickly established a large audience in the U.S. and abroad. Several of the books I reviewed won prestigious awards or were best sellers. The genres and formats are varied and the authors have fascinating backstories they shared with my viewers. The feedback from authors and viewers alike has been incredibly rewarding and I look forward to the road ahead for all of us.

My road has taken an unexpected turn in the past week. Some urgent family matters have sprung up that must be tended to. I must take a hiatus from my webcasts for a few weeks to take care of my family. Anyone who has a family understands this decision. That does not make it easier for me to step away from Booked webcasts, which I love doing.

I will continue to do my weekly blog. Authors, editors, publishers, agents, bookstores, and anyone involved with bringing books to readers are encouraged to get in touch with me through my website at www.bookedwebcast.com. Although I will not broadcast new shows for a few weeks, I will be reading books and communicating with people in the industry as I plan for the resumption of my webcasts.

While I am on hiatus, you can catch up on any of the shows you may have missed by visiting the Archives at www.bookedwebcast.com. While you’re at the website, peruse the Book Excerpts and enjoy my timeless blog posts.

Acclaimed author Joyce Carol Oates noted that, “Reading is the sole means by which we slip, involuntarily, often helplessly, into another’s skin, another’s voice, another’s soul.”

Thank you to all who have supported Booked so far, and welcome to all newcomers. Please join me in the celebration of books!

Recommended

For obvious reasons, the focus of Booked is books. Great writing can also be found in literary periodicals. A favorite of mine is Glimmer Train. One of the most respected short-story journals in print, Glimmer Train has been discovering, publishing, and paying emerging writers since 1990. In addition to publishing stories for readers, this journal provides excellent advice for authors in their Writers Ask publication. Glimmer Train also offers free monthly bulletins in which you’ll find essays by creative-writing teachers and other published authors on craft, perspective, and the particulars of writing and getting published.

When All Else Has Fallen

Love knows no limit to its endurance, no end to its trust, no fading of its hope; it can outlast anything. Love still stands when all else has fallen. – Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), French writer and philosopher, mathematician, physicist, inventor.

The book I introduced you to last week – New York Times Best Seller, Tell My Sons, by Lt. Col. Mark Weber with David Murray – gained national fame as a powerful, inspiring memoir of an accomplished soldier who was also a husband and parent, facing terminal cancer. Words like heroism, courage, leadership, integrity, and discipline are typically used to describe Mark. He was a soldier’s soldier who used General Douglas MacArthur’s famous 1962 speech to West Point cadets to frame a message to beloved sons he would never see grow to adulthood.

Mark’s honesty inspires me. I therefore confess an embarrassing misstatement in Part One of my webcast, which went online at www.bookedwebcast.com on August 19th. I inadvertently demoted Mark to the rank of Lieutenant. In fact, Mark Weber earned his Lieutenant Colonel rank by serving the United States of America with great distinction, a fact I was well aware of. My error is herewith corrected.

While I’m in this introspective confessional mood, I wonder if book reviewers (myself included) are missing the opportunity to identify this gallant memoir as a wonderful love story. In focusing on Mark’s remarkable military life, are we failing to give enough credit to his remarkable military wife? The relationship between Mark and Kristin Weber was not easily navigated. Through recalled scenes that are, at times, funny, frightening, turbulent or deeply touching, Mark’s memoir captures what marriage is really like, and how we should re-think our role in that partnership because marriage matters. The insights about marriage that Mark learned and left for his sons in this book can serve all of us well. We also gain even more respect for the sacrifices military families make every day so their loved ones can serve our nation.

Part Two of my interview with Tell My Sons co-author David Murray goes online at www.bookedwebcast.com on Monday, August 26th at 8 PM, EST. We talk about what happened to Mark and his family after the book was published. You will learn insights that have not been revealed in any other interviews. You’ll also hear about David’s interesting, varied, sometimes quirky, very popular solo writing. You’ll come away from the show understanding why Mark chose David as his co-writer and what David learned from Mark during their collaboration on Tell My Sons. If you’ve missed Part One, you can find it in the Booked Archives on my website. When you visit the website, be sure to also check out the Book Excerpts page to read a sample of the book and find links to some of Mark Weber’s interviews.