Thursday, May 17, 2012

Audiobooks Question

I was looking at the back case of an audiobook I'm currently listening to, 'Odd Thomas by Dean Koontz", and noticed something strange. Its sale price was $44.95. This lead me to the question, "Who the hell would pay $45 for an audiobook?"

I don't mean this in the sense that audiobooks are not worth that price. Many are over 10 hours long and read by professional voice actors. I just don't get how the demand for this market exists. Who is buying these audiobooks? Who has the combination of lack of reading interest and the means to pay $45 for a book they are probably going to listen to once, yet does not have the capability of renting it from the library or finding a "free" version online.

Only realistic markets for people who buy audiobooks at full price that I can think of...
1. Housebound blind or nearly blind elderly (I assume non-housebound elderly and blind non-elderly people have means to acquire these books at a lower cost, whatever those may be)
2. Insane people
  
That's it. 

If you are someone, or know someone, who buys audiobooks at full price, I would love to know the motive. Please enlighten me in the comments section.

PS- Sorry if this sounds ranty or insensitive. I'm just genuinely at a loss.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Attention E-book Readers

I came across this site recently. I haven't explored it fully yet, but it looks promising.

Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page

Message from their welcome page:
Project Gutenberg offers over 39,000 free ebooks: choose among free epub books, free kindle books, download them or read them online.

We carry high quality ebooks: All our ebooks were previously published by bona fide publishers. We digitized and diligently proofread them with the help of thousands of volunteers.

No fee or registration is required, but if you find Project Gutenberg useful, we kindly ask you to donate a small amount so we can buy and digitize more books. Other ways to help include digitizing more books, recording audio books, or reporting errors.

Over 100,000 free ebooks are available through our Partners, Affiliates and Resources.

Milestone!

Earlier this month our blog passed 20,000 unique visitors! What's more impressive is that we have averaged over 1,000 unique visitors every month since last October! Big thanks to all of our readers!

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Maurice Sendak

"Once a little boy sent me a charming card with a little drawing on it. I loved it. I answer all my children’s letters — sometimes very hastily — but this one I lingered over. I sent him a card and I drew a picture of a Wild Thing on it. I wrote, “Dear Jim: I loved your card.” Then I got a letter back from his mother and she said, “Jim loved your card so much he ate it.” That to me was one of the highest compliments I’ve ever received. He didn’t care that it was an original Maurice Sendak drawing or anything. He saw it, he loved it, he ate it."
 -Maurice Sendak

Coincidence?

Several months ago Maurice Sendak appeared on the Colbert Report (http://pleasanthillbookclub.blogspot.com/2012/01/stephen-colbert-with-maurice-sendak.html) where he gave an endorsement of Stephen Colbert's new children's book, I Am A Pole (And So Can You). Sendak's quote, which appears on the cover of the book, states, "The Sad thing is, I like it."


The publishing date of Colbert's book is today, May 8th, the same day of Sendak's death. I guess Sendak's integrity couldn't allow himself to live another day knowing his quote might help the sales of this book.

If you want to purchase I Am A Pole (And So Can You), follow the link below.
http://www.amazon.com/Am-Pole-And-Can-You/dp/1455523429/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1336493774&sr=8-1

Maurice Sendak Dies at 83

Via yahoo.com
By Dylan Stableford
The Cutline

Maurice Sendak, the renowned children's author whose books captivated generations of kids and simultaneously scared their parents, has died. He was 83. Sendak passed away on Tuesday from complications caused by a recent stroke, his editor told the New York Times.

He lived in Ridgefield, Conn., and was hospitalized in nearby Danbury. According to the Associated Press, Sendak suffered the stroke on Friday. Sendak wrote and illustrated more than 50 children's books--including "Where the Wild Things Are," his most famous, published in 1963. The book--about a disobedient boy named Max who, after being sent to his room without supper, creates a surreal world inhabited by wild creatures--won Sendak the coveted Caldecott Medal, the equivalent of a Pulitzer Prize, in 1964. "Where The Wild Things Are" was adapted into a live-action film by Spike Jonze in 2009. "Where The Wild Things Are" was not only revolutionary--it was wildly profitable, selling more than 17 million copies, according to Bloomberg.com.

Sendak's other groundbreaking works include "In the Night Kitchen," "Outside Over There," "The Sign on Rosie's Door," "Higglety Pigglety Pop!" and "The Nutshell Library." "Bumble-Ardy," his first book in 30 years, was published by HarperCollins last year. A posthumous picture book, "My Brother's Book," is slated for 2012. Sendak "transformed children's literature from a gentle playscape into a medium to address the psychological intensity of growing up," the Washington Post said in an obituary. His "unsentimental approach to storytelling revolutionized the genre," the Los Angeles Times said. "In book after book," the New York Times wrote, "Mr. Sendak upended the staid, centuries-old tradition of American children's literature, in which young heroes and heroines were typically well scrubbed and even better behaved; nothing really bad ever happened for very long; and everything was tied up at the end in a neat, moralistic bow."

That's why, perhaps, Sendak could never break free from being labeled a children's book author, despite his exploration of darker themes. "I write books as an old man," Sendak said in a 2003 interview. "But in this country you have to be categorized, and I guess a little boy swimming in the nude in a bowl of milk can't be called an adult book. So I write books that seem more suitable for children, and that's OK with me. They are a better audience and tougher critics. Kids tell you what they think, not what they think they should think."

 In January, Sendak appeared on "The Colbert Report," giving Stephen Colbert some advice on how to make it as a children's book author. "You've started already by being an idiot," Sendak said. "I don't write for children," Sendak told Colbert. "I write, and then someone says, 'That's for children.'"

 "Sendak understood," Slate observed, "that kids need literature that makes adults uncomfortable. They need books that reflect their chaotic and dark worlds, in which sometimes children do have to feed their mothers." After Colbert pointed out that Newt Gingrich said American children don't have a great work ethic, Sendak said, "Newt Gingrich is an idiot of great renown. There is something so hopelessly gross and vile about him, it's hard to take him seriously."

President Barack Obama has made it something of a tradition to read from "Where The Wild Things Are" at the annual White House Easter Egg Roll.

Sendak was heavily involved in Jonze's film adaptation. "He was involved in every aspect," Dave Eggers, who co-wrote the script, said. "Maurice really trusted Spike to do the book justice, and not to be afraid of the book and not to be too reverent."

Sunday, May 6, 2012

May 5 Book Haul

First stop, Pleasant Hill Library Book Sale. Showed restraint, left with three books. Martian Time-Slip by Philip K. Dick, Master Mind of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs, and a cool old reference book on the Age of Enlightenment. Total cost: $2.
Stop 2, Flying Colors Comics (FCC) for Free Comic Book Day. Line was about 80 yards long. I love comics, and I love free stuff even more, but I wasn't about to wait an hour to get some. Fortunately there was a FCC staff member handing some out to those in line. So I left with a copy of a DC The New 52 and went home.
Good day.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Free Comic Book Day!

Every first Saturday of May is National Free Comic Book Day! The only comic store I know of in the Pleasant Hill area is Flying Colors Comics. Here is a link to there store: http://www.flyingcolorscomics.com/

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

May Book of the Month: A Night of Horrors by John C. Berry

via goodreads.com A thriller about the 24 hours leading up to the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. This tightly plotted novel captures the single day when John Booth and his conspirators plot to kill President, VP, and Secretary of State; the Cabinet plans a post-war US; and the Lincolns dream about their future. It builds to the simultaneous and brutal attacks that left lives shattered and a nation paralyzed. By the way, this is our first exclusively Kindle book. Hope that's a not the same as a "straight to video" movie. To be determined.