Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Friday, 12 April 2013

It's All about the Books




It's All About the Books

“Always be "opportunity-ready" - The greatest door-opening opportunities often come in the form of objections. ”  ― Lisa Washington


This is not my room. But if it was, I probably would still need more bookshelf.


After I've badgered my brother to lug my 23kg bag up to my room and the customary comments about the fact that my hand luggage is full of clothes and the one he's carrying is all books, the first thing I do is ask myself a familiar question: 

How on earth am I'm going to renegotiate space on my bookshelves?

It's inevitable. I come home from university a few pounds of fat less, a few kilograms of books more, and since I'm not Harry Potter and I don't have a magical expanding trunk, there's a constant battle between where the stuff I bring back to London finds it's home. 

This time, perhaps spurred on by the fact that I've been reading up on my publishing houses as I apply for various work placements and pray that maybe one or two of them see some hint of potential, I decided to figure out what publishing houses fill my shelves. Do the Big Six dominate? Do their various imprints reflect themselves between my own literary choices? What about the independents? How many of them have crept into my hands? What about the vintage books: the classics I've inherited or those uncovered gems from Portobello Market? 

I started off with vague musings - a plethora of questions about what my book shelves tell me. But as I took them all down and rearranged them into their relevant groupings, I figured: why not turn it into an exercise in which you all can share? 

What writer or aspiring young publisher, like myself, hasn't had to go through the eye-opening, eye-wearying trawl of Penguin or Random House, trying to figure out exactly what makes an imprint distinct from the mothership? Who hasn't wanted a comprehensive, finger-tip guide to some of those book-brands that make applications to any company just slightly overwhelming? 

Now, I know there are way too many questions here for just one blog post so for the next few days, you're going to be privy to the intricacies of my book shelves. I'm going to go through publishing house by publishing house, looking each one and their imprints. By the end, you'll probably be able to see what sorts of things I read and where they come from - should be useful, should be fun, should be challenging. 

As usual though: it's all about the books. 

Je serai poète et toi poésie, 
SCRIBBLER

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Not for the Weak of Heart


Writing is a way of life. Books are a way of life. If you're a writer, you're on a mission that will take you through the highs and lows of human emotion. In fact, your journey is just as complex as any of your characters. The difference is, you have to shape your characters, mould your words, create an imaginative space for the readers of the world. 
This is your life. So forgive the crudity, but we might as well start breeding a new generation of readers too. 

Image suggested by the Amazing Alexandra Lloyd

Friday, 3 February 2012

Organizing the Bookcase


Amazing video because sometimes books have a life of their own.
What can you do with your books?

Thursday, 2 February 2012

To Whom it May Concern


I chose to begin today with a welcome - because even though I know that every one who strays across this has much better things to be doing - it is quite rude not to begin by giving ones greetings to those who stumble upon the road less travelled by. 

This is The Daily Scribble - which in this case is very unlikely to be 'daily' but it sounds rather more like writing than 'The Scribble' and in any case, 'the scribble' I'm sure has already been taken by one or other Marvel villain - and it will be about Writing and Books and things of a sort. 

I will post up writing prompts (which you will also find on my tumblr) and reviews (which will really just be my opinion on the various books that I read). There will be references to obscure things such as NaNoWriMo, an auspicious writing challenge that sees thousands of aspiring scribblers bleeding from their fingers as they attempt to scrawl at least 50K in the month of November. There will be literary expeditions, also known as rambles off into the vagaries of poetry. There will be 

Now you can see why I said you almost certainly have something better to do. If this is the case, I would suggest that you hurry away before a prompt catches you eye or a writer rises to tempt you into keeping him immortal. If not, then welcome, peruse at your leisure and enjoy. 

Je serai poète et toi poésie,
SCRIBBLER