sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Via summertea:

Amazon.com removes sales rankings from print books tagged GLBT. Also books with BDSM themes and (explicit) heterosexual erotica.

This matters not just because it distorts figures to make already marginalized groups look even smaller, but because unranked books won't show up on front-page search results.

List of affected books.

Affected works of classic literature include: Tipping the Velvet, Maurice, The Well of Loneliness, The Charioteer.

Affected works of nonfiction include: The Dictionary of Homophobia, Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History, Unfriendly Fire: How the Gay Ban Undermines the Military and Weakens America.

Affected self-help books include: My Husband is Gay, The Way Out, Hello Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks and Other Outlaws.

Though really it shouldn't matter whether a book is classic or not, nonfiction or not, explicit or not, A SUICIDE PREVENTION MANUAL or not. Suppression is suppression; manipulating sales data for political reasons is manipulating sales data for political reasons.

three scenarios )

EDIT: ALTERNATE THEORY: trolls are responsible.

EDIT2: Statement from Amazon.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
First off:

2008 in books!

It's so not a coincidence that most of the books and most of the reviews come from the first half of the year. I've read lots of novel-length fanfiction in the last six months, if that counts.

What I said over there goes double over here: if I "forgot" to review a book and you wanna know what I thought, just comment and ask! ...Although I've said that before, ahaha. (But this time I mean it!)

Secondly:

2008 in writing!

...There was none. ^^; Man, that was easy.

Thirdly:

Happy Birthday [livejournal.com profile] jullllier!
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Wrote a book review for last month's bibliophages:

http://community.livejournal.com/bibliophages/18319.html

I also ended up reading I, Claudius and Claudius the God for this round -- the second mostly during the long car ride back from Montreal -- made me extremely nauseous but it was worth it.

The theme this month is Love Overcoming Obstacles (Or Not). Please sign up! The deadline is, um, tomorrow. -_-; Well, but would any of you be willing to join in this round with a recommendation list -- you only need to put three books on it -- if the deadline was extended to Friday? Because I totally would extend the deadline if I thought that even one person would be interested.

Montreal, by the way, was awesome. Met up with [livejournal.com profile] petronia Friday night and we saw Stars. XD My main thought is that this is perfect music to fall asleep to if you happened to have stayed up the entire night before reading (for instance) some autobiography by some guy in some band. Kind of like a light show with soothing pop noise. (I don't think this was supposed to have been the point. ^^; Oh well.)

Saturday night I went out for dessert, coffee and beer with my brother's friends, half of whom had ALSO been to the Stars concert. XD They are a great bunch of people, Alex is lucky to have found them. He keeps telling me that they are nothing like his (mostly male) high school friends, but there's an injoke-ness that's the same, even if this (mostly female) group is much more inclined to like 2-hour phone calls at one in the morning.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Google settled with AAP (Association of American Publishers) for 125 million, proving (once again) that it's easier to beg forgivess than to ask permission.

Summary from mass corporate email, condensed:

The corporate rah rah take on the settlement )

...Which doesn't address the really scary thing about Google Library Project (to fiction publishers), which is that every new book published will now have to compete with every book ever published (and scanned by Google). Especially with print on demand services on the rise.

On the other hand, new books already compete with library books and used books, and you can't stop the tide.

Publishing is supposed to be a "conservative" field but we are so far ahead of the RIAA (and MPAA) right now. And not just because Google did all the hard work: music had muxtape, didn't it? Before the RIAA shot themselves in the foot when they shut down the site. Maybe it's because digital books aren't really direct competition; maybe it's because public libraries have been around for ages; or maybe it's because the book industry was never very profitable to begin with.

another one

Jul. 9th, 2008 03:07 pm
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Sorry! List memes are what you guys get when I am too sleep-deprived to think straight.

This time it's The Telegraph's 50 Best Cult Books. As always, bold the titles you've read, italicize the ones you started but didn't finish, and astersk** the ones you always meant to read but somehow never got around to.

the list )

I think the trick with this list is NOT to have read everything on it, but only, you know, the good stuff. (Or at least the not-crazy stuff.) There are way too many sixties books on here, also.

more comments )

Kids should still be forced to read books they don't understand, though! It's good for them.

Blog reactions to books on the list:
The Bell Jar
Dune
Testament of Youth
Justine
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Seen with [livejournal.com profile] sesame_seed and [livejournal.com profile] emblem's boyfriend on Saturday (aka Day 2 of the KILLER HEATWAVE we are currently suffering here on the East Coast).

in conversation )

Borders has a 40% off sale on CDs today and tomorrow! Borders does not, however, have The Jayhawks. ;_;

Books to blog:
River of Lost Footsteps: A Personal History of Burma, Thant Myint-U (finished)
The Venus Hunters/The Best Short Stories of J.G. Ballard, J.G. Ballard (duh)
What Katy Did/What Kary Did Next, Susan Coolidge
We Are All Welcome Here, Elizabeth Berg
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, Junot Diaz
Swordspoint, Ellen Kushner

Not sure what to read next - Going Postal (Terry Pratchett)? Justine (Lawrence Durrell)? More nonfiction? Anyway.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I didn't manage to write up a post for this round, but I did manage some comments on Tari's (excellent) discussion post:

One
Two
Three

[livejournal.com profile] tarigwaemir really is a much better discussion-post writer. ^^; As in, she can write posts that invite discussion: when I write these things, I ramble on and on with my own opinions, and end up limiting the discussion to either agreement/disagreement or highly personal annecdotes. (Or maybe just cowing people into not posting their own opinions at all, aha.) Tari's disciplined/restrained style is a much more effective approach, if your goal is actually getting people to, you know, weigh in.

What do you guys think? Are you more likely to comment to a post that is more open-ended and invites any and all thoughts on a topic, or one where the author expresses definite (though not intended to provoke) opinions?
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I plead sleep debt, your honor. (I can't stay up to watch the Daily Show or the Colbert Report anymore! *sob*)

[livejournal.com profile] worldserpent posted about the many many many faults of Katekyou Hitman Reborn!, and why she was entertained by it anyway. A few weeks ago [livejournal.com profile] lacewood made a similar, but much less forgiving post, but then went on to BECOME A FAN ANYWAY WTF. This is seriously the last time I anti-recommend anything, obviously such tactics have either none or an opposing effect -_-;.

April Fools: I liked this one at the Reborn! comm (haha, it was pages before anyone got the joke, stupid manga obviously attracts lots of stupid fans kidding, kidding, the joke was kind of niche and the community is extremely popular, so lots of people probably commented in the first rush before anyone picked up on it). There was also this one on the Loveless comm, which was AWESOME. XD

supacat's post on JE. I'm not much of a fan of the source material, but I like reading the commentary.
From that post, [livejournal.com profile] annnimeee's Nobuta wo Produce fic "Youthful Love, WHICH IS LOVE, seriously. .___.

More fic recs!
[livejournal.com profile] c_elisa, For the Kingdom of Heaven: X-men, Beast POV on a controversial mutant "cure".
[livejournal.com profile] mithrigil, Spires of Granite, Eyes of Black: Twelve Kingdoms, Rakushun on pilgrimage to Mt. Houzan. This recommendation is pointless because every single 12K fan here is probably already watching [livejournal.com profile] canis_m, but just in case.
[livejournal.com profile] xparrot, On the Wings of Imagination and With Healing in His Wings: Stargate Atlantis & Dragonriders of Pern. I forget who recced this. orz Google says that this crossover is not the first, but it might be the first with Sheppard as a sarcastic bronze dragon bonded to a reluctant McKay. On a related note, [livejournal.com profile] afrai has been running a "give me two characters, and I will write you a story where one of them is a dragon soul-bonded to the other" challenge on her ficjournal, and the results have been very entertaining so far. XD
EDIT - HOW COULD I FORGET -
[livejournal.com profile] vanilla_klise, Mushi ex Machina: the best Modern!AU Mushishi fic ever. See also the psuedocanon fic A Wandering Song + everything the author has ever written.

Work was hell today. I hate style handbooks. WHO CARES WHETHER THE PERIOD COMES BEFORE OR AFTER THE PARENTHESIS IN AN MLA-STYLE CITATION, I CERTAINLY DON'T.

Okay, I'm done. ...No! Wait! I also read some books this week:

Sea of Wind by Fuyumi Oni (trans. Alexander O. Smith)
War of the Oaks by Emma Bull
Tin Princess by Philip Pullman
and
The Prentice Hall Anthology of Science Fiction and Fantasy by Vrs. Authors <-- someone at work gave me this for free

I've been totally failing at bookblogging this year, but if someone wants to know what I thought of these, I'll try very hard to answer in comments.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
An anonymous commentator pointed out that as much as Now: Zero resembles Death Note, it resembles the Death Note pilot chapter even more:

http://sub-divided.livejournal.com/131007.html?thread=1459903#t1459903

So the question is, does one of these translations of J.G. Ballard's work into Japanese contain the short story "Now: Zero"? Does anyone know?

EDIT: Yes.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
The credit for this goes to [livejournal.com profile] emblem, who found it. I'm just the person who had to immediately order it from amazon and pay the extra $2 for it to be delivered overnight.

...The package I mentioned in my last post was J.G. Ballard's The Venus Hunters, a short story collection which combines stories from 1967's The Overloaded Man with stories from 1969, 1976, and 1978. Now: Zero is the first story in the collection; it's eleven pages long. Genre-wise, it's a horror story told from the first-person perspective of that creepy guy at your office who doesn't say anything when you mistreat him, but who secretly keeps a record of every abuse (real or imagined) he's ever suffered at your hands, and who you'd be afraid was going to murder you in your sleep if you didn't know for a fact that he was a total coward and would never dare.

Yes, all that in just eleven pages. ^^; Though I might be projecting some of it. In any case, Now: Zero takes that person, and gives him an old notebook that seems entirely ordinary, except that the day after he, in a fit of sudden rage, writes down the name and fantasized death of his boss at the office, his boss dies at the time and in the manner specified in the notebook.

Wait! It gets better. You see, not only does the main character in this story possess a Death Notebook (you see what I did there? XD), he also determines (through trial-and-error: no instructions for this one, I'm afraid) that there are several conditions, or rules, under which the notebook operates. The first is that the manner of death must be feasible. For instance, he determines that whatever the "militarists" of the country say about the ever-present threat of nuclear attack, it is not feasible for every inhabitant of a disliked neighboring town to suddenly drop dead at noon.

The second rule is that only the events surrounding a death can be controlled by the notebook. He can't, for instance, change the weather, or effect the stock market. (However, it doesn't seem to occur to him that he can accomplish many more things besides death by including those things as a condition of death. If Ohba read this story (and I really think he did -- you'll see why in a moment), this may have been one of the points that set him off thinking about how much more could have been done with the premise, and wouldn't it be interesting if...? But I'm getting ahead of myself.)

spoilers for Now: Zero & implied spoilers for Death Note )

The only review of this story I found online described it as "inconsequential," ahaha. I can sort of see why. Despite a very strong beginning, Now: Zero doesn't quite succeed as a horror story -- that is, while you're reading it, you are profoundly horrified, but once you've gotten to the end...once you've reached the last line...once the moment has passed...reality once again asserts itself (STRONGLY, in this case). The horror doesn't linger, like it does in truly great horror stories. Now: Zero combines truly excellent ideas with great writing, but just misses coming together in a really effective way.

It's of such situations that fanfiction is born, as they say. XD

Background on JG Ballard: He's very influential, cited in some places as the forebear of cyberpunk. According to [livejournal.com profile] emblem who's been reading other J.G. Ballard words his stories are heavily laced with a feeling of impending doom, which sometimes arrives by the end of the story. One of the websites I was reading observes that Ballard was an alcoholic and that this is reflected in his characters' relationships, which are generally "pleasant in the morning, argumentative in the afternoon, and abusive at night." (See EDIT4, below.)

Ballard is 77 now. Growing up, he spent two years in a Japanese interment camp in Shanghai. He wrote a novel about it, later made into an Oscar-winning film which was directed by Steven Speilberg, written by Tom Stoppard, and starred John Malcovich and Christian Bale (who debuted). *_* <-- wants to see this so bad.

EDIT: See this comment for a way in which this story is *not* like Death Note.
EDIT2: See this comment for similarities between the story and the Death Note pilot.
EDIT3: "Now: Zero" was published in Japanese. Recently, in fact. Apparently, the connection between it and Death Note is not unknown to Japanese fans. There go my dreams of groundbreaking investigative journalism.

EDIT4: At Ballardian, Simon Sellers read the Death Note pilot and isn't convinced that similarities between it and Now: Zero are conclusive evidence that the one was inspired by the other. And I have to say, after finishing The Venvus Hunters and the stories collected in The Best of JG Ballard, that I can see his point: a LOT of these short stories remind me of something else. So maybe Ballard is like Philip K. Dick, one of those visionaries who got it so right that we are still seeing resonances everywhere.

On the other hand, I am still bitter enough about the way Death Note ended, and about the manga's total failure to explore ANY of the deeper themes the set-up promised (or seemed to), to believe that Ohba's initial inspiration was "found" rather than intuited.

Lastly, Simon also points out that I had JG Ballard confused with crime writer Jim Thompson: it's Thompson, not Ballard, who's the alcoholic. Acccccccck. Thanks for the catch, Simon!

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