blog.rightreading.com concept to publication 2012-01-18T02:52:41Z http://www.rightreading.com/blog/feed/atom/ WordPress xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Living in the material world]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=4032 2012-01-18T02:52:41Z 2012-01-13T13:00:55Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Living in the material world

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An advance copy of 1616 arrived this week. I gather only a couple of copies were air shipped from the printer (R.R. Donnelley) in China, so it was kind of my publisher, Counterpoint, to send one to me. The bulk shipment should be here in a few weeks, and the book should hit stores in the second half of February.

Counterpoint went to more expense and trouble on the production of this book than I expected, beginning with color throughout, which was a little surprising as this is a book intended for the trade and not a museum catalogue or art book per se. The book has nice chocolate-colored boards and a red and yellow headband. The 7¼ x 10 in. trim size makes it a little bigger than a standard trade book (often 5½ x 8½ or 6 x 9) but not so big as books intended mainly for the art market (which are often 9 x 12 or larger).

1616, full book

The front cover and spine are stamped with gold stamping (a little washed out here by my flash).

spine of 1616

There are colored ensheets front and back. The image is a pair of Japanese screens (one shown above the other one) from the period covered in the book. Together these happen to fit the dimensions of the book perfectly, and they represent some of the best geographical knowledge of the time.

1616 endsheets

The book is well bound with sewn bindings so that it lies flat when opened.

1616, spread with Galileo image

All things considered, the art is nicely produced on 128 gsm matte paper with good opacity.

1616, spread with Avercamp image

All in all, a nice piece of work, and for now attractively priced at $35.

1616, spread with Francken image

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Living in the material world

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Errorist alert]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=4030 2012-01-10T07:05:11Z 2012-01-10T14:00:39Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Errorist alert

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sign showing errorist alert levels

I made this little sign for my office. I thought it might come in handy.

This marker goes with it:

marker showing today's threat level

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Errorist alert

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[The Gettysburg PowerPoint]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=4026 2012-01-08T19:25:02Z 2012-01-09T13:00:28Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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The Gettysburg PowerPoint

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gettysburgh powerpoint slide

As Presidents Day approaches, it is worth recalling one of our nation’s finest moments.

 

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The Gettysburg PowerPoint

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Google Plus versus Facebook: Where things stand today]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=4018 2011-12-27T06:09:24Z 2011-12-26T17:56:14Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Google Plus versus Facebook: Where things stand today

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facebook and google plus logos

Remember the buzz about Google Plus when it launched? It was a nice bump while it lasted. But I think it’s safe to say it hasn’t sustained itself. My #OccupyXmas piece over at Salon.com has had 504 Facebook likes since it went up a day and a half ago. How many Google +1s has it had? 18 — a little over 3 percent as many. I’d say the ball is in Google’s court. They’d better come up with a new feature, or this game is over.

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Google Plus versus Facebook: Where things stand today

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Give the headline writer a raise]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=4015 2011-12-15T16:34:15Z 2011-12-15T16:34:15Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Give the headline writer a raise

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Everybody in New York Hates Slate Reporter Who Complained About Indie Bookstores

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Give the headline writer a raise

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Stunning, excellent, fabulous]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=4001 2011-12-16T21:29:39Z 2011-12-13T13:00:59Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Stunning, excellent, fabulous

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1616 received a starred review yesterday in Publishers Weekly. PW, the most influential of the big four advance review publications (the others are Kirkus Reviews, Booklist, and Library Journal) reviews about 10,000 books a year, and not too many get stars. In the book publishing industry, starred PW reviews are believed to increase media coverage and bookstore and library orders — we’ll see about that. Meanwhile, here is the review (for which I’m most grateful). The book will be published in March by Counterpoint Press.


 1616: The World in Motion

Thomas Christensen. Counterpoint (PGW, dist.), $35 (384p) ISBN 978-1-58243-774-3

At the outset, Christensen confesses his lack of academic standing to write history, given his background as a translator (Like Water for Chocolate, with Carol Christensen) and editor and director of publications at the San Francisco Asian Art Museum. Nevertheless, he has created a stunning overview of the nascent modern world through a thematic exploration of the year 1616. Christensen interweaves various narratives to describe such trends as the increasing roles of private corporations like the Dutch East India Company and of economics in world politics or the emerging voices of women as writers—such as Dorothy Leigh, whose The Mother’s Blessing had 23 printings—and occasionally powerful participants in statecraft, like Nur Jahan, who aided her husband in ruling the Mughal empire. Juxtaposing concurrent growths in witch hunting and scientific discoveries, Christensen points out that Kepler calculated the laws of planetary motion while also defending his mother, an illiterate herbalist, against witchcraft charges. Careful to include events from around the world, not just Europe and the Americas, Christensen enhances his excellent explications of backgrounds and settings with dozens of fabulous illustrations. Most readers will want an atlas to track the action in 1616’s “world in motion.” (Mar.)

Reviewed on: 12/12/2011

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Stunning, excellent, fabulous

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Seeking the man behind science’s champion]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3996 2011-12-12T03:25:40Z 2011-12-12T13:00:56Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Seeking the man behind science’s champion

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Since at least the mid-twentieth century there has been a line of Galileo scholarship that has held that Galileo’s problems with the Inquisition should not be viewed as indicating a basic conflict between science and religion but instead as just problems peculiar to Galileo the man, the personality. I think the ultimate motivation for this line of argumentation is the worry of twentieth-century scientists that their work would somehow be seen as godless and communistic.

In some respects this seems the oddest angle to take on Galileo and his work. It is true he never saw himself as undermining religion. His case was more an expression of internal politics within the church itself than any kind of assault on it. Still, the church — let’s just say it — came down squarely on the wrong side of this one, and that reflects badly on it. Nonetheless, the argument continues to this day, as this review of a recent biography indicates.

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Seeking the man behind science’s champion

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Color psychology]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3986 2011-12-04T18:48:30Z 2011-12-05T13:00:48Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Color psychology

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pantone color swatches

I was thinking the other day about how my color preferences have changed over time, and that got me looking at a few pop psychology websites about color preferences.

The basic problem with these sites is that there are particular hues and then there are their concepts. So if a site asks you to rank your preferences by clicking on color swatches, you might say, “I like red, but I don’t like that red. Whereas if you are asked to quickly name your favorite color without thinking about it and you name red, you are most likely thinking of the concept of redness rather than of a particular hue.

Of course the notion of a favorite color is ultimately absurd. Red would be meaningless without all of the other colors to juxtapose with it. From the designer’s point of view, colors take meaning from how they are used in relation to other elements.

But as a sort of amusing parlor game it can be interesting to wonder about why one’s preferences change. As a child if you asked my favorite color I would have said blue — that’s the color I usually picked when choosing board game tokens, for example. As a young adult I would probably have given you a lecture about color philosophy and how existence precedes essence and why that is relevant to de Saussurian linguistics, but if (quite justifiably) hit over the head and forced to pick I would have said yellow. Now I find myself increasingly drawn to green, and when I go clothes shopping I often wish there were more greens offered (there are few).

I noticed that there is a great deal of disagreement on the various sites about what your color preferences “mean.” According to one representative site, a preference for blue reflects a conservative, reliable, sincere, trusting, and trustworthy personality; a preference for yellow a cheerful, fun, creative, and analytical bent; and a predilection for green a practical, down-to-earth, stable, balanced, compassionate, and calm nature. Sure.

A few years ago I read a couple of erudite books on color in art by John Gage, former head of the Department of History of Art at Cambridge University. Gage looked at color from a variety of different disciplines. I found his surveys interesting, but I find I have retained little of what I read in his books. It’s probably because I favor the wrong colors.

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Color psychology

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Turkey Day]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3974 2011-11-23T05:14:54Z 2011-11-23T04:57:42Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Turkey Day

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turkeycock by mansur

North American Turkey, ca. 1612, by Mansur. Victoria and Albert Museum, IM 135-1921.

In honor of Thanksgiving, here’s a painting of an American turkeycock by the great Mughal painter Mansur (from my forthcoming book 1616: The World in Motion). Mansur was the greatest Mughal painter of natural history subjects.

It was an area in which the Mughal emperor, Jahangir, was deeply interested. A world in motion brought to his court many strange and curious creatures, which he invariably directed his painters to document. In 1612, when a large number of birds and animals were brought to his court from Goa, he wrote, “As these animals appeared to me to be very strange, I … ordered that painters should draw them in the Jahangirnama [his reign journal], so that the amazement that arose from hearing of them might be increased.”

Among the birds brought from Goa was this American turkey painted by Mansur. Like Abul Hasan (who painted the cover image of my book), Mansur ranked high in Jahangir’s esteem, and the ruler gave him the title of Nadir-ul-asr, “Unique of the Age.” “In the art of drawing,” he said, Mansur “is unique in his generation.” He ranked him together with Abul Hasan, saying, “In the time of my father’s reign and my own, these two had no third.”

Jahangir was proud of such creatures in his menagerie as flying mice, tailless monkeys, zebras, yaks, cheetahs, West Asian goats, Himalayan pheasants, dodos, ducks, and partridges. He had many of the foreign animals bred in captivity. When he received a strange animal he typically would record a verbal description of it before having its likeness painted. In 1616 he was presented with an Abyssinian elephant, noting that “Its ears are larger than the elephants of this place, and its trunk and tail are longer.” His concern for accuracy and completeness of documentation led to a naturalistic approach to paintings of natural history, of which Mansur was the foremost proponent.

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Turkey Day

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Mailbag: Past Me]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3965 2011-11-02T01:57:18Z 2011-11-01T13:00:37Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Mailbag: Past Me

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I received this e-mail today (some names redacted):

Dear Tom,

On this date (the Saturday after Thanksgiving) back in 2010 C and I had recently returned from Europe. We had Thanksgiving with E, but C2 didn’t call or respond to calls, and we were worried about her. I had a nasty cold. C had first felt sick on the train from Innsbruck to Zurich.

I was working on the Kepler section of 1616. How’s that book looking?

It’s looking pretty good, thank me very much!

I had forgot about futureme.org, which lets you send messages to yourself in the future. How strange to get this message from myself from almost a year ago.

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Mailbag: Past Me

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Denisovan migration across the Pacific]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3955 2011-11-01T02:47:28Z 2011-10-31T13:00:05Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Denisovan migration across the Pacific

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This map, from arstechnica, shows the distribution of genes of a protohuman species, Denisova hominins, among modern humans. The blue area in Europe, West Asia, and North Africa represent a low level of distribution of Denisovan genes, presumably because interbreeding in these areas was instead with Neanderthals. The Denisovan genes are most prevalent in New Zealand, but also in Australia, Southeast Asia, and southern China.

But what is striking about this map to me is something else: there is a strong distribution of Denisovan genes in northern South America. While there could be other explanations for this, this map seems pretty clearly to be indicating, in my opinion, that humans traveled directly across the Pacific to South America, and not across the Siberia-Alaska land bridge as used to be the conventional wisdom. It is possible that migration occurred that way too, but as far as this Denisovan-affected population is concerned, it sure looks like they just lit out straight across the Pacific.

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Denisovan migration across the Pacific

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[1616 video trailers]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3939 2011-10-25T03:46:30Z 2011-10-22T03:12:14Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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1616 video trailers

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I made two trailers for my forthcoming book 1616: The World in Motion. The short one is a little over a minute long and has no voice-over narration. It’s main advantage is that it’s, well, short. The other one, a hefty ten minutes long, is more informational.

The short video trailer:

Carol says the short trailer overemphasizes Asia, which is a fair criticism, but I’ve about hit my limit for now on video work! I thought the long video trailer was just probably too long for most people, but early listeners Anne and Ellen had the following reactions: Ellen says “I like the long trailer better! I think it has a better sense of the book and is more engaging. But I think the audio track needs some work — the music’s a little loud and your voice a little quiet in comparison. I like the script and images you chose though.” And Anne says of the long version “I enjoy the narration and all the fabulous graphics … the music is well selected too. I wonder though-if the sound track could have less volume so the voice over is clearer to listen to. I preferred it in areas where the music was lower. It does run a little long but is very interesting.”

So on the basis of that feedback I’ve turned down the volume on the music (I hope by the right amount), uploaded the long trailer to YouTube, and embedded it here:

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1616 video trailers

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Links for Friday, Oct. 21]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3927 2011-10-18T02:23:14Z 2011-10-21T14:00:07Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Links for Friday, Oct. 21

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“Every separation is a link.” — Simone Weil

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Links for Friday, Oct. 21

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[What is the best time of day to post to a blog?]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3912 2011-10-01T17:38:48Z 2011-10-03T14:00:24Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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What is the best time of day to post to a blog?

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informationial graphic charting affective moods of twitter users

These days I’m pretty casual about my web presence, but a few years ago I gave some thought to maximizing the impact of blog posts. I ended up scheduling most of my posts for 5:00 am Pacific time. My strongest geographical regions were the U.S. east and west coasts, and that would be 8:00 Eastern time. A lot of people check their feeds in the morning, and it is incontrovertible that most people do the bulk of their browsing at work, little as employers like hearing this (so I mainly post on weekdays).

A new study purporting to track people’s affective states through the day brings new information to this topic. Researchers tracked the relative use of positive and negative words in tweets at different times of the days throughout the week. They found that negative terms predominated early in the morning and mid-to-late afternoon, while positive terms were most common from 6:00 to 9:00 am and in the late evening. The pattern held even on weekends, when most people aren’t going off to work.

The methodology can be questioned. Harvard psychologist Dan Gilbert points out that “if you counted the good and bad words people said during intercourse, you’d mistakenly conclude they were having an awful time.”

Supposing the results are valid, what are the implications for people posting to the web? Should you make negative posts when people are most negative and positive posts when they are most positive? Or should you always try to post when people are positive and will presumably be most receptive to what you are saying? Or does this not matter at all, and what you should really be looking at is the volume of traffic — my guess is that while people might be feeling positive around 10:00 pm there are probably significantly fewer of them online at that time than in the morning.

Well, I’m moving my post time forward an hour, from 5:00 am to 6:00 am. I hope you’re happy.

 

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Informational graphic via the New York Times

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Links for Friday, September 30]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3908 2011-09-27T04:17:44Z 2011-09-30T13:00:51Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Links for Friday, September 30

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“Every separation is a link.” — Simone Weil

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Links for Friday, September 30

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[More on the “alt” tag]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3902 2011-09-26T02:03:30Z 2011-09-26T13:00:45Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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More on the “alt” tag

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bibliodyssey

I recently lamented my belated discovery that “alt” text was not being displayed on mouseover of my images.

The estimable Peecay of Bibliodyssey has replied by e-mail with a description of his system:

I try to abide by the pure description (for a blind person, is how I understood it) to approximate an image with alt tag (eg. “woodcut of cat in colour from Japan, 16th cent.”)

But then I try to put something specific to the book or author or illustrator in as the title tag.

I’ve always worked under the assumption that – when including captions as well, below the image – I was priming those images as best they could be to be open to image search engines.

What I hear from the “SEO” types is that alt tags seem to help with search engines but title tags less so. That’s hearsay, really, and I haven’t tested it.

According to SearchEngine Journal, it is indeed important to keep the various tags different. Ann Smarty, speaking of the alt and title tags, says, “include your main keywords in both of them but keep them different. Keyword stuffing in Alt text and Title is still keyword stuffing.”

Wily Michael Gray has a helpful guide to optimizing images for search engines.

All good advice. But kind a lot of work to provide three different kinds of unique nonrepetitive text for all your images.

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More on the “alt” tag

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Another boring blurb post]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3895 2011-09-23T21:47:04Z 2011-09-23T21:47:04Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Another boring blurb post

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evan s. connell

evan s. connell

“Outstanding book. Tom Christensen’s scholarship is meticulous. The reproductions are beautiful. 1616 is a treasure.” — Evan S. Connell, Jr.

I got this nice blurb from Evan S. Connell (and to me that’s not boring at all). It’s great to get recognitions from a distinguished author not just of fiction (Mr, Bridge, Mrs. Bridge, etc.) but also of histories (Son of the Morning Star,etc.). Among his other honors, Evan was nominated for a Lifetime Achievement Man Booker Award.

I was a little anxious about blurbs for this book. I’ve been in museum publishing for so long that my literary rolodex had got pretty stale. But the blurb process has actually gone pretty well. I’m expecting one or two more to come in (I probably overdid it and should have left some for next time).

Right now the blurbs are looking something like this:

“Shakespeare may have died in 1616 (as incidentally did Cervantes—on the same date!) — but here we have Love’s Labour Found. A brimmingly generous intellectual feast, lavishly curated by Mr. Christensen — on every page a fresh marvel — the catalog, as it were, of a show just asking to be mounted, and the Show of the Year at that.” (Lawrence Weschler, Pulitzer Prize ­Finalist for General Nonfiction for Mr. Wilson’s Cabinet of Wonder)

“With its stories of restless spirits and restless feet and its truly amazing images from Japan to Persia to Rome, this book will surprise and delight every reader and provide new insights into an interactive early modern world.” (John E. Wills, Jr., author, 1688: A Global History)

“Outstanding book. Tom Christensen’s scholarship is meticulous. The reproductions are beautiful. 1616 is a treasure.” (Evan S. Connell, Man Booker International Prize Nominee for Lifetime Achievement, author, Lost in Uttar Pradesh)

“With a masterful command of facts and data, Christensen shows how separate threads affected one another, transformed discourse, and contributed to the development of a truly global culture fully four centuries ago.” (Emily Sano, director emeritus, Asian Art Museum, San Francisco)

“Unforgettable characters and stories that illuminate many of today’s global aches and joys.” (Peter Laufer, James Wallace Chair in Journalism at the University of Oregon, and author, The Dangerous World of Butterflies)

“A brilliant creative examination and interpretation of the developed world’s recent history:  east, middle, and west. Christensen documents the main civilizations of East Asia, South Asia, the Near East, and Western Europe and the significant colonial civilization in Central and South America. A treasure of plates of art and maps alone.” (Gary Snyder, Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Turtle Island)

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Another boring blurb post

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[The Danish Poet]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3889 2011-09-20T16:04:54Z 2011-09-20T13:00:46Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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The Danish Poet

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The Danish Poet is a animated short film written, directed, and animated by Torill Kove. It is narrated by Liv Ullmann. Via Jason del Arroz.

liv ullman

Liv Ullman

torill kove

Torill Kove

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The Danish Poet

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[John E. Wills on 1616]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3881 2011-09-19T17:52:16Z 2011-09-19T17:50:01Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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John E. Wills on 1616

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1688: A Global History“With its stories of restless spirits and restless feet and its truly amazing images from Japan to Persia to Rome, this book will surprise and delight every reader and provide new insights into an interactive early modern world.” – John E. Wills, Jr., author, 1688: A Global History

I received this lovely blurb for 1616: The World in Motion from the distinguished historian John E. Wills, Jr. (University of Southern California). Wills wrote a book called 1688: A Global History, which is perhaps the closest in spirit to mine. In fact, once I remembered having read reviews of that book it sort of hung over me while I was doing mine, and I scrupulously avoided looking at it to make sure my approach wouldn’t be influenced by it. (Now that I’m done and I’ve had a look I’m relieved to say that the books turned out to not that much alike.)

I don’t know Prof. Wills, and I approached him cold, and not without a bit of nervousness. Professional historians are often condescending to amateur historians like me. But Prof. Will was generous and gracious, and I am immensely thankful to him.

John E. Wills’s masterful history ushers us into the worlds of 1688, from the suicidal exaltation of Russian Old Believers to the ravishing voice of the haiku poet Bash?. Witness the splendor of the Chinese imperial court as the Kangxi emperor publicly mourns the death of his grandmother and shrewdly consolidates his power. Join the great caravans of Muslims on their annual pilgrimage from Damascus and Cairo to Mecca. Walk the pungent streets of Amsterdam and enter the Rasp House, where vagrants, beggars, and petty criminals labored to produce powdered brazilwood for the dyeworks. Through these stories and many others, Wills paints a detailed picture of how the global connections of power, money, and belief were beginning to lend the world its modern form. “A vivid picture of life in 1688…filled with terrifying violence, frightening diseases…comfortingly familiar human kindnesses…and the intellectual achievements of Leibniz, Locke, and Newton.”–Publishers Weekly

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John E. Wills on 1616

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xensen http://blog.rightreading.com <![CDATA[Productivity secret]]> http://www.rightreading.com/blog/?p=3876 2011-09-18T17:04:09Z 2011-09-19T13:00:00Z Post from Right Reading, Tom Christensen's guide to print and electronic book publishing.
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Productivity secret

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abandoned telvision

With a couple of forthcoming books and other projects in the works, I’m sometimes asked how I manage to do this considering I have a day job, and a long commute to boot. So now — drumroll — I’m finally going to reveal my secret (but you might not like it).

I don’t watch much television. I’ve never seen American Idol, Dancing with the Stars, Jersey Shore, Mad Men, The Sopranos, Real Housewives of Wherever, Two and a Half Men, Lost, or a lot of other popular shows.

In her recent Sunset magazine article “Time Lost and Found,” Anne Lamott writes, “Time is not free—that’s why it’s so precious and worth fighting for…. Fight tooth and nail to find time, to make it. It is our true wealth, this moment, this hour, this day.”

One interesting thing about people is how they use their time. If watching television or playing computer games fulfills your needs, then great, go for it. But if you’re compelled to engage in some kind of creative expression, then you have to make time for it. And that is probably going to mean giving something up.

It’s your choice.

*

Image of a television left out in the rain from striatic’s photostream.

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Productivity secret

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