September 29, 2011

A $79 Kindle?!

In all the hoopla yesterday about the announcement of Amazon's new tablet, the Kindle Fire, there were only brief mentions that Kindle is also releasing different versions of the Kindle e-reader as well.  Yes, they're still selling and supporting my good old 3rd Generation Kindles (now referred to as "keyboard Kindles").

And yes, some of the new ones have touch screens.  Which is awesome.

But hey, don't forget about this guy.  This is the new basic Wi-Fi Kindle.  With "special offers" (read: ads for screensavers) this baby is only $79!  Now I'm not here to hawk Amazon's wares (though I am, of course an "Amazon Associate" which I signed up for in the hopes of paying for the domain name and maybe getting a little $ to donate to books for my school library, but so far...nada).  I don't care what e-reader you go for or if you go for an e-reader at all.  I personally like mine, but I still like books and audiobooks as well.  Reading is reading as far as I'm concerned.  Don't be a format snob.

But the point here is...$79!  That'll become the new base price for all basic e-readers.  We've broken the $100 barrier for these things, baby!  That's pretty cool.  Now they'll be in reach of many more folks.  I can see a lot of kids getting one of these for one of the many gift-giving holidays coming up (see what I did there?) and more schools being more able to try these kinds of things out (though I've heard B&N's Nook is a better fit with schools, I'm sure it's only a matter of time before their basic model is under $100 now as well).

Welcome to the not-to-distant-future!

Star Trek PADD
Amazon Kindle

September 12, 2011

So now I'm on The Twitter...

...and you can follow me @library_jim.

I mentioned some of my thoughts about using this service at the GLMA blog this morning.

I think I didn't like it much the last time I tried it because I already had too many "buckets" to check. Home email, school email, feed reader, etc.  But lately I've been trimming my feed reader down to give myself more actual reading of books time and they've opened up Twitter at my school.  When I'm home I'm one of those odd ducks that likes to actually interact with their families.  But lunchtime at school?  I'd much rather see what's up on Twitter which is more like an interactive feed reader to me at this point.

Let me know of any tips you have since I've just started dipping my toe back into it.

September 5, 2011

Decatur Book Festival 2011

Every year on Labor Day weekend while I'm usually at Dragon*Con, there's also a really cool book festival going on in Decatur, GA.  This year, since I'm a new school librarian and all, I thought I ought to check it out.  I mean, I've done it before in the past, but never committed to it for the weekend.

This year, Saturday and Sunday were vastly different experiences.  Saturday was hot and oppressive and not much fun at all.  Sunday was cloudy, breezy and delightful.  I guess those Dragon*Con dudes know what they're doing by having it inside during one of the hotter times in the South.


Don't ask me why this is the mascot, but it's pretty cool.  Now while the Decatur Book Festival isn't nearly as big as what we affectionately call Nerdy Con, it's a good size.  There are many stages with writers reading, speaking and having panels coving most genres you can think of.  There are plenty of shops and festival food wafting through the air.  Tom Perrotta was there.  So was Robert Owen Butler and many more.  I was mostly focused on the kid's authors of course and was looking forward to seeing Avi, Tony DiTerlizzi, Adam Gidwitz, Gordon Korman, Margaret Peterson Haddix, and many more.




 I did see Adam Gidwitz of Tale Dark and Grimm fame.  He clearly got into it when reading aloud and was a fun and engaging speaker. I missed pretty much everyone else I wanted to check out on Saturday because it was unbearably, unrelentingly hot.  It wasn't just sucking the sweat out of our pores, it was sucking the very fun out of the air.  We were there all of two hours but it felt like most of the day and we were all completely tuckered out.  Needless to say we didn't stick around for any signed books.







Saturday was much better.  Thanks to tropical storm Lee smacking into a cold front, the temps were much lower, there was a cloud cover and an actual breeze.  Ahh.  Harper and I got there early for the Pete the Cat parade!  We could actually mosy abound shopping at the vendors who opened early, chat with the other participants gathering for the parade and generally goof off taking silly pictures and videos, like the one at left.  









While people-watching during the lead-up to the parade, we ran into James Dean, the Pete artist, in his sparkly blue cowboy boots!  He told Harper here purple shoes were groovy and let us snap a pic.






Them we were off!  We followed the drummer and the small fire engine lights down the main drag and wound our way to the Children's Stage.  We followed James Dean, the artist and Eric Litwin, the writer/singer who was chanting the Pete the Cat song through a megaphone.  When he ran out of verses he'd get a nearby kid to say something else Pete had stepped in.  They weren't very creative kids and either came up with different colored grapes or kept making Pete jump back in the mud.  On the drive home Harper and I tried to come up with better ones.  Her favorites included having Pete the Cat step in a big pile of glitter and maybe even stumbling into some rainbow sprinkles.  Tee hee!

We got some cool t-shirts and previously signed books from authors who had been there the day before from the Little Shop of Stories.  But man, I wish we could have met Gordon Korman.

I'm thinking next year I'll stick with Dragon*Con.  Better costumes and air conditioning makes me happy.

A Month of Reading

Last month I'd been busy and hadn't posted individual posts on a bunch of stuff I'd been reading, so I just decided to clear the decks and do one long post on everything I'd been reading for the previous few weeks.  And I liked it.  It reminded me of Nick Hornby's Believer column in which he'd keep us up to date on his book buying and book reading.  Not that I'm nearly as funny or interesting as Nick Hornby but you get what you pay for I suppose.

So since I last ran off at the keyboard, I finished one novel (that I was supposed to have read for my book club forever ago), went to a book club meeting without having read the book (and was pretty glad I hadn't after the discussion), and have gotten almost halfway through a big, fat nonfiction book.

The finished novel was Gaiman & Pratchett's Good Omens.  ''Gaiman & Pratchett's'' sounds like a haberdashery or something, doesn't it?  Well they created a fun romp of a novel that was right up my alley.  In fact it went down the alley, knocked on the door, and came it for a nice sit down.  It was funny, thoughtful and absurd.  Just the way I like my end-of-the-world novels.  I never finished it the first go round because I was in grad school and it just got squeezed out.  This time I got to take it all in and enjoy every silly detail.  Now I'll have to dig into more Pratchett but, jeez, where to start with that guy?  He's got a jillion books.  Should be fun.

The unread book was A Feast of Snakes by Harry Crews.  I know it's incredibly hip to like Harry Crews, but the few guys that finished the book did not recommend it.  Even if they enjoyed parts of it, they said it was more like a collection of character studies that an actual novel.  And a pretty grotesque one at that. I obviously have no problem with the grotesque (remember I'm a fan of Geek Love), but this just sounded like he was working out his small-town derision without anything or anyone to root for.

One of the reason's I didn't read it is because I mistakenly though a class I'll be taking on Thurdays would have already started, but it doesn't start until next week.  Since I'd read two book club books over the summer, Brat Farrar and The Island at the Center of the World, I jumped at the chance to see my buddies and new friends since it may be a while before I see them again.

The big, fat non-fiction book might be even more up my alley that the absurd novel.  It's Richard Holmes' The Age of Wonder and it is fantastic.  I loved A Short History of Nearly Everything and also enjoyed The Disappearing Spoon but this takes the cake for mixing science, history biography and, believe it or not, literature.  He's a biographer in the main, and that's mainly what he does here.  Though instead of one figure from history, he ties together many including Joseph Banks, The Herschels, and many more and shows how intimately their discoveries were tied in with Romanticism in the literature of the time.  Keats, Shelly, Coleridge, Wordsworth were all influenced by the astronomy, exploration, and even ballooning going on at the time.  He posits this ''Age of Wonder'' to be from roughly Captain Cook's first major voyage on the Endeavour, accompanied by Banks, the future president of the Royal Society,  to Darwin's explorations on the Beagle.


It's far from dry historical reporting.  Banks is particularly earthy in his descriptions of the free and open personal enjoyments to be had among the natives of Tahiti.  One cool bit: his is the first European description (in the late 1700s) of surfing.  He and some comrades observe natives using old canoe prows to surf the waves for hours at a time for the pure enjoyment of it.  These explorers have a hard time imagining doing something for that long which doesn't lead to food, shelter or getting to a new place.

It's got a ton of fun stories like that, but I'll save a few up for when I finish it.  Hopefully by next month?  I'm in no rush, that's for sure.

In other reading news, we finally read the first Harry Potter to our daughter!  She's eight.  Was it too soon?  She liked it, but kept forgetting who Filch and Mrs. Norris was.  So I had to show her a picture of the guy from the movie and, yeah, he's creepy.  She doesn't seem to be in a rush to start the second one, so now we've gone onto the first Sister's Grimm book.  So far so fun.  Seems to be perfect for third or fourth grade.

Nick Horby's Believer essays compilations begin here.

September 4, 2011

September 1, 2011

Clean up on cheap Kindle books

Yes, they have a list of 100 Kindle Books for $3.99 or less.  Some goodies my kidlit, literary and sciency friends might be interested in:

Feed by M. T. Anderson

Because of Winn Dixie by Kate DiCamillo

Welcome to the Monkey House by Kurt Vonnegut

Galapagos by Kurt Vonnegut

The Penderwicks by Jeanne Birdsall

Junie B. Jones and the Stinky, Smelly Bus by Barbara Parks

Magic Treehouse #1: Dinosaurs Before Dark by Mary Pope Osborne

They also have a Kindle Daily Deal now (today's os some boring management book, but there have been some good ones and it's worth keeping an eye on).

Okay, enough crass commercialism.  Back to our regularly scheduled lazy posting (non)schedule.