Category: Publishing

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Comics Publishers Recognize Digital Opportunity

If there’s one area of publishing where the “game-changing” hype around the iPad has substance, it’s comic books. While comics have been in digital formats, legally and otherwise, for years, few would argue that Apple’s sleek tablet is the first platform to offer an optimal digital reading and purchasing experience, from comiXology’s innovative Guided View

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

The Ideal 21st Century Publisher: A Remix

My fantasy publisher would follow a pretty simple equation: Tor.com + Runes of Gallidon + Book View Cafe + Cursor = Awesome!

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Wrestling With Words: Defining Transmedia

Ask 5 people what they think transmedia is and you’ll get 10 different answers, all with pretty sound reasoning, most likely based on the industry they work in.

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

The Godin Situation: Content, Context, Community

Seth Godin’s decision to not publish his theoretical next book(s) via traditional channels has caused a predictable stir amongst the pundit class, with proclamations about “The Death of Publishing” coming from many of the usual suspects looking to scare up page views. Predictably, few have acknowledged the unusually nuanced statement Godin actually made about his situation: “The thing is–now I know who my readers are. Adding layers or faux scarcity doesn’t help me or you.”

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Don’t Be a Writer, Be a Creator

And by independence, I mean making a sustainable living, not just self-publishing your book via Amazon or Lulu or Smashwords and declaring yourself an “indie”.

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

Goodreads Takes Next Step in Social Reading

Americans spend nearly a quarter of their time online on social networking sites and blogs, according to the latest Nielsen research, and the most conservative estimates predict eBooks will represent at least 10% of book sales by the end of the year, but one question that’s not been clearly answered yet is whether there’s any

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

“Weird and Wonderful”? Me, on the Future of Publishing

The above tweet led to a fun interview over the at the Book View Cafe blog, “Weird and Wonderful: Digital Book World and Guy LeCharles Gonzalez,” with author Sue Lange asking me some interesting questions that really made me think hard to solidify some of my ideas about the “Future of Publishing” and what it means for

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

On Inception, The Passage, and Writing in The Obama Era

The weakness of “It’s all a dream” — why we hate that, why we feel cheated when narratively anything is revealed to be all a dream — is that you’ve just asked me to spend so much time and emotional capital investing in the stakes of this, and you’ve now swept it away with the

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

So You Have a Platform; Now What?

And now blogging is — and very shortly became — something people do do because they are ambitious. –Lizzie Skurnick When all is said and done, one of my personal highlights from 2010 will undoubtedly be the “Why Keep Blogging?” panel I participated on at SXSW, partly because it was a great session that was

Avatar: Me, in front of my bookshelves, wearing a black t-shirt that says, "runner" on it.

On Transmedia and Fan Fiction

For transmedia novelists (and publishers) to retain creative control will require more than a repurposing of content. This might give a ‘taste’ of what transmedia can ‘do’, but for it to work on all levels it must be intrinsically built in and not bolted on. –Alison Norrington, Transmedia Requires New Breed of Writers, Publishers Ever

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