Monthly Archives: October 2013

There’s an App for That, but Will You Use It?

This year’s International Festival of Authors features Marisha Pessl, author of Night Film. I haven’t read this book yet, but it’s full of creative extras, including a “Night Film Decoder” app that can be downloaded and used to scan images in the book (print or e-book) that unlock multimedia content.

I love innovative stuff like this, yet I can’t help but think, “Who has the time?” I have yet to read Chaucer, Eliot, and Waugh — I’m never going to catch up.

In an article in the National Post, Pessl said that the reading experience is sacred, and she wouldn’t want readers to be interrupted by their phones. She said the app is for “insane readers” — and we’ve all been there, haven’t we. If the Brontë sisters had broadsheet companions to their works — imagine fake missing person ads for one Heathcliff of Wuthering Heights, or stagecoach timetables and maps of roads leading far, far away from Rochester’s Thornfield — I’d have pored over every square inch.

But can there be too much of a good thing? I want to experience an interactive book to see what kind of value the extras add, and how they change the reader’s experience and understanding of the story. I think extra content certainly appeals to a wider audience — not only to those readers who love text but to those who love art and poetry and technology and surprises. In twenty years I’m sure today’s toddlers won’t be asking themselves if too much content is a bad thing; they’ll be happily picking and choosing their content as they see fit.

Here’s to Landing on Our Feet

I just returned from dropping my daughter off at the local subway station, where she and her fellow Girl Guides are selling cookies. They do this every year, and I was struck by the memory of walking her to the station last year. I tore my ACL last October, and walking was excruciating. The subwayContinue Reading

A Systematic Approach to Job-Hunting: Step 1

Donald Asher’s first step in a job search is identifying job targets. A job target has 3 components: industry, function, and title. Before doing anything, you need to know what job you’re looking for. You will not contort yourself to fit posted jobs; you will  go after the jobs you want. Go crazy with yourContinue Reading

TwitterStory: Black & Blue

I just tweeted my first TwitterStory this morning. All 10 posts are 140 characters or less. The spacing was more cramped in my actual Twitter posts. Here it is: I’ve always been a sucker for a girl who gets her hands dirty, and this girl’s hands were plenty dirty. It was the first thing IContinue Reading

A Systematic Approach to Job-Hunting

I recently discovered the books of career expert Donald Asher. In Cracking the Hidden Job Market, Asher offers a step-by-step approach to conducting a job search. The approach has 7 steps: Identify job targets Identify raw leads Convert raw leads into lists of names of specific people Turn a name into an appointment Sell inContinue Reading

Line Edit

I’ve complained before about the lack of quality copy editing being done in the newspaper biz.  A lot of copy editing is contracted out to Pagemasters, and, well, you get what you pay for. Here’s the opening sentence from a movie review in today’s National Post: Among the relationship the enhanced transparency of the onlineContinue Reading

TwitterStory

I’ve been working on my novel, and it ain’t easy. I’m a few thousand words in, but I’ve decided I need to sit down and create a more detailed storyline because I find myself all over the place in terms of tone and themes. There’s too much going on, and I need to get aContinue Reading

Can You Edit With the Best of ‘Em?

Here’s a short story that comes complete with editing suggestions from professional editors. I read the story and made my own editing suggestions and then compared my ideas with those of the pros. As one might expect, there was some variation in opinion among the featured editors, but they agreed on the major problems withContinue Reading