Beverly Akerman MSc

Beverly Akerman MSc
Location
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Birthday
April 26
Bio
Beverly Akerman's short story collection, The Meaning of Children was released in Canada in 2011 (look for it at Amazon.ca, Chapters.ca, and http://tinyurl.com/6zd2ecp). After over two decades in molecular genetics research, Beverly realized she'd been learning more and more about less and less. Skittish at the prospect of knowing everything about nothing, she turned, for solace, to writing, winning myriad awards for her efforts. She recently received her third Pushcart nomination. Her nonfiction and academic work have appeared in Maclean’s Magazine, The Toronto Star, The National Post, The Montreal Gazette and on CBC Radio One (Canada’s NPR-equivalent), as well as in numerous lay publications and learned journals. It pleases her strangely to believe she’s the only Canadian fiction writer ever to have sequenced her own DNA. http://beverlyakermanmscwriter.blogspot.com/

Beverly Akerman MSc's Links

Salon.com
AUGUST 30, 2011 1:00PM

"Are books dead?"

Rate: 3 Flag
book-rip



If you're a writer--or "just" a reader--you need to read this amazing article!! “Are books dead, and can authors survive?” It's by Ewan Morrison, based on a talk he gave at the Edinburgh Book Fair.
Here are a couple of intriguing excerpts to whet your curiosity. Feel free to drop me a line & let me know what you think...


“...Can books be written in sweatshops?

Well, books might not be manufactured in China and Korea but the long tail is the sweatshop of the future, and it will contain millions of would-be-writers who will labour under the delusion that they can be successful in the way writers were before, in the age of the mainstream and the paper book..."

"Authors must respect and demand the work of good editors and support the publishing industry, precisely by resisting the temptation to "go it alone" in the long tail. In return, publishing houses must take the risk on the long term; supporting writers over years and books, it is only then that books of the standard we have seen in the last half-century can continue to come into being."

Basically, Morrison's saying that the newer generations' expectation of free content has lead to the demise of the midlist author, the destruction of advances, the music and film industries (and the even the porn industry). The economic model for free content just isn't there. Meantime, it's the merchandisers making all the money--and those who "monetize" the data we generate everytime we point and click...

 

What do you think?

  [For more of my best writing, including news of my book, The Meaning Of Children, please visit my other blog!]
 

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Beverly,we're always going to need good editors and publishing houses to filter the stream of verbiage which passes through our culture. That seems more critical than ever now. Hopefully, though, they won' succumb to the pressures of the almighty dollar and our overly commercialized world; and that those editors and publishing houses will continue to take chances with writers they believe in.
http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2011/08/race-to-bottom.html
Ha!! I really have been hearing this for the last 20 years. I first got to the Lieutenant Governor's Office when I heard the line from Ghostbusters: "Print is Dead" Ghostbusters. Does this give everyone a reference?? Now we see that publishing has changed, so books do seem to have taken a blow. Still, because of the world and because of the medium, as long as there are thinkers, there will be print, there will be books.
Agree with Lyn Lesch.

Jackie Onassis was asked this question, in one of the rare interviews she gave once she became an editor. She said something to the effect of I think there will always be a market for books for those who want to go to places they can't otherwise go, through books that have been carefully produced to ensure the best quality.

I have hope. Great piece.
i say: let us breed a new subculture of monks.

a book, though, is just a book.

long ago, homer wrote a book with his big mouth.

they made it a, uh , book.

then a movie.

thoughts, memes, are what matters.
as long as that doesnt die we are ok.
though i will cradle my crumbling books like starving babies.
i say: let us breed a new subculture of monks.

a book, though, is just a book.

long ago, homer wrote a book with his big mouth.

they made it a, uh , book.

then a movie.

thoughts, memes, are what matters.
as long as that doesnt die we are ok.
though i will cradle my crumbling books like starving babies.