Thursday, April 24, 2008

Not remotely book related...just annoying...

So Fortune just announced the biggest profit makers of 2007. The winner is, of course, ExxonMobil with 40.61 BILLION dollars in profits...nearly twice that of the number two and a record for annual profits for an American company. ExxonMobil *also* set this record in 2006 and 2005.

I am all for vibrant markets and making profits where/when possible...but there seems to be a little bit of a disconnect (at least to me) when fuel (gas/diesel/heating) prices are skyrocketing *and* the likes of ExxonMobil are claiming it is due to refining limitations and crude oil prices. I just spent $70 to fill the car. I wonder how many books will fit in a SmartCar.

Labels: , ,

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Please excuse the silence...

Because the chaos of trying to get ready for a major show is not enough....

So, I was already a bit tweaky because I had the NY shows (ABAA and Westside Shadow) this coming weekend and the MARIAB Boston Fair the next weekend. This would normally be enough to bring me close to the edge.

On Friday, I committed to flying to the west coast to visit a client...leaving Monday and returning on the redeye Tue/Wed...landing in NY (where, I hope, I will meet my wife who will drive the van down...with the books...on her birthday). Flight, hotel, car arrangements are all made...I should be packed for the show tomorrow and all will be well *twitch*.

I met today with new clients with some truly exceptional items...that I must catalogue between now and...you know...Thursday. While packing, driving, flying, twitching, twitching, twitching.

I love what I do...truly, deeply, passionately....perhaps masochistically. Wish me luck, I should be in rare form by the Boston weekend. *twitch* No loud noises or sudden movements.

Anyway, I may be a bit silent here for a bit...I will, however, do my very best to blog the three fairs.

Labels: , , ,

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Addendum rant: Sex, violence and forfeiting civil liberties...

Ok, I'm still annoyed and have found solace in the intellectual arms (and humor) of Henry Rollins. I offer for your enjoyment two of the gems from the past: his Letter to the FCC (sex bad, violence good) [N.B. there are some bad words used in these clips...if such offends you, go elsewhere]


This one is Henry feeling a bit annoyed about the assault on civil liberties that has been a major theme of the White House for the past several years.



I don't know about you...but I feel better after listening to Henry. Remember, "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." (Benjamin Franklin)

Labels: , ,

Annoyed by stupidity today.... [Warning: Rant]

We have Congress about to cave on yet another fear-mongering attack on privacy and on the Constitution (and a simultaneous broadening/gutting of FISA), Bernanke is poised to cut rates yet again in an attempt to stave off a recession and the House has approved contempt citations against Bush minions amid teeth gnashing...but what is getting the most focus by the press: Jane Fonda said the word "Cunt" on the Today show.

Fonda, 70, is part of the the 10th Anniversary performance of "The Vagina Monologues." She is reading a monologue *titled* "Cunt" and said the name of the piece on air. That the piece revolves around de-mystification of its subject matter and female empowerment and getting *beyond* pejorative linguistic associations appears to have been COMPLETELY LOST on Meredith and the Today Show folks. They issued a public "apology" for the "remark" and people have been blathering about it ever since.

Mind you, according to that fount of knowledge Wikipedia
the Vagina Monologues has been translated into 45 different languages and performed in over 119 countries. Celebrities who have starred in the play include: Jane Fonda, Whoopi Goldberg, Idina Menzel, Glenn Close, Susan Sarandon and Oprah Winfrey. Ensler [the author] was awarded the Obie Award in 1996 for ‘Best New Play’ and in 1999 was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship Award in Playwriting. She has also received the Berrilla-Kerr Award for Playwriting, the Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Solo Performance, and the Jury Award for Theater at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival.
What the hell is going on in this country when no one apologizes for the ongoing rape of our Constitution over the last 7 years or so but public apologies are required for stating the title of a monologue. No one seems to be apologizing for fiscal mis-management that my great-grandchildren will still be dealing with...but people are prostrating themselves to make amends for the "damage" done by a word. Truly, this country is doomed if we can't do any better than this in vetting the wheat from the chaff as to what actually MATTERS in this country.

[Mind you, it is an offensive word and one that I generally avoid. However, it is the nature of its burden and weighted meaning that *gives* it such power in this context....the irony of the apology is sadly rich...]

ADDENDUM: Apparently, this catastrophic embarrassment to the core of the American ideal has also fallen to the wayside... While it is clear that "dirty words" trump government sponsored torture, recessions, undermining the 4th Amendment and nearly all other minor issues....*nothing* beats a mass shooting at a college. The US media pigs will be feeding at NIU's trough for days. I guess I should be thankful that international news streams are so easy to follow these days (CNN's front page is focused on the shooting with supporting tales of a 10 year old who shot his sister over chips and Valentine's Day "moolah"....BBC's lead story is "
Bush defends US record on Darfur" and Hezbollah's current threat to Israel, etc....you know, news). It is really bloody sad that the best source for news *about* this country come from *outside* this country....except of course for the violent or prurient, that we do better than anyone. I'm going to bed, maybe it will be better tomorrow....or at least I'll be less annoyed.

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Go West, young man...the joys of modern air travel…

So we woke at 2ish am and drove to the bus station where we loaded up and were off promptly at 3:15am. Two hours, some nice orange juice and rewatching The Queen (in which, Helen Mirren does not “get her kit off” (one of my all time favorite actress quotations)) later and we were at Logan.

There were at least two other dealers on theWe arrived around 5am and got our bags check and were through security in short order - next time everything gets shipped except our carry-ons and clothing. Then came the sitting while trying not to drift off (and miss the flight). flight this morn. The flight was...er...long...and torturous…

Not all that long ago, I flew frequently. I flew frequently for long distances. It never bothered me. That is not the case any longer. I am, I guess, older, bigger, grumpier and/or the airlines have shrunk, you know, everything… The only saving grace was that the gentleman ahead of me did not opt to tilt his seat back…

We arrived at about 11:15am (reflecting the wonderful loss of 3 hours on the way out that are, wickedly, returned to us on the way back). From there, the day radically improved.

We check into the Petite Auberge on Bush St. We have a lovely little room overlooking the private courtyard. I am typing this in the common room downstairs, nibbling on a very nice roasted mushroom spread on fresh french bread and sipping sherry. All hotels should have hors d’overes and wine/sherry in the afternoons. I can’t wait until breakfast in the morning (we are staying here because it is one of my parent’s favorite hotels, 26 rooms and just wonderful). We had a lovely time chatting with a family from Australia here for the weekend.

After checking in, we wandered over to Chinatown. Tomorrow is Chinese New Year and it was very festive and fun to poke about the shops. We had dim sum for lunch at House of Nan King and that was great. Unusual dim sum, no carts, you just say you want it and the chef sends out plate after plate of wonderful things until you realize you have grossly overeaten. Yum.

Serendipity Books and others tomorrow. I’m going to go slip into a coma.

Labels: , ,

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Chaos at W#@$ette leads to a new blog and...

our first foray into web advertising. I have enjoyed and followed Wonkette (sorry, no link, still annoyed) from the early days when it was, you know, still Ana Marie Cox's baby. She basically sold it/moved on and it became part of Gawker Media's clot of blogs.

'ette was notable for its *very* snarky and "insider" DC/politico news. Funny, on point and on pulse with a serious love of the loathsome nature of DC and its resident political sleazebags and their minions. You know, the way news should be...

Anyway, they blew through a fair number of writers post-Ana (all male...at 'ette...urgh). Then the frequent poster, Anonymous Lobbyist, came "out" and revealed herself as Megan Carpentier and let us know that she had quite the lobbying gig and would be full time at 'ette. I had dropped back to check it about once every two days or so until Megan began writing...'ette was back. Sharp, funny, profane and just "back". Hell, Megan literally waterboarded a co-worker for our pleasure and amusement...and then destroyed the tape (luckily, there was a secret camera).

I was back to checking it at least twice a day and clicking through on many/most of the posts (i.e. generating money for the site). Then Ken Layne "came back" to 'ette and, in short order, fired the only 'ette at 'ette (it was not a gender thing, apparently, but a style thing....Megan wanted 'ette to be 'ette and Ken apparently wants it to be back in the "snooze" period). There was much gnashing of teeth (notably here) and much outpouring of support for Megan.

About two days ago or so, Megan, Greg Wasserstrom (also recently axed at 'ette) and Hunter Walker (of Gridskipper) founded a new snarky political blog, Cynics' Party ("Exposing hypocrisy, Espousing Profanity since January 24, 2008."). They are off to a great start from a content standpoint...but the off the blocks GoogleAds monetizing resulted in a horrifying amount of Ann Coulter (care, don't say it out loud or an angle looses its wings) and Newt Gingrich newsletter appeals (clearly a deep and disturbing flaw in AdWords).

Late yesterday they redesigned in a way the pushed AdWords "down" the page and added their own support ads. In support of their new venture (and in response to their *very* competitive pricing), I decided to run a wee banner ad on the site. It is our first online buy. How knows, with a bit of luck, it will drawn a new client or two...hope springs...er...eternal. Best of luck to Megan, Greg and Hunter.

Labels: , , , , ,

Sunday, January 13, 2008

A recurring rant re show endings...

I know I am young (relativistically), idealistic (at least in part) and foolish (in too many ways to count)...however, I think it is flat out *wrong* to start packing up a booth before a show ends. Above and beyond the fact that virtually all the show contracts we sign state that we will not pack up before the show ends (and thus those that do so are in breach of contract) and far more importantly, it just seems rude and discourteous to customers of the show. I think nearly a quarter of those at the fair this weekend began packing up half and hour before the show ended and half or so were packing within the last 10 or 15 minutes.

The promoter was taking money from customers within the last half-hour...admittedly, poorly planned by the customers. Even if you have had a bad show, are grumpy or any number of other things, what does packing up early actually gain you...sitting in line, waiting to get in? Getting out a few minutes faster?...and at what cost? Our last sale of the show came at 5:04 and was north of $1K...a sale that would not have happened if I was in the midst of packing with my booth full of boxes.

Personally, I like taking my time packing up. I chat with some of the other more relaxed dealers, pack everything carefully away and by the time I am actually ready to get the car, there is no line or waiting (admittedly, we tend to be within the last handful to get packed up...). There just doesn't seem to be any reason to rush packing...especially not at the expense of the customers.

Sorry (sort of) for the rant. But really, you pay money for the opportunity to be at a show, show your wares, meet clients and buy books...it makes not sense at all to undermine the last few minutes and, potentially, leave a bad impression with those clients (potential or otherwise) who are there to the end. I'm going to go write a thank you note to the gentleman who spent a fair bit of money with me in the final moments of the fair...because he could.

Labels: , ,

Monday, December 31, 2007

A year-end rant...[mis]packing revisited...or Why Ebay Still Makes Me Itch...

I will preface this minor rant with a "the book arrived safely and all is well" and I know there are those who feel that I should, thus, keep my mouth shut...but I can't...oh well: So I "win" an auction on behalf of a client for a lovely little circa 1560 emblematica volume. I was able to secure it within what we hoped to pay (a bit north of $3,000), I was able to pay by EFT (and thus avoid the ebay/paypal "convenience" premium) and the shipping by FedEx (from the EU) was very fairly priced.

When the package arrived, my heart was in my throat. The images tell the proverbial tale. The book arrived in a FedEx Tyvek envelope...mind you, this is a good thing, as FedEx appears to have thrown it in a mud puddle somewhere along the route (the mud splatter can be seen in the first picture). Tyvek is great stuff...but I could tell it was "unboxed" within and was thus nervous from the start.

I opened the Tyvek to find a padded manila envelope. I admit that I pretty much loathe these things. I am the first to say that if you are shipping a reading copy of this or that...something that cost $20 or less perhaps...then a padded envelope is probably perfectly fine. However, when you are shipping a valuable (or reasonably valuable) book, incurring the "cost" of using a bloody box is really not too much for a client to expect. Prior to this book, my "record" was receiving a $700+ volume in a padded envelope (and bumped at two corners as a result). Here, a $3000+ book had been so packed....urgh.

Hope springs eternal, so I thought, "well, hopefully it is between overlapped cardboard pieces to protect it." With minor trepidation, I opened the evelope and found another layer of bubble wrap and brown packing tape. I could make out what appeared to be wrapping paper under it...but now cardboard. Perhaps it is under that?!?

Having opened the bubble wrap with care, I found the wrapping paper and more brown tape. I opened this carefully...reasonably taken aback by the lack of any protection for the corner, etc. The book itself was, overall, happy. The head and heel are gently bumped, but may well have shown that prior to this ride across the sea. In the end, I shouldn't *really* complain, as the book arrived safely.

However, I really do just find it upsetting. Here is a book, over 450 years old and reasonably expensive, that was effectively wrapped in bubble-wrap and dropped in an envelope. I just really don't think this is "acceptable"...although, admittedly, it did arrive safely. I guess my rule of thumb is that I ship books the way I would like to receive them...safely and well packed in a crush resistant box. Packing materials are relatively cheap and a straight cost of doing business. When I do have to use a Tyvek envelope (for a pamphlet or the like), I wrap/pack it in paper and bubble and then between stiff cardboard overlapped sheets taped tight to protect the edges.

I don't really ship anything under $25 and most of what I send is a fair bit more than that...and I completely understand that the metrics are very different if you are moving a lot of lower end material. That said, I just don't understand how someone can put a $100, $500 or $3000 book in a padded envelope and think that is is "ok". grumble grumble grumble

Labels: ,

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Stephen King recommends waterboarding for Jenna Bush

Gilbert Cruz of Time Magazine interviewed Stephen King recently. In it, King suggests that Time should name Britney Spears and Lindsay Lohan "person(s) of the year". His point, of course, being that most/all of the mainstream media appear more inclined to follow Spears' underwear choices (or the lack thereof) than, you know, all those annoying serious and dreary "actual news" events happening about the country and world.

I am inclined to agree with him about the decline of our focus and arguable forfeiture of cultural legacy:
We've switched from a culture that was interested in manufacturing, economics, politics — trying to play a serious part in the world — to a culture that's really entertainment-based. I mean, I know people who can tell you who won the last four seasons on American Idol and they don't know who their f------ Representatives are.
He also had some reasonably clear thoughts about how GWB might most easily get his head around the issue of waterboarding:
So I said something to the Nightline guy about waterboarding, and if the Bush administration didn't think it was torture, they ought to do some personal investigation. Someone in the Bush family should actually be waterboarded so they could report on it to George. I said, I didn't think he would do it, but I suggested Jenna be waterboarded and then she could talk about whether or not she thought it was torture.
It's not every day that a reasonably mainstream literary figure suggests waterboarding the president's daughter. Personally, I tend to believe one should not advocate a practice that one has not (or can not) personally experienced. I'll avoid the obvious issues, but I've always found it interesting that after the Maine legislature passed the "Maine Law" requiring that no Maine prisoner could be executed without the personal order of the governor, not a signal execution took place for 27 years. Apparently talking about the merits of the death penalty differed from the responsibility of actually ordering another's death.

More and more, we seem to have a great number of people who hold opinions/positions passionately and/or dogmatically with little or no...you know...thought/study/facts/contemplation supporting those positions. Mainstream media feeds into this in a significant way. There was a time, until relatively recently, when the "news", in its various forms, strived to educate on major issues and events. In recent years, if it is not prurient and/or sensational, it is not worth reporting...hell, one of the owners of one of the major news networks testified before congress that his network was not required to tell the truth, that it was, effectively, an entertainment network.

Personally, I'm with Stephen King, I'd like to see some high level discussions about the balance between real news and fake news. Then again, any coverage of such an undertaking would undoubtedly be preempted by another Spears' panty event. I'm going back to cataloguing...annoyes me much less...too much ranting makes me restless...

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Bonus day, return trip and what not to do after a red-eye

[Links will be added in the morning...realy quite pathetic]

We had a great bonus day in Seattle. We ended up being scheduled on the 11:50 red-eye out of Seattle, getting into Portland at about 930 or so Tues. morning. We used the extra day to meet with a classmate of Suzanne's and do some book hunting.

We stopped in a number of shops and picked up some very nice stuff...all of which will be shipped to us (even better, as we were pretty much maxed out on the "stuff to schlep" front). After one last nice meal at the Icon, we headed to the airport where we arrived just as Don arrived following his day of wandering.

The flight was long and reasonably unpleasant. I am once again proclaiming my belief that *NO* economy seats should be able to recline. The woman in front of my was, apparently, annoyed that her seat would not fully recline...because my femurs do not telescope. I did, finally, tell her (very nicely) that no amount of "bouncing" at the back of her seat would result in my legs getting any shorter...she apologized and brought her back forward a fraction of an inch. I have bruises on my left knee. Ah the joys of flying.

We made it home, Don drove us all back from the airport, which was a real treat...simplicity at that point was remarkably pleasing. We caught up on minor emergencies. I did some of the acute work I needed to do in preparation of Nick Basbanes speaking at the Baxter tomorrow and we took an all too brief nap.

Finally, because we had spent pretty much two days awake and/or being tortured, we rewarded ourselves by attending the season opening of the Portland Symphony. It was really wonderful...but it was very gentle and lulling when I needed the 1812. I managed not to disgrace myself by falling asleep, but only be the skin of my teeth.

Addendum: Note to self: When you are doing a book fair on the west coast and then a book fair on the east coast the following weekend, pay attention to what you bring west. We remembered, in the nick of time, that a reasonable number of books in Seattle were needed in Northampton this weekend. I had to ship two of our 5 crates 3 day instead of ground. That is, it is costing us more to ship two boxes back than it did to ship them all out. Oh well.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Seattle bound and the arrival

Well, we were picked up at 415am for the airport. I opted not to bother sleeping. I must admit that I am getting older and that blowing off sleep for a night is no longer something that I can just blithely undertake. Really quite pathetic.

Our plane took off from Portland on time as did the connecting flight at JFK. We flew JetBlue and above and beyond the great price ($99 from Portland to Seattle), the service was better than average (sad, but true) and the TV was a nice treat. We watched several National Geographic specials, including one very cool one on Boston’s Big Dig.

One minor rant: Airline seats should not recline at all. It was fine (sort of) back in the days of lots of leg room and all, but even on JetBlue (better than average leg room), it is just annoying as hell. Granted, I am over 6 feet tall and I LOATH having seat backs in my knees. I am the first to say that the seats are not the most comfy things and I know I would be more comfy if I reclined…but I do not do so because it is so frigging rude to the poor person behind me. I wish the annoying woman in front of me felt the same way…

We landed in Seattle at 12 noon, checked into the hotel. I did not know it was possible to have a hotel with two prong plugs (and non-free web access). It is a roof and a bed…and there is PLENTY of free wireless alternatives…but the lack of connectivity is probably a deal breaker before next year.

We visited Twice Sold Tales and met the owner, Jamie Lutton and great fun was had by all. We picked up a few little fun things and have our eye on one or two things that might need to head east with us.

Great Thai lunch followed by a very nice coffee…it being Seattle and all. FedEx delivered all my cases (and those of Don Lingren) to the UPS store near the Pavilion. The *wildly* helpful young man (Chris) at UPS volunteered to schlep crates with us so we were able to bring everything down in one trip (about 2.5 blocks or so).

We dropped everything off at the pavilion and will be ready for set-up tomorrow morning.

Labels: , ,

Friday, August 10, 2007

Query: Professional Niceties, relevent or arcane

I have just learned another "professional nicety", of which I was previously blithely ignorant. It has come to my attention that when a book dealer brings a client of theirs into your shop/booth and said human purchases from you, you owe the introducing dealer a 10% commission. This makes sense, I think, though it was news to me. [N.B. there is an argument that you owe this commission to the other dealer on *all* purchases from such a client *forever*...which also makes sense, but I have heard conflicting opinions...].

This has led me to think about professional courtesies, generally, and what has been happening to them specifically. Changes in the business, particularly the flood of new "dealers" with little or no background in the profession, seems to have resulted in an erosion of some of the niceties of the profession, as perhaps has the growth of web business. The following are the niceties that are front of brain for me...please post or email me with any that I have overlooked:
  • The granddaddy, of course, is the reciprocal discount. Typically 20% (10% in the UK, it appears), most dealers who take the business seriously discount stock to other dealers. It is nice when one is purchasing for stock...all but necessary when acting as an agent. When I purchase material for clients, my margin is generally the discount (I do not believe a client should pay more when I secure a book for then than they would getting it from another directly)...as a result, it is very seldom I will purchase a book from a dealer who chooses not to offer a discount. It seems as if this one remains very strong. There is clearly some erosion among internet-only dealers...but most of those who refuse to extend discounts are not "really" book dealers (exceptions, as always, exist).
  • Not "doing business" in another dealer's shop/booth. This is largely a book fair issue, though one that applies to shops as well. It is just common courtesy that you do not enter another dealer's booth and pitch a book/strike up a conversation with a potential client of that dealer. It is just plain rude. You do not see it often...but it does happen and is almost always a good way to get someone seriously pissed off at you (and talking about it with all other dealers).
  • The aforementioned, "tithe to those who bring you clients". This is straight-foreword and makes good business sense. This is, particularly in certain areas, very much a "networked" profession. A fair number of collectors will not buy from dealers they do not "know" and a personal introduction by one dealer to another can go a tremendous way to in starting a relationship. In my experience, such introductions tend to be limited to "good" customers only...all the more reason to thank the introducing dealer. As I mentioned before, there is a traditional view that such an introduction obliges the introducee to pay a commission to the introducor for the life of the client (or other dealer). Again, I think this makes sense...though the logistics seem to get tricky in time...
  • A related, "tithe to those who bring you business". This is also pretty straight forward. If a dealer sends someone to you who sells/consigns material with you, you owe that referring dealer 10%. Again, this is just good business...as you want other dealers to feel comfortable introducing you to their "good clients", so do you want those dealers to feel comfortable referring sellers who do not fit their stock. The best transactions are ones where everyone is happy.
  • Do not make an appointment with a dealer and not buy anything. This applies largely to appointment only dealers and falls under the rule of: if you are going to take someone's time, compensate them for it. Obvious exceptions exist for friends (and, perhaps, enemies) but generally if you call and make an appoint to see someone's books, you should buy *something*. It does not have to be much...though bigger is generally better.
  • Don't "cut and paste" other's work product. This is obviously a rather recent addition...though it existed pre-web as the more specific "don't copy verbatim another's catalogue description". This practice, again pursued mostly by...er...flakier members of the art, is really more of a nicety issue than an ethical/legal one. While some are attempting to "copyright" their book descriptions (and the issue generates a fair bit of gnashing of teeth), I suggest that one would be hard pressed to succeed in pursuing such a claim and guarantee it would not be worth the time and effort. That said, while "imitation" may be the sincerest form of flattery, copying verbatim another's description is...er...tacky and rude. I've had people ask me if they could quote large parts of some of my more verbose descriptions and I have never said no. I've had others *clearly* cut and paste my descriptions...I keep a little list. Mind you, there is very little truly original work out there...most "good" book descriptions are so good because interesting bits were pulled out of published bibliographies (or earlier catalogues, etc.). I guess the rule might be "don't be verbatim".
[This last should be noted for a future post...there are some wonderful examples of "bibliographic errors" where a mistake was made in a very early bibliography (e.g. early 17oos) and still appears, two, three and seven generations later, because subsequent bibliographers relied on the first bibliographic description and did not bother to handle the book itself. Admittedly, these things may only interest geeks like me...]

Again, if you know of other "nicety" rules that I have failed to include, please let me know. I am also curious to receive feedback (emails will be kept confidential) as to opinions about specific rules and/or issues around the evolution of such rules in "modern times". I am toying with an article on this subject at some point in the distant future...

Some of these issues seem to break over the "trade" versus "profession" views of the art of book dealing. I am a very strong advocate of the "profession" argument. I know there are a reasonably wide variety of business models that are, to varying degrees, equally viable in the marketplace and this adds complexity at times in having people play well together. That said, I also believe (?know?) that the business as a whole is best served when we treat each other with the highest degree of respect and professionalism possible. Thoughts? Comments? Pissy rants?

Labels: ,

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Day One at MARIAB in Boston...

We arrived around 8am and left a hair after 7pm. I have reasonably comfortable shoes. There is no such thing as "reasonably comfortable shoes" after 11 (or, you know, 8) hours standing on a concrete floor. My feet are extremely displeased. We have another 10 or so hours tomorrow. Urgh.

Now that my whining is out of the way, Day 1 was a pleasant successes. We were busy steadily throughout the day. The day started out a bit slow, but Joyce stopped by early with the nice news that cars were lined up in the lots to get in...well, nice to know there were people waiting to get in...less so for those waiting in cars. There was not a lot of time when there were not at least one or two people in the booth and a fair amount of the time when there were 3-5. Even better, it was a genuinely engaged and happy crowd. It was really a rather fun day.

Did I mention it was 11 hours long. On a concrete floor. After 8 hours during set up. On same concrete floor.

I am pleased (and flattered) to say that I had a client stop in and tell me that my newsletter to clients about this event triggered her and her son to fly down from Midcoast Maine to spend the weekend. I can honestly say I am fond of all of my clients...but some also just make me happy to do what I do.

Of added note: My son and assistant joined me at this fair...all 11 hours. Granted, he spent much of it playing on his GameBoy or reading, but he was cheerful and charming all day...above and beyond the call (particularly toward the end). As if being well-behaved under arduous circumstances was not cause enough for celebration, at the very end of the day, he mustered the extra bit of charm to achieve his first "hand sale". As documented in the two images to the side, he first approached the husband with one of "his" miniature books, chatting him up about having a wee Shakespeare that can travel. The husband then called his wife over. As evidenced in the second image, my young assistant then read through the wee volume and closed to deal. It was his very first sale. He is *far* too pleased with himself. Have I mentioned I love my clients.

It was a good day. I hope tomorrow is as much fun. Did I mention it will be another 10ish hours on the concrete floor (the last two or so packing up).

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Time joins Newsweek in keeping America stupid...

Well, Newsweek treated its US readers as morons twice last year (here and here), now Time joins its competition in "protecting" us from...well...you know, real news. I don't know about you, but I am not certain if I am insulted these NEWS journals view the US "market" as preferring a protracted advertisement for Leibowitz's retrospective to "real news" or if I just feel sorry for our society that "news" has, to all extent and purposes, become lost to our "lowest common denominator" cultural morass.

Sadly, I have been getting most of my day-to-day "news" from foreign sources for the last several years (one of the better side effects of the emergence of the web). CNN, et al have effectively been relegated to the equivalent of an alternative to a poorly scripted "reality" show...which seems to be the niche they are seeking to fill. I have this vague memory of R. Murdoch under oath before Congress stating that Fox "News" had "no obligation" to tell the truth in their reporting...that they were an entertainment corp (I have not citation for this and lack the time to find it...but the memory is reasonably clear (it...er...annoyed me *a lot*)).

I'm going back to preparing for the Boston book fair this weekend. More shortly on this front.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

The Second Amendment meets the First Amendment...

...and the expected bloodbath ensues. The Washington Post has just published an interesting article on the colossal implosion of big-game hunter Jim Zumbo's career. In brief, Zumbo, a 40+ year NRA member, hunting writer, host of a popular TV program on the Outdoor Channel, etc. wrote a couple of posts calling into question "long range shooting" and the use of assault weapons in hunting (i.e. prairie dogs). Since this began two weeks ago or so, he has "resigned" his position as hunting editor for Outdoor Life (for whom he had written for 42 years), been released from his long-time relationship with Remington, had his highly rated hunting program on the Outdoor Channel put "in hiatus", etc. Personally, I am less interested in this chain of events as a "second amendment" issue as I am from the First Amendment side, the "chilling effect" this will have on rational debate and the matter of the power of unintended consequences.

While many people seem to be writing (or ranting) about this without, apparently, reading what he wrote, I thought I would post it here (N.B. the original posts, on his blog at Outdoor Life, have been removed...an interesting ancillary issue (that is, the "loss" of significant writings when they inflame unusual passions)). The following are the two posts that appear to have some folks worked into a lather:
While at the SHOT Show recently, I ran into a guy who complained that too many hunters were taking excessively long shots. He’s an outfitter, and witnessed plenty of people shooting at elk at distances greater than 350 yards. He suggested that that was too far, primary because the majority of those hunters had no clue of ballistics. Most were “Hail Mary” shots. I agree. We read about people making 500 yard shots and more, and that, to me, is ridiculous.

Then at the SCI convention last week, I talked to a guy who bragged that his custom gun kills deer out at 800 yards and better. To each his own, I suppose, but that isn’t hunting. It’s shooting. And I don’t care how great a marksman you are. The risk of wounding an animal at extremely long ranges is high, and where’s the sportsmanship, the ethics, the satisfaction of taking outrageously long shots? I understand there’s a group in PA that shoots deer at 1,000 yards and more. More power to them. Just don’t ask me to support that kind of “hunting.”
(J. Zumbo, 2/6)
As I write this, I’m hunting coyotes in southeastern Wyoming with Eddie Stevenson, PR Manager for Remington Arms, Greg Dennison, who is senior research engineer for Remington, and several writers. We’re testing Remington’s brand new .17 cal Spitfire bullet on coyotes.

I must be living in a vacuum. The guides on our hunt tell me that the use of AR and AK rifles have a rapidly growing following among hunters, especially prairie dog hunters. I had no clue. Only once in my life have I ever seen anyone using one of these firearms.

I call them “assault” rifles, which may upset some people. Excuse me, maybe I’m a traditionalist, but I see no place for these weapons among our hunting fraternity. I’ll go so far as to call them “terrorist” rifles. They tell me that some companies are producing assault rifles that are “tackdrivers.”

Sorry, folks, in my humble opinion, these things have no place in hunting. We don’t need to be lumped into the group of people who terrorize the world with them, which is an obvious concern. I’ve always been comfortable with the statement that hunters don’t use assault rifles. We’ve always been proud of our “sporting firearms.”

This really has me concerned. As hunters, we don’t need the image of walking around the woods carrying one of these weapons. To most of the public, an assault rifle is a terrifying thing. Let’s divorce ourselves from them. I say game departments should ban them from the prairies and woods.
(J. Zumbo, 2/16)

So it appears that, as a professional hunter, he questions the increasing use of "long range" shots ("shooting" vs "hunting") and the use of "AR and AK" rifles (auto and semi-auto "assault weapons") in hunting (specifically referencing prairie dogs). He *might* have gotten away with this as mere opinion *except* that in his post, he distinguished between "sporting firearms" and "'terrorist' rifles". This alone appears to have worked *many* people into a frothing lather (I'm not posting links to the apparently endless blog posts ranting about Zumbo's "betrayal"...google his name and pretty much the first 45,000 returns are in the "Zumbo=Dumbo" vein).

I will preface by saying that I grew up in rural Maine, have hunted, support the right to hunt (by bow, gun or slingshot) and, in general, support 2nd amendment (which, for those who forget, reads, "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.") [N.B. While I do support the 2nd Amend., am I the only one who reads "well regulated" with as much weight as "shall not be infringed"?] I am not interested in discussing what Zumbo said, per se, but rather the reaction and broader implications. Frankly, nearly every "serious" hunter I know would agree with most of what he said...long range shots are flaky and arguably more dangerous and "hunting" with AR/AK rifles, while fun, lacks a certain amount of "sportsmanship." He did not say that such rifles should be banned, per se, simply that they should be banned "from the prairies and woods." By all means, go to a machine gun shoot (Maine had a great event up in Dover-Foxcroft, named for the inventor of the first portable fully automatic machine gun, Hiram Maxim (who also invented the mousetrap), though I do not know if it is still being held)...but blowing away prairie dogs with an AK-47 does seem to lack a bit of...er...challenge.

The WP appears to have hit on the substantive issue. What is important is not the pros and cons of using a .50-caliber sniper rifle to hunt deer (or, as it were, collect deer parts) or AKs on prairie dogs, it *is* an issue of not allowing any division or distinction between hunting rifles and shotguns and assault weapons. The NRA and similar gun-rights groups are adamant in pushing the slipper-slope argument that any regulation of assault weapons, sniper rifles, armor piercing ammunition, etc., etc. will inexorably lead to regulation of hunting weapons (ignoring that whole "well regulated" aspect of the amendment). The point they make is that most of the *money* comes from hunters while most of the "feet on the street" passionate advocacy comes from assault weapon owners and that the NRA effectively endorsed this as the salient point by showing that, "the Zumbo affair shows there is "no chance" that a "divide and conquer propaganda strategy" could ever succeed."

Zumbo apologized profusely, but the lifelong hunter and hunting rights advocate was promptly burned in effigy. Granted, the "terrorist" reference was semantically poorly chosen...but his overarching points are at least colorable, if not correct. However, in the editor's note regarding his "resignation," Todd Smith of Outdoor Life states, "We respect Mr. Zumbo's First Amendment right to free speech, and we acknowledge his subsequent apology and admission of error." This is immediately followed with,
However, Outdoor Life has always been, and will always be, a steadfast supporter of all aspects of the shooting sports and our Second Amendment rights, which do not make distinctions based on the appearance of the firearms we choose to own, shoot or hunt with.
The "admission of error", one hopes, was that of speaking a thought out loud and offending the "all or nothing" approach of the NRA, et al (and, for that matter, they clearly do *not* respect his right of free speech, or they would defend his speech on those grounds). The implications, of course, are clear. There can not be a rational discussion of the pros and cons of any of these issues. You either support the completely unfettered "right to bear arms" or you are an enemy to be attacked and pilloried in any and all ways possible. I find this really troubling.

It appears there can be no rational voices in this matter at all. On the "right", you get thrown out of the club if you support any regulation of anything that goes "bang", on the "left" you get ousted if you acknowledge that hunting...and shooting...is fun, constitutionally protected and generally not such a bad thing. As Yeats said, "The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity." I think the opinion of a renowned and articulate hunter would be of value in this debate. I bet we don't hear any in the near-term (or at least none not towing the party line of "no regulation is acceptable").

Personally, I am fond of that term "well regulated" and just can't seem to get myself worked up on one side or the other (lacking all conviction). There are firearms that are appropriate for hunting...and there are firearms that are appropriate for target shooting. I am not certain it is unreasonable to have "time and place" restrictions on semi/automatic weapons, sniper rifles, flamethrowers, rocket launchers and such things. There is a rationality issue at play here...in Maine, I am not able to own a Black Cat firecracker, but there is no problem with my owning a .50 caliber weapon with an effective range of 7,500 yards (yes, 4 miles) and the ability to punch through an inch of vehicle armor or 3/4 of an inch of bullet-resistant glass (there are purportedly over 20,000 of these firearms in private hands in the US). Now there is not doubt that big guns are fun...but does one really "need" one. The same argument applies to ARs and AKs. Unfortunately, no one seems able/willing to discuss these issues in anything but extremes...and well all end up suffering for it.

The worst aspect of the Zumbo affair is that it absolutely confirms the worst fears of "rational voices" and reduces the "debate" over gun control to a battle of zealots. Unfortunately, this appears to be an increasingly common problem in this country, from the President's, "If you don't support me, you support Terrorism" stance to the arguments around Intelligent Design (or the lack thereof) and Evolution. Personally, I'm tired of dogmatic arguments unsupportable by reason or logic. I'm tired of the increasingly anti-intellectual sentiment so pervasive in this country. I'm tired of vapid talking heads on "news" programs telling me that if I'm not embracing the current Anna Nichole Smith pseudo-news event then I am "snob". I'm tired of a political environment where deep and/or long-term thinking is *actively* condemned and ridiculed. I am just tired.

It is a good thing Carl Hiaasen has a new book out...I bet the twits in Nature Girl will get their's in the end..............

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, February 26, 2007

"News guy snobbery"...funny or sad?

Thanks to ThinkProgress for one of the funniest/saddest things I have read in a very long time. Apparently Fox News has grown tired of their Favorite War Ever(tm)...In defending his obsessive coverage of the Anna Nichole Smith, Fox talking head John Gibson accuses Anderson Cooper and others of "new guy snobbery" and basically attacked them for covering the Iraq war. "Oh, ‘There’s a war on! There’s a war on!’ Maybe, just maybe, people are a little weary, Mr. Cooper, of your war coverage, and they’d like a little something else."

Clearly, the rational alternative to the day to day horror/depression/angst/humiliation of our current plight in Iraq is the death by vomit of an exploited, drug addled, depressed and depressing pseudo-celebrity. Clearly an improvement. The great irony, of course, is that after years of hawking the War and its advocates, Fox is now calling those who speak of it "snobs."

As noted in the blurb, since Smith's death on Feb. 8th, 42 US soldiers have died in Iraq, not to mention nearly 1000 Iraqis. To be Fair and Balanced(tm), reporting on such things is just ever so tedious. If Fox is really lucky, Ms. Shriver will find Gov. Schwarzenegger in flagrante delicto with an illegal housekeeper and smother them both in their sleep...a Kennedy killing the traitorous Republican gov. *with* a good dirty/illegal alien aspect...why I bet no one would talk about Iraq for weeks.

It would be quite funny where it not so deeply, mind-numbingly pathetic and depressing.

Labels: , ,

Monday, February 12, 2007

Yeats', Second Coming, the Iraq war and irony...

Adam Cohen has an OpEd item in the NYTimes that is worth a good read for the bookishly inclined...or at least the bookishly inclined with a healthy sense of irony. He notes that the recent Brookings Institution report on the Iraq war is titled, "Things Fall Apart"...that Rep. Jim McDermott (D. WA) titled his speech calling for the administration to present a cogent plan for Iraq, "The Center Cannot Hold" and that blogs on the conflict are rife with "the blood-dimmed tide is loosed" in the Iraq (see here, here, here or here). Then there is one of my personal favorites, "The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity."

The common thread, of course, is that all come from W.B. Yeat's, 'Second Coming' and herein rests the irony. The pundits love to quote it...but don't seem to really understand it...or Yeats. Above and beyond the fact that he was far from a Christian (he considered Christianity "an idea whose time had passed"), and far from a democrat (he was a fan of Plato's benevolent dictatorship...or fascism), the poem is really "a powerful brief against punditry."

I offer the final few passages for your review and consideration:
The Christian era was about the ability to predict the future: the New Testament clearly foretold the second coming of Christ. In the post-Christian era of which Yeats was writing there was no Bible to map out what the next “coming” would be. The world would have to look toward Bethlehem to see what “rough beast” arrived.

This skepticism about predicting the future has more relevance to the Iraq war than any of the poem’s much-quoted first eight lines. The story of the Iraq war is one of confident predictions that never came to pass: “We will find weapons of mass destruction”; “we will be greeted as liberators”; “the insurgency is in its last throes.”

The confident predictors who have been wrong in the past do not hesitate to keep offering up plans. That is true of President Bush, certainly: he talks about what his “troop surge” will do as if he had never been wrong before. It is also true of the pundits. The co-author of “Things Fall Apart,” the Brookings guide to going forward in Iraq, is Kenneth Pollack, who is — incredibly — best known for his 2002 book “The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq.”

It is bizarre to see shards of “The Second Coming” appended to the Brookings report, or to any of the other plans and prognostications about the war in Iraq. Yeats, who grew up feeling “sort of ecstasy at the contemplation of ruin,” did not just welcome whatever new order his rough beast was ushering in. He believed the only way it could plausibly be spoken of was in the form of a question.

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

An interesting voice temporarily (I hope) silenced...

One of my more favorite blogs, Tech Ramblings from the Rare Book Trade, has gone off on an indefinite hiatus. This is unfortunate, as I am fond of the blog and have always found it one of the more interesting in the realm (granted, I am, in addition to being a recovering attorney, a geek of the highest order). What is really unfortunate is that he is not taking his break because he necessarily wants to do so, but because his employer (an unnamed rare book dealer) has made it clear that his personal blog is professionally threatening to his position.

Needless to say, many bookishly inclined bloggers are unhappy about this (see, e.g. Hugh). I agree with Hugh (and ASWR) that booksellers are colleagues, not competitors. More broadly, I concur with many of the voices that Tech Ramblings' employer was extremely short-sighted and/or misguided in his fear/concern of his employees blog (N.B. this was a private blog, but I will ignore the overt "what he was doing on his own time is his own business" issues). The major sticking point appears to have been that the Tech Rambler provided links to "other" booksellers and/or bookseller's blogs.

Personally, I would embrace an employee who was so engaged both in focus of the business *and* the niche he serves (tech) that he wanted to build a voice around the area. Personally, I would have taken the opposite approach and sought to have the blog brought under my "brand" and more closely linked to my business. I track, mostly for personal amusement, where my visitors come from and where they go when the leave. I know better than most how many people link into my site from other book sites/blogs and how many follow links on my site out to other book bloggers. I can personally and professionally attest to the *value* of linking to other's in the profession.

That said, I understand Tech Ramblings' willingness/desire to roll with his employer's request and not threaten his job. I am reminded of O.W. Holmes', "This is a court of law, young man, not a court of justice." It is fine (and proper) to talk about freedom of speech and personal blogs vs business pursuits and all the topics that this issue has opened for debate. In the end, however, I completely understand the decision to walk away from a personal blog run primarily/exclusively for personal amusement and pleasure in the face of losing a job that, one presumes, is interesting and rewarding.

To be clear, I hope Tech Ramblings returns. I suggest Tech Rambler show his boss how much traffic comes to his site through the blog. I hope his employer comes to realize his concern as to "other links" is unfounded. We are a community and are far stronger together than as islands. I will leave the link to TRftRBT in the side bar as it contains some great content...with luck he will return.

Labels: , , , ,

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

And now for a non-book, totally tech moment...


Well, MacWorld was today and Apple announced several new products...but only one really matters to me. I want an iPhone (go here for a great review and MANY pictures). I want it NOW. I want to sleep with it under my pillow. I want to rub it, ever so softly, against my cheek. I want to gaze lovingly at it. I long for it. I covet it. I crave it.

I love Apple for many reasons. I love them most of all for occasionally bringing something to market that genuinely makes me covet a bit of hardware. It is, as one would expect, a stunningly beautiful, simple and elegant device. I can not wait to explore the UI. I can not wait to have a phone that has built in WiFi, so I can get my email/web access *without* paying for the overpriced data service from my carrier. I can not wait.

Oh, and there is a new settop box, AppleTV that looks really slick and several other new/improved toys.....but, oh my, have you seen the iPhone *wistful sigh*. It will be shipping in June. That gives me 5 and a half months or so to really loathe my current phone...all its inadequacies...its poor design (both aesthetic and UI). It's lack of a 4 (or 8)gig drive. It is going to be a long few months.

Labels: , , ,

Thursday, January 04, 2007

I don't even know where to start...

President Bush claimed new powers today to search US mail without a warrant. In a "signing statement" he executed while signing the postal overhaul bill on December 20, he basically undermined a substantial aspect of the bill itself. His signing statement directly contradicts the part of the bill that explicitly reinforces protections of first-class mail from searches without a court's approval. My grandmother *often* told me that if I didn't have anything productive to say, perhaps I shouldn't say anything at all...while I often ignore these sage words, what could I really say about this that would not result in a long rant.

That said, please see what the ABA's, "Blue-Ribbon Task Force" said about these statements (in brief: that they are an affront to and undermine separations of powers).

Labels: ,

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

So much for fun in the stacks....

According to this Wired article, one byproduct of Chicago State University's nearly $40MM library reno is that students will no longer be allowed in the stacks. All shelving and pulling of books will be done by robotic "pickers". This is a technology that has been evolving rapidly in warehouse settings and has the potential to be efficient and, at least in theory, cost effective.

Generally, the stacks can be closer and higher (potentially several stories). Better yet, if implemented as is seen in major warehouse projects, books can be shelved "dynamically"...that is, books checked out more often would be in prime/fast locations and The Starr Report would be in some dank corner. Better yet, the system can learn as it goes...refining its algorithms and becoming more efficient.

On the other hand, please read: Why Things Bite Back: Technology and the Revenge of Unintended Consequences (Edward Tenner, 2004). I suggest this may also result in the modern grocery store phenomena...if/when there is a power/technology failure, no one can function any longer. You literally can not make purchases at a grocery these days when their "system" is down...forget the fact that no one can make change...nothing has prices on it anymore. Good for tweaking pricing for arbitrary and capricious reasons...problematic otherwise. I predict many major libraries will follow this path as well...and will be utterly useless whenever there is a "failure".

Technology is such fun.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Books, science, myth, Cobb County and the ACLU...

Fair warning, minor rant to follow: Yesterday's Atlanta Journal-Constitution ran a heart-warming piece titled: Cobb gives up on evolution book stickers. In brief, the Cobb County school board, in an attempt to add their own surreal touch to Cobb's colorful (or is it colorless) history ordered stickers be tipped into all the science books (35,000) basically stating that evolution is a theory, not a fact.

Needless to say, some number of rational residents of CC brought suit, supported by the ACLU and many lawyers were made extremely pleased. A judge ordered the stickers removed. Many people sat around scrapping stickers out of books. CC appealed. CC settled the action, agreeing to pay about $167,000 to cover the Plaintiff's legal fees. Add to this sum their own legal fees and I wager that CC has managed to blow about $250,000 or so that could have been spent on...er...new science books.

The issues in CC can best be summed up with the closing comments of the article. Larry Taylor, a father of three students in the system and an advocate for the stickers used the currently trendy "if I find it threatening to my myopic view of the world, blame 'terrorists'":
"They were trying to do the right thing. It's terrorist organizations like the ACLU that are hijacking our country's educational system by imposing their own secular agenda on the rest of us."
On the rational side of reality, Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State in Washington, D.C., stated:
"Students should be taught sound science, and the curriculum should not be altered at the behest of aggressive religious groups. Cobb County school officials have taken the right step to ensure that their students receive a quality education."
This is, of course, the latest skirmish in the ongoing "Intelligent Design" debate and I am not going to dwell on the generalities (admittedly, I have ranted about this before). I have, however, had a thought.
This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.
I have had a change of heart. I rather like this statement. It is clear and states things that make sense. The textbook contains material on evolution - *excellent*, I'd be worried if it did not and it lets me know what to look forward to in the book. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things - again, *excellent*, evolution is in fact a theory (a reasonably well tested and understood theory, but a theory just the same)...with luck, this statement might trigger useful discussions about theories, hypotheses and facts, a very useful conversation in this age of reality distortion. And finally, noting that "this material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered" should be a "restating the obvious" issue...but if schools find it necessary to remind students (and/or teachers) of this *fact*, so be it.

No, to be fair, I think there should be a sticker added to the front of all bibles (and possibly other religious texts, but for the moment, just bibles. I propose something like the following:
This bible contains material on spirituality, the nature of the human condition and a hypothesis on the origin of all things. The text contained herein is the product of many centuries of an oral history, the stories being told by one person to another, with all the inherent issues origin presents. It is also the product of many iterations and revisions, again over many, many years...some official, some less so, with large portions edited, excised and/or added at various points of time and for various reasons; it should be viewed as a theory, not a fact regarding the original of all things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully and critically considered.
Or words to that effect, this is clearly very preliminary. It's just a thought...but it might might be a useful approach. I am very open to all constructive thoughts.

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Sadly, it looks like Lenin was right...

Vladimir Lenin, noted advocate of the press is quoted as saying:
Why should freedom of speech and freedom of the press be allowed? Why should a government which is doing what it believes to be right allow itself to be criticized? It would not allow opposition by lethal weapons. Ideas are much more fatal things than guns. Why should a man be allowed to buy a printing press and disseminate pernicious opinions calculated to embarrass the government?
So have things changed since he said this? Well, unfortunately, no. TPM Muckracker has an incredibly disturbing story: Bush Admin: What You Don't Know Can't Hurt Us.

Basically, someone noticed that after issuing monthly reports on the number of attacks in Iraq since the war began, DoD suddenly declared these reports "classified" since September of this year. Curiosity as to what triggered this change led, as such things often do, to discovering an extraordinary pattern of conduct when it comes to reports/studies/commissions/etc. that produce (or may produce) data the administration does not want to hear (and/or want you to hear).

Some examples:
When a gov. report showed an increase in global terrorism in 2005, the Admin. announced it would stop publishing the report.

When the Bur. of Labor Statistics reported a significant increase in the number of factory closings in the US, the Admin. announced it would stop publishing information about factory closings.

When the Dept. of Eduction found that charter schools were underperforming, the Admin. announced it would sharply curtail the amount of information it collects on charter schools.

The EPA announced plans to close several libraries used by researchers and scientists. The agency claimed it was a cost-cutting measure...which conflicts with a 2004 report indicating that the facilities *made* the EPA a $7.5MM surplus annually.

And, of course, on November 1st, 2001, President Bush issued an executive order limiting the public's access to presidential records. This order undermined the 1978 Presidential Records Act, which required the release of such records after 12 years. Bush's order prevented the release of "68,000 pages of confidential communications between President Ronald Reagan and his advisers" (some of whom had positions in the Bush Administration).
There are many other examples. It depresses me. I want to rant about it...but lack the energy. I think I will just go reread 1984, curl up into a fetal position and wait for this to be over.

Labels: , ,

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Is Crichton's poisoned pen aimed at Crowley's penis...

This has been getting a bit of play from various sources but I hope you will allow me my wee personal rant. Some time ago Michael Crowley, a political journalist of TNR fame, wrote a piece (second page here) in that journal about Crighton's brilliant writing style and intellectually stimulating plot lines. It opens with the following quotation from State of Fear:
She took a sip of red wine, then set the glass down on the bedside table. Unceremoniously, she pulled her top over her head and dropped her skirt. She was wearing nothing beneath.

Still in her high heels, she walked toward him. ... She was so passionate she seemed almost angry, and her beauty, the physical perfection of her dark body, intimidated him, but not for long.
Apparently Crichton took offense at the accolades heaped upon him. "Next," his most recent bit of airplane reading (did anyone else read Airframe while flying a redeye across the country?), includes a character named "Mick Crowley" who happens to be a Washington-based political journalist...who----wait for it----rapes a two year old baby boy.

Mr. Crowley (who often goes by "Mike" and, like the the "Mick" went to Yale...but does not, I believe, rape babies), is quoted as saying, “In lieu of a letter to the editor, Crichton had fictionalized me as a child rapist." The following is a snippit taken from the NYTs
Alex Burnet was in the middle of the most difficult trial of her career, a rape case involving the sexual assault of a two-year-old boy in Malibu. The defendant, thirty-year-old Mick Crowley, was a Washington-based political columnist who was visiting his sister-in-law when he experienced an overwhelming urge to have anal sex with her young son, still in diapers. (NYT, Columnist Accuses Crichton of 'Literary Hit-and-Run')
Now don't get me wrong: I am fond of trashy reading. I am fond of some of Crichton's speculative romps...though the science is *often* so broken that the annoyance level grates at me. I am fond of really public personal attacks...especially really venomous ones (as noted in the NYT's piece, Crighton took advantage of the "small penis rule" for defamation, the idea being that no one wants to go into court and say, "yep, that 'small penis', it's definitely ME").

No, what really offends me is how Crighton has slowly drifted into annoying (and...er...wrong) socio/scientific/political rantings that make his recent books little more than thinly veiled position rants with the intent, I suggest of pushing/shaping public opinion (e.g. State of Fear re global warming, Prey re nano-tech and now Next re biotech). I know, I know, people aren't that dumb to get their ideas about major social/cultural/scientific issues from the pages of Crighton's thrillers...they are too busy watching Fox News and reading USA Today.

Crowley sums it up exceptionally well at the end of his apparently offensive piece:
The Bush years have been Michael Crichton's anni mirabiles. And now, like a mighty t-rex that has escaped from Jurassic Park, Crichton stomps across the public policy landscape, finally claiming the influence he has always sought. In this sense, he himself is like an experiment gone wrong--a creation of the publishing industry and Hollywood who has unexpectedly mutated into a menacing figure haunting think tanks, policy forums, hearing rooms, and even the Oval Office. And, ironically, this leaves Crichton in the very role he and