Archive for December, 2009

you are not a gadget. or a cephalopod.

having just read YOU ARE NOT A GADGET (by Jaron Lanier, who is apparently some kind of tech bigwig who i formerly had not heard of, January 2010 from Knopf), i feel like this is the kind of book you can’t NOT respond to. Lanier just about begs for response, both internal and out loud (as it were).

as Stephanie points out, “There are too many ideas in this book that I underlined and starred and ?ed and yes!ed to count.” which makes it a really difficult book to review. where do you even start? simultaneously, by the end of it i had kind of lost the big picture. i’m not sure if that’s my fault or Lanier’s, but the close left me with a feeling of “…. and? what is the take-home here?” so that makes it doubly difficult to review, because i was left trying to play connect the dots.

all that aside, i think the book is well worth the read. it’s deceptively short, but there’s plenty of food for thought. and if you’re a bookseller & social media user like me, you get stuck on a couple of things in particular.

1) authorship

Stephanie brings this up too, and makes excellent points, but i wanted to go in a different direction, especially in regards to the recent Rick Moody Twitter experiment. one of the things that bugged me most about the execution of the co-tweeting was the lack of ownership assigned to the tweets. you either had to know from the beginning what was going on, wait for the little “this is what this is!” that appeared at the beginning and end of the tweets each of the three days (which, come on, this is Twitter we’re talking about, who does that?), or ask the co-tweeters — there was no quick, easy way to find out. on the one hand that is probably not a big deal; so you have to do a little work! but when you’re thinking about authorship as a commodity, one that (according to Lanier) is disappearing rapidly because of social media, then the lack of tagging (something, anything!) to identify those tweets as Rick Moody’s in origin is troubling. if you use social media the way i believe most of us do (and the way that Lanier doesn’t seem to acknowledge — see #2), then provenance is typically very clear. when you blur the lines the way Electric Lit did, i think you open the door for the very thing Lanier worries about: the separation of the artist from their work. perhaps during the experiment itself, there was enough context to identify all those tweets as being written by Moody. but what about afterward? they are still on the net — Twitter may not log them, but Google sure as *&#@ does, and many of us back up/archive our timelines in various, sometimes publicly accessible, ways. so post-experiment, what points back to Moody or Electric Lit? precious little.

the reason this bugs me so much is because it was done by a publisher and an author — the two people/entities who have the MOST invested in ownership of creativity. so i am sending out a distress signal/public plea here: please, authors and publishers. PLEASE, think things through. social media experiments are fantastic and wonderful and often huge teaching moments for all of us. but a little mindfulness goes a long way — let’s not give away any more than we have to. i believe very strongly that content deserves to be owned, and that often it deserves to be paid for, and i can only imagine that you do too. if those are our goals, before you try ANY experiments, take a moment and think about whether or not you can meet those goals. if not, maybe the experiment is worth reconsidering.

2) how we really use social media

Lanier doesn’t talk about Twitter much directly, but rather refers off-handedly to tweets and bits and streams, and i think he sort of misses the boat. his argument is that, by trimming our personalities to bite-sized morsels communicated over channels like Twitter, Facebook, etc., we are reducing ourselves in reality, as well as surrendering our individuality and becoming part of the “hive mind.” i’m not going to address anything except for Twitter in this case, because i believe this is where he is most wrong.

if his argument were accurate, then the “follow” function on Twitter is totally useless. if all i’m doing is joining the hive mind, then it doesn’t matter who is talking — all POV are equally valid, because we’re all part of one big neuro-techno-brain thing. or something like that. (i am not making this up, i swear.) but try to imagine using Twitterwithout the follow function. i can tell you right now, i just wouldn’t bother. i would place good money on a bet that most Twitter users check the public timeline VERY infrequently — i honestly can’t remember the last time i did. instead, i look for people who are interesting, who have unique and varied viewpoints, who i think i can have a good conversation with. in other words, i look for AUTHORS with PERSONALITY.

plus, authorship/ownership has its own protocol. the use of the ReTweet or RT standard is not only hugely adopted, but also hugely important — just watch the current uproar over Twitter’s new RT function, which severs the commentor/repeater from the original tweet. by taking away the ability to comment/adjust a tweet when we repeat it, Twitter is encroaching on our ownership of our conversations. and people are not liking it.

en garde, Lanier!

despite my differences as stated, Lanier makes some really excellent and really troubling points about the directions in which online programming, not to mention the way we use it, is going. he also has a kind-of adorable ode to the cephalopod and virtual reality (yes, he manages to link them) at the end which made me a little giddy. i also am now ridiculously curious as to who this guy actually is — he not only name-drops all of Silicon Valley, but then tells stories about that time they all went surfing back in college. puts kind of a new face on people who are generally known more for their icons than their own individual selves. which probably tells you more about me than it does about him, i realize as i type this.

if you have EVER wondered about the future of culture, or art, or technology, or any combination of those three things, then you need to pick this book up (and then highlight it, argue with it, throw it across the room, retrieve it, blog about it, and pass it along to a friend).

p.s. i just realized that Neil Gaiman’s BBC Audio Twitter project falls squarely into the gray area that worries both Lanier and i. in sum, Neil started a story on Twitter and other people were invited to finish it. apparently someone sifted through all the tweets that were properly tagged and assembled a story that has been recorded by a professional narrator. so, who gets authorship (is that a word?) of the story? is each contributor of selected tweets credited? as far as i can tell, the authors are being billed as “Neil Gaiman and the Twitterverse” — which basically falls under the scary “hive mind” notion that Lanier rants about. i haven’t listened to it yet, and to be honest i’m not sure i ever will, because, well, “too many cooks spoil the broth” and all that. even though it’s NG, who i usually adore. so maybe i have to concede that Lanier has a point in the specific, if not the general. the ultimate point here, though, goes back to my plea for publishers to think things through. PLEASE, FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, THINK IT THROUGH!

meta, FTW! (or: fiction, meta-fiction, and Castle)

let me start by saying that i am a die-hard fan of both Nathan Fillion and the show Castle. i was a fan of Fillion first, which is why i started watching Castle.

so when Hyperion announced last year that they were doing NIKKI HEAT books (for realz!), and then they did a give-away of the first book, HEAT WAVE, on twitter AND I WON (disclosure: i won!!!), i was pretty freaking excited.

and then i read the book. correction: i just finished this morning. it was all i wanted to do on my day-off-morning: sit in my pajamas with my extra-strong cup of yorkshire tea and finish HEAT WAVE, so that i could finally tell you all how it is.

but the trouble i’m having is that there are two things to talk about: the book, and the book’s genesis. let’s start with the book.

HEAT WAVE is a mystery, of the mystery genre. this means that the prose is not literary, but definitely readable. it’s entertaining, fast-paced, good action, requisite tension and/or (no, definitely make that ‘and’) sex, all in all your standard first-in-a-series-that’s-going-to-be-crack-for-the-procedural-fan book.

i feel like i should confess at this point that i really don’t read mysteries, procedural or otherwise. i don’t even really watch them, with the notable exceptions of The Wire, Monk, and Castle (both being the exceptions that prove my personal rule).

so that’s my take on the book. now (and infinitely more interesting, to me anyway) for the genesis of the book!

this is a book that is written by an author who is in point of fact a work of fiction himself. a tv show is created. an actor is selected to play an author on a tv show. in the show, references are made to his fictional works of fiction. then, they publish one of these works of fiction. IN REAL LIFE. the actor-as-author gets a dust jacket photo, a blurb, AN ACKNOWLEDGMENTS PAGE FOR THE LOVE OF GOD ON WHICH HE THANKS THE ACTOR. and (yes, it continues) the book features a fictional version of the fictional author, a wise-cracking reporter who is tailing a detective — based on the show’s wise-cracking author who is tailing a detective. oh. my. god. i might just die of the meta-ness of it all. even extra-strong yorkshire tea cannot quite get my brain wrapped around this.

seriously. does that not boggle the mind? before i sat down to write this morning i was trying to verbalize it to my husband, also a Fillion/Castle fan, and we were trying to figure out if it would work without Fillion. as in, can you pick an actor who would suddenly make all this just kind of silly? is it Fillion himself? is it the quality of the show? is it the writers behind the show? also, WHO WROTE THE BOOK?

if you leave all of that aside, i have to confess that i think this experiment in meta has been executed beautifully. the book is fun even as a stand-alone, and will be extra-fun for fans of the show, who will recognize all their favorite show characters reflected in the book characters (META!!!!). congratulationsHyperion, this was a tricky one, and possibly a long-shot. i am now a believer: Meta For The Win!

also, Hyperion, p.s.: if you send Nathan Fillion — ahem! I mean Richard Castle on book tour, i expect a phone call!

thoughts on the rick moody twitter experiment

smart people have already weighed in on this: check out patrick from vromans’ take and a great interview with Electric Lit’s scott lindenbaum.

between them, they’ve covered the aspects that were successful and not so successful. there are probably lots of other great interviews/posts too — feel free to leave links in the comments! there are lessons to be learned here about “publishing” via twitter, and about co-tweeting as opposed to re-tweeting. i am not going to tackle that. or whether i consider it a success or a failure. or even the questions that arise of authorship and ownership (i’m half-way through YOU ARE NOT A GADGET, otherwise these might not have occurred to me).

what i wanted to do, as someone who made the decision to pull our store feed (@breathebooks) from the ranks of the co-tweeters on Day 1, is to try and express in some semi-intelligible way why i am so glad someone finally tried something like this.

i’m glad they did it, because it raised three very important (and very connected) questions for us as a tweeting store: who are we talking to, who is listening, and what is our twitter account for (in no particular order — it’s very chicken-or-egg, if you think about it).

who are we really talking to? patrick points out in his post that if @vromans is really just talking to other booksellers/industry professionals, rather than customers, he’s not even sure that twitter is worth it for them. as someone who has two accounts — my personal account, and a store account — i can’t stress enough how important this is to me.

which gets us into “what is our twitter account for?” my personal account is SPECIFICALLY for talking to other booksellers/industry professionals, along with anyone interesting who pops up. our store account is (meant to be) for talking with customers, engaging with them, alerting them to store goings-on, etc. but are our followers customers? there isn’t any really good (translate: easy) way to tell this. however, there are lots of ways that i could ramp up my efforts to turn customers into followers (and vice versa, but that’s a whole other post). i’m beginning to formulate a strategy for exactly that — more on that later.

which leads us to, who is listening? i didn’t pull us from the experiment because our followers were revolting — although our bookseller followers were (very vociferously) in fact in revolt. i pulled us for a few reasons — we don’t normally tweet that much, i wanted to put more focus on store-related tweets, i was nervous about the complete lack of authorship/tagging involved — but most of all, it was because of the silence.

not one non-bookseller commented on the feed, either positively or negatively. not one retweet, not one “what’s this?”, nothing.

and radio silence, when you’re doing something that different, is not a good sign.

so who is listening? who are we talking to? what is it for?

when i figure it all out, i’ll let you know.



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