Ken Baumann

http://kenbaumann.com

I'm the author of the novels Solip, Say, Cut, Map, The Country, and The City. I've also written the nonfiction books EarthBound and Eat the Flowers. I'm currently publishing my novel A Task via Kickstarter in order to have an hourlong conversation with each of its first thousand readers. For a decade I published books through Sator Press, and for a decade I acted in film and television; now I help students at St. John's College. More info: kenbaumann.com.

BetterWorld Books / Dogoodery

The hands are holding the planet in space.

The hands are holding the planet in space.

From BetterWorldBooks.com:

We’re breaking new ground in online bookselling. We believe that education and access to books are basic human rights. That’s why books sold on BetterWorldBooks.com help fund high-impact literacy projects in the United States and around the world.

All books are available with free shipping to any location within the United States (or $3.97 worldwide). And in case you’re concerned about your eco-footprint, every order is shipped carbon neutral with offsets from Carbonfund.org.

Here’s the best part: In addition to selling new titles, Better World Books supports book drives and collects used books and textbooks through a network of over 1,600 college campuses and partnerships with nearly 1,000 libraries nationwide. So far, the company has converted more than 11 million donated books into $4.5 million in funding for literacy and education. In the process, we’ve also diverted more than 6,000 tons of books from landfills.

That’s right.  Free US shipping, cheap international shipping, new & used books, ecologically-conscious shipping, $$$ to charity, and they work with schools/libraries.  Oh, and from a quick search of five books in my ToRead list, they have multiple copies of each.

Alright.  What’s to like about Amazon anymore?

Random / 2 Comments
April 18th, 2009 / 2:04 am

Wow: The Espresso Book Machine

Literature Terminator.

Literature Terminator.

From the press release:

Blackwell, the UK’s leading academic bookseller, has unveiled the launch of the 2.0 Espresso Book Machine (EBM) at its flagship store, 100 Charing Cross London. It is the first bookshop installation of its kind within the UK, allowing any book to be selected from an inexhaustible network of titles and prints on demand in just 3 minutes from a digital file onsite, online at www.blackwell.co.uk, or uploaded in person from CDs or flash drives.

This bad boy whips up a book in three minutes.   Go on to read more about the implications of such a device.

My take:  This is definitely a much more ecologically sustainable process than the standard model of book production, which is exciting.  It also completely removes the barrier of entry to producing a book, which, I’d argue, is a very ‘good’ thing; the more art the better.  It’s happening all around us; the availability of cheap means of production means that anyone with a computer and a camera can make a movie, anyone with a computer near this behemoth or Lulu.com can make a book, anyone with a computer and Garageband/Audible can make music, etc.  Distribution will be the sticking point in media for awhile, and it’s going to get messy.  I look forward to help making the mess.

What do you think?

EDIT: Also, a thin treatise on paperback vs. hardback after the jump…

READ MORE >

Random & Technology / 16 Comments
April 16th, 2009 / 6:15 pm

Three Things I’ve Found Interesting Within the Sphere of ‘Booklyfe’, or: Booklyfe 3

This is what all talent/literary/federal agents look like.  Its code.

This is what all talent/literary/federal agents look like. It's code.

1.  Literary agent Nathan Bransford of Curtis Brown, Ltd. is offering readers the chance to play Literary Agent for a Day over at his blog. It’s pretty simple:  Read the posted queries, pick the queries you think belong to books about to actually be published, win ______ (he hasn’t specified the prize).

2.  Via Matt Briggs, an essay from Frederick Barthelme published in 1988. I’m sure quite a few of you have read this already, but I hadn’t.  I think the essay is definitely worth talking about, still.

3.  Interview Magazine writes about Five Dials, a .pdf/email distributed literary journal.  Hey, who knew this interweb thing could be used for like, literature and stuff?

I’ve already blabbed about this stuff elsewhere, if you’d like a quicker river.

Contests & Random / 71 Comments
April 15th, 2009 / 7:04 pm

Has anyone read this?

?

Has anyone read this book? It comes recommended by Stanley Crawford.  I’m hoping to cull a concise summary from someone here so I can avoid buying it.  Ahh, the irony.

Also:  You can look forward to an HTMLGiant contest/giveaway.  Big and soon.

Random / 11 Comments
April 11th, 2009 / 9:50 pm

Pardon this brief interruption…

News television is a socially and morally robust medium.

Random / 12 Comments
April 7th, 2009 / 11:26 am

Booklyfe 2

Literary Multiplier / Critical Mass

Literary Multiplier / Critical Mass

And here’s Norman Lock on small presses & print vs. digital, via Eugene Lim’s wonderful blog.

A select bit from Norman, and my thoughts:

…To acknowledge such a limitation is to accept a reduced role for the writer.  I do not believe that what I write can change the world or the people in it. I don’t believe that anything written by a contemporary literary artist has that power over a mass audience. There are some who believe they can restructure consciousness using language and narratives that defy convention. But their visionary writing will scarcely be read by the people most in need of a transformed consciousness. The only work that has power to engage a mass audience is sentimental (which is a lie) or pornographic (which is also a lie, though perhaps a more entertaining one). We can rue this. We can set down the causes to mainstream publishing or to a degeneration in popular taste and appreciation that have little to do with literacy. But we can and should seek out our own margin and make our literature there.

READ MORE >

Author Spotlight & Presses / 13 Comments
March 31st, 2009 / 9:28 pm

Happy Birfday, Dear Millions

I stole Maxs books cuz hes a boy and he is dumb n ugly.

I stole Max's books cuz he's a boy and he is dumb n ugly.

Popular book blog The Millions turned six yesterday.  I really enjoy reading The Millions and think it’s a hell of an achievement to consistently provide entertaining and intelligent content for six years.  Also, pretty much everyone on the staff that I’ve spoken to has been cool, helpful & genuinely nice.  Head over and show them some love.

Web Hype / 4 Comments
March 25th, 2009 / 9:42 pm

BookLyfe, or Compendium #1

Millions crushed underneath.

Millions crushed underneath.

Hello everyone.  Pappy Blake Butler has allowed me to talk out loud a bit, and for that I am grateful.  I hope to not bug the hell out of everyone here at HTMLG.

I’ve gleaned a lot of booktalk from the internet in the past week or so, and I’ll present it here, all at once.  To start:  Over at the Vroman’s Bookstore blog, Patrick Brown discusses the National Book Critics Circle’s recommended reading list.  Patrick says:

…their recommended list leaves a bit to be desired. It’s not that the books on the list aren’t good — they are — it’s that they’re, well, a little obvious. My friend Cory, blogger at Skylight Books in LA, pointed out that Philip Roth made the list. Looking at the fiction list, I feel a little like Jack Black’s character in High Fidelity, “Philip Roth? Not obvious. No, not obvious at all. Come on, NBCC, couldn’t you make it easier? What about Hemingway? How about William Shakespeare? Why not recommend Hamlet?” I don’t mean to hammer on Philip Roth, who I love, but come on.  Does he really need the readers?

READ MORE >

Random / 33 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 9:10 pm