Dying Words

While wandering around the internet and the SOU library database, I stumbled across an article reporting that words are falling out of use faster than new words are being coined. Now, on its own, I might just overlook this report (especially with Professor Battistella remedying the problem by creating a new word every day) if it weren’t for the reason given to explain this occurrence. What’s the cause you ask? Spell-check.

Now, this observation wasn’t made by someone with a little too much time on their hands. Some credibility can be give due to the fact that the study was conducted by a team at the Lucca Institute for Advanced Studies in Italy and they analyzed, according to the article, English, Spanish, and Hebrew with the help of the Google’s digital texts. As they moved through books from the nineteenth century to present day, here’s what they found—beyond finding the need to point the finger at spell-check:

The investigators found words began dying more often in the past 10 to 20 years than they had in all the time measured before. At the same time, they discovered languages were seeing fewer entirely new words emerging. They suggest that automatic spell-checkers may be partly responsible, killing misspelled or unusual counterparts of accepted words before they see print (Choi, par 7).

I’m not really one to talk because I honestly can barely spell opportunity without spell-check correcting me. I never really applied myself during elementary school spelling lessons. Sorry to my second through sixth grade teachers, but in my defense, it wasn’t because I assumed spell-check would catch it, as I justify it nowadays…it was because I just hated studying for spelling quizzes.

However, that being said, I’m not entirely sure I believe spell-check’s to blame. Yes, it corrects spelling, but if a word existed before the spell-check existed, it should be checkable—allegedly—since there would be something to reference. I believe it’s slowed the coinage of new words because people shy away from having the red squiggle under anything that might not be in the database of words spell-check knows.

It should at the very least be interesting to see if the discovered trend continues into the next decade.

Works Cited

Choi, Charles. “Digital spell-checking may be killing off words.” Science. MSNBC, 15 Mar. 2012. Web. 26 May 2012. <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46749036/ns/technology_and_science-science/t/digital-spell-checking-may-be-killing-words/#.T8D8KsWEFEN>

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A response to “The Internet, A Writer’s Dream…”

What John Yunker from Ashland Creek Press said in class “If you can write and have something to say, you will do well in life,” resonated with me too.  I felt that it was more than a distant possibility that I could get my ideas ‘out there’.  Getting published was suddenly tangible.  I have access to all the same social networks.  I have an expanding knowledge of how to be creative in the digital world.  But everyone else can also see the vast opportunities that are possible on the internet for voicing your piece.  The internet is almost overly accessible.  The question arises, “How will anyone find my voice, my needle in a haystack, amongst all this s#*t?”

Midge Raymond and John Yunker introduced, at least to me, the idea of book trailers.  Their trailer, Love in the Time of Amazon.com ignited a series of ideas that make getting noticed online plausible.  I became curious about what kinds of book trailers my favorite authors created.  I imagined them being a bit more like a movie trailer than the example Ashland Creek Press showed our class.  There is quite a variety of approaches to book trailers, and companies like Circle of Seven Productions specialize in creating book trailers for authors and publishers (at a cost of course).  Here are some of their selling points for their book video marketing package:

  • Book trailer and online distribution
  • Social Media Promotions, including YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and MySpace
  • Online Marketing to multiple platforms, including blogs, video sites, social media and bookmarking sites
  • Promotions to portable devices such as Wii, PSP, iPhone and other mobile phone devices
  • Video submission to media sites for broadcast
  • Online distribution of book video to reader sites including GoodReads, Watch the Book and Bookscreening.com
  • Aggressive Online Outreach to Genre Specific Sites
  • Online distribution of book videos to over 5000 libraries
  • Online distribution of promotional material to over 300 booksellers
  • Multi-venue online promotions including social sites, media sites, reader destination sites and blogs

The internet has added multiple layers of complexity to what writing is as a profession.  I only follow one well-known author on Facebook, Neil Gaiman.  His was the first book trailer I watched; Instructions was written and read by Neil Gaiman and illustrated by Charles Vess.  It was not what I expected.  I expected the book trailer to be a teaser.  I thought the author would not divulge the entire story, but he does.  I love it, and the trailer doesn’t detour me in the slightest from wanting to have my own copy of the book.  It’s about four minutes long, but worth it.

 

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An Interview With Molly Best Tinsley

Molly Best Tinsley is professor emerita at the United States Naval Academy, an award-winning writer, and the co-founder of FUZE Publishing. Her writing has been recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Oregon Book Awards, the Pushcart Prize, and the Maryland Arts Council, among others. She is the co-author of The Creative Process (Bedford/St. Martin’s) and of Satan’s Chamber (Fuze Publishing), and the author Throwing Knives (Ohio State University Press) and My Life With Darwin (Houghton Mifflin).

Her memoir Entering the Blue Stone has recently been released by FUZE.

As a FUZE intern for the past two terms, I’ve learned a lot about FUZE and the publishing world during and wanted to share it in this interview.

EM: I understand you and Karetta are long-time friends.   Has establishing a publishing company been something you have discussed over the years?

MT: It was not something that was ever even mentioned in the past. In fact, we lost contact, continual contact anyhow, for a long time, and only saw each other when we got together for lunch when I visited back east. It was over one such lunch that Karetta broached the idea of writing a thriller, and so I decided to take it on.

We realized, however, that there was no market for it. We tried the usual route, with agents, etc., and we were just not getting anywhere even with a pretty aggressive effort. People weren’t picking up our book because we were an unknown quantity, unknown writers, for whom they couldn’t develop a marketing platform.

It was kind of an idea that developed on the spot, and was totally Karetta’s idea, because my brain simply wouldn’t have gone there. I would have just waited until the cows came home; my pattern is to send stuff out a lot, because getting rejection letters is just the way to getting the eventual acceptance letter.

EM: Three years ago the publishing world was in disarray.  What did you think you could accomplish by starting a small press?

MT: After the economic crash, shit hit the proverbial fan. Publishing companies all but shut down in terms of acquisitions.

There were plenty of signs early along that marketing departments had taken over, the piece of the company that spent its time looking for literary value had to go through the marketing, so it became more and more about what was monetarily viable. And not just in the past three years, this goes back to Reagan, when business took over the country.

But that’s what keeps me involved: doing for others what would have been lovely to have had done for me when I was trying to get published. I like to enable the writers that are “behind me” in the publishing world, bringing out books that deserve to be out there, because without the right contacts you’ll never get published.

Publishing companies only want to pick up blockbusters, things that will “go viral.” There’s such a gambling mentality: find something nobody else has found, give them a ton of money and hope they make more back for you. Supporting good writers isn’t the goal anymore.

EM: Your goal is to publish the works of new or unheard authors.  This approach violates good business sense in that established authors are more likely to produce solid revenues, than new ones. How has this worked for Fuze?

MT: It seems to be working really well. It’s working in the sense that the writers are satisfied, and they can feel good about their book.

On one level we’re satisfied about the books, but the once piece missing is to break into the larger world. Media, of course, are the ways in, but big media. JPR/Oregon TV interviews are all regional, attracting more competent writers that have the spark, which is good, but the real challenge is breaking through from regional to national recognition.

I’m sure I could figure it out if I had the time, but I keep saying to myself, “Would you rather spend time doing this or write?” I need to write, even if nobody reads it, I have to make these stories. Even so, I am always pitching in, trying to make things happen when they can, and I’m always looking for new ideas.

EM: Your mission is to publish stories that are well-written, have cross-cultural themes, the power to educate and change minds, and be a page turner.  Are these stories hard to find?

MT: We really haven’t had a lot of trouble. In a way, that mission statement is not as confining as one might think.

Black Wings, with military culture is a world apart from most of us, so we have a clash there. I’m currently editing a book about post World War II Britain, a coming-of-age story. There’s a lot of World War II German versus British mentality, and it’s all very fascinating. This book asks the really important questions about war. It can fall easily onto our “sweet spot.”

I also recently met a woman who had a published story. It had a lot of local social satire, which might be difficult to market, but she’s such a strong writer we can’t really turn her down.

Quality of writing is really important in all this.

EM: Developing a publishing company takes a unique set of skills.  You and Karetta have different backgrounds. How have these differences helped or hindered the development of the company?

MT: I has really helped. I couldn’t do this without her business sense, and she couldn’t do it without my writing. As it often is, in this world of publishing, you have a publisher and an editor, just like with a movie you have a producer and a director. I’m the editor, I write and she makes things happen in the real world.

EM: What is the most important lessons you have learned during the last three years?

MT: We have learned a lot about using the internet. Meg Tinsley, our director of Marketing and Public Relations, has helped a lot, with the newsletter andus get acquainted with bloggers. And our other intern Mary Lee helps with the social media.

It’s all an unfamiliar place for us, but it’s very hard to avoid the cyber side of things with a business, especially today.

My big ah-ha moment in all this has to do with learning my limits, and realizing that I can’t let go of my writing. It has to take up at least half my time, or I’ll go nuts. Sometimes when I have doubts, I ask myself “Is this what I quit my job for?”

Setting limits has been extremely important.

It’s just really hard, because I want to publish every writer, or even just help them. I want them to keep writing. Creativity is drying up in our natio; we are not creating, we are just consuming. I don’t want the voices of the world to go quiet even though I can’t give everyone a megaphone.

EM: Is there anything you would do differently now that you have three years of experience in growing a business that publishes good books?

MT: There’s nothing I would necessarily do differently. You have to take certain steps in a thing like this, and there’s no bypassing them.

We’ve had to revise our situation as we went along, and that experience has helped in the long run. We now know to avoid certain avenues, and those kinds of things are important.

EM: What is your plan for growth over the next five or six years?

MT: I would like to get into a situation where my work level is manageable, maybe doing four books a year or so. I really dislike time-pressure, because life is too short to have to worry about deadlines. That’s what graduate school was for.

I’d like to get to a place where I can find a good balance of my work and FUZE’s work. Balance is the most important word for me right now.

EM: If you were to fast forward five years from now, how will FUZE have changed?  Stayed the same?

MT: I’d like to build up a list of strong writers that have books that are still of interest to the public and are still being bought. Nothing big or glamorous, mostly more of the same, just more fine-tuned. That said, naturally I’d love a big success, mostly so we can launch further successes for everyone else, providing more potential for all of our authors. I’d also like to get the attention of the writing world, so a book of ours would immediately get attention as soon as it was published, instead of having to claw and bite to make that happen.

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Writer’s Cramp: In the E-Reader Era, a Book a Year is Slacking

On May 12, 2012 Julie Bosman of the New York Times reports on the rise of technology influencing (negatively) hard copy books.  What exactly does this mean?  With electronic book sales increasing rapidly, making book-lovers’ favorite pastime more convenient, hard-copy books are not necessary to lug around.  Pages do not need to be physically flipped, nor does a book-lover need an over-sized bag to carry multiple books at once: just in case one isn’t enough.

Kindle and Nook sales increased over 100% in 2011 to about $969 million.  Also in 2011, total book sales – electronic books, scholarly books, etc. – rose to about $11.6 billion.  Meanwhile pocket books decreased by about 36%.  They appear to be a category fading out and replaced by quality paperbacks or e-books.  According to Julie Bosman, “[Authors] are trying to satisfy impatient readers who have become used to downloading any e-book they want at the touch of a button, and the publishers who are nudging them toward greater productivity in the belief that the more their authors’ names are out in public, the bigger stars they will become.”  On a chain of readers to books, books to authors, and authors to publishers, technology/e-books has reduced the love in this chain and replaced love with convenience and stardom.

Although technology has significantly decreased book sales, it also provides benefits for e-readers: social media.  As Bosman suggests, the Internet allows readers to develop a more intimate relationship with their favorite authors, who they can follow through blogging, Twitter, and Facebook websites.  Also despite the stardom, which seems to be the main goal of authors, many authors do not just write digital-only stories for the money.  However the disproportional amount of revenue that authors do receive does cause some authors like Steve Berry, a popular thriller writer, “It does sap away some of your energy.  You don’t ever want to get into a situation where your worth is being judged by the amount of your productivity.”

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