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"The Future of the Book"

9 Comments -

1 – 9 of 9
Blogger QUASAR9 said...

lol Bee,
hard not to use what has been said before, or to quote famous people who have said it ...
would we have to give up writing
would we have to give up maths if we could not use the numbers 1 to 9 and zero (cero or nought 0).
Ancient science fiction?

3:11 PM, September 16, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Bee,

that's really a quite unique method to write a non-fiction book ;-).

I have read the prefaces of many books, and never come across something similar... For some reason, I always start with the preface, and often, that's all what I read in a book, but in most cases because I get distracted, not because the preface dissuades me from continuing.

In this case, It probalby would ;-)...

Cheers, Stefan

6:05 PM, September 16, 2007

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi all,

I recomend:
Bill Bryson: "A Short History of Nearly Everything".

For the pro and the amateur alike.

Best

Klaus

6:07 PM, September 16, 2007

Blogger Rae Ann said...

The guy should have just written a blog. ;-) (making a jab at myself more than anyone else)

12:51 PM, September 17, 2007

Blogger QUASAR9 said...

Hi Bee, This is Watt?

4:05 PM, September 17, 2007

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Quasar:

hard not to use what has been said before, or to quote famous people who have said it ...

Well, if we start writing books without even bothering what has been said before, we will sooner or later do nothing else than just repeating the same circles again and again. If we don't take care to pass on relevant information, the system will lose its memory. As I've mentioned before in The Right not to Know badly organized information is essentially useless information. Best,

B.

12:18 PM, September 18, 2007

Blogger amaragraps said...

Klaus, I suspect that Bryson has picked up that idea from this older classic: The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody by Will Cuppy.

Highly recommended! :-)

4:45 PM, September 18, 2007

Blogger Nathaniel said...

Hi there -
I am currently on page 210 of the book. I find it hard to read, but the fact that he wrote the book in the manner he did, was of interest as I wanted to get a fresh insight into some form of economics.

What can I say? I was bored, so I went to Borders one day and found it. If you can migrate through the numerous analogies and whatnot, you might end up liking the book, despite the fact that it is a hard read.

Regards

3:29 AM, October 06, 2007

Anonymous a quantum diaries survivor said...

Hi Bee,

I have always thought -I'm such a snob- that for a book, being read by me is a privilege, not to be granted to anything! My CPU is a rather scarce resource (and it's decreasing as we speak), so some management overview is necessary.

So I perfectly concur that a threshold has to be set - and the threshold may well be the interest that the few first lines of a preface arise.

Cheers,
T.

6:24 AM, February 14, 2008

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