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Wild Blue Yonder
Okanagan InstituteOkanagan Institute Outlook
Okanagan Institute
Making Book
Okanagan Arts
INSIDER SECRETS OF PUBLISHING
Okanagan Arts
» Tuesday 24 August 2010 | 5 pm
» Hooked on Books, 225 Main Street, Penticton

An informal afternoon hour showcasing ideas and people in the Okanagan creative economy. Join us as publishing experts and entrepreneurs explore the rapidly changing publishing landscape and how writers can benefit from emerging markets and new technology.

» $2 at the door. Refreshments will be available.
» Seating is limited, please reserve yours HERE


Insider Secrets of Independent Publishing Success Revealed

With the rise of print-on-demand technology and traditional publishers focusing too much on a few authors, more authors are choosing the independent publishing option. At the same time, the book as a product is changing, in a way analogous to how music changed from something packaged, to a file on a computer or mobile device. In a mournful eulogy to the book and to the bookstore, Sven Birkets of the Wall Street Journal wrote: "What is disappearing, with the speed of ink drying on a folio leaf, is the public profile of books, our sense of their literal and symbolic presence. We have all seen what is happening to libraries, as increasing numbers of them put their funds to digital use, moving books up, up and away from what used to be the central ports of access - the reading rooms - to make more room for monitors."

The most obvious quality that sets books apart from other media is the amount of human thought, skill and sheer hard work invested in each title, whether it's successful or not, whether it's published by a major publisher, by a small or niche publisher, or by the writer. This is bound up with the fact that the creation, production and marketing of books operates on a slower rhythm and a longer time-scale than other print media, and especially than the jump-cut, day-to-day busyness of the electronic media. Unable to provide instant gratification, books must insert themselves into the public sphere in a different way. Some of the book's attraction to readers arises from this sense that reading books offers an opportunity for more sustained thought - or escape - than can be found in a world of ephemera, surfaces and spin.

On the other hand, the new era of books may actually see more authors, more reading, and more books being bought and sold. Books are just the next in a long line of media changing from analog physical carrier to digital file storage. We know what it's like when things lose their physical attributes and the scarcity related to it. So far, it's proven to be one of the best things that can happen to something we love.

On Tuesday, August 24th at 5 pm the alternate weekly Okanagan Institute Outlook series at Hooked on Books in Penticton presents Making Book: Insider Secrets of Publishing. Join us as publishing experts and entrepreneurs explore the rapidly changing publishing landscape and how writers can benefit from emerging markets and new technology.

David KorinetzOkanagan InstituteDavid Korinetz was born in Winnipeg, and grew up on a diet of Marvel comic books and Edgar Rice Burrows novels. In the seventies, even after Tolkien's great work, both Fantasy and Science Fiction were still considered grade B stuff, until George Lucas changed the status of Science Fiction forever with Star Wars. Suddenly the genre was in vogue and marketable. In 2002 he enrolled in a Writer's Digest correspondence course. It was a choice that changed his life. His instructor was Steven F. Havill, who taught him things like what point of view meant, why horses don't crawl, that stories have plots, and more importantly, how to make an outline. Armed with this new knowledge, David spent the next two years writing the first draft of his first book, FireDrakes, and began his journey into the world of publishing. Besides continuing to write, David now operates Red Tuque Books which distributes independently-published books to independent book sellers and library services across Canada.

Robert MacDonaldRobert MacDonald has had a long and distinguished career in publishing. He was the Director of the Publishing Workshops at the University of Toronto and the Banff Centre for fifteen years. He was a founder of the Canadian Periodical Publishers Association and the Graphic Arts in the Public Service Foundation. He has consulted for - and started - book, magazine and hybrid media publishing companies in Canada and the US. He is the Publisher in Residence at Okanagan College and the Director of the Okanagan Institute.

In his presentation, MacDonald shows how the digital technology that has transformed every type of publishing over the past couple of decades has also radically reduced the economic and temporal barriers to publishing books. He presents a straight-forward program that allows writers and publishers to create high-quality books, find a ready market and not break the bank. He maintains, "Many writers hanker for the time when books and their authors, with publishers as their gatekeepers, could set the terms of public debate. Those days are mostly gone. Books today are only part of a vast, deep and diverse matrix of cultural products. The question that now faces the book industry (and the individuals that empower and depend on it - writers, editors, designers, publishers, marketers and sellers) is how to make a future for itself in this rapidly changing landscape."

FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO REGISTER ONLINE CLICK HERE

Express
Making Book: Insider Secrets of Publishing takes place at Hooked on Books, 225 Main Street, Penticton. This is the 9th event the Okanagan Institute has held there, and the 165nd public presentation offered in the Okanagan since 2007.
Outlook is hosted by Robert MacDonald. The Institute has played host to many Okanagan luminaries, including former deputy secretary general of Amnesty International Derek Evans, artists Lee Claremont and Gary Pearson, BC Book Award nominee Don Gayton, CBC Literary prize winner poet Harold Rhenisch, distinguished editor and author Jim Taylor, poet laureate and professor John Lent, creative entrepreneur Nikos Theodosakis, animator and filmmaker Jim Cliffe, community activist Don Elzer, dancer David LaHay, architect Jim Meiklejohn, culinary artist and writer Heidi Noble, broadcaster Marion Barschel and many others from a wide range of creative fields.



Okanagan InstituteOkanagan Institute
The Okanagan Institute is a group of creative professionals that have gathered around the goal of providing events, publications and services of interest to enquiring minds in the Okanagan. We partner with individuals, organizations, institutions and businesses to achieve optimal creative and social impact.
Our mission is to ignite cultural transformation, catalyze collaborative action, build networks and foster sustainable creative enterprises. We invite the participation by all members of the creative community.


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