I've been promising to update you on my current online adventures for awhile now. Truth be told I've probably been a bit of a tease. But today I am following through.
This week celebrates my fifth week working for the State Library of Victoria in their Centre for Youth Literature (CYL). My role as Program Coordinator encompasses many things from conferences, youth days, professional development and a whole heap of online content. I may not be posting reviews on PSnark anymore but I will be posting them elsewhere. (However, PSnark will continue to host discussion posts and the odd event recap. I've also been asked to construct a series on Australian authors and that will be underway shortly.)
Where can you find me on the web?
Read Alert blog - this is the Centre for Youth Literature blog. Beware it looks a little antiquated but that will change from March. My team will be posting updates on Australian YA, reviews and a lot of new content. I am currently attempting to post every other day and the most recent post is on romance in YA - Love, Romance & Broken Noses.
Inside A Dog - CYL's website has been an ongoing fixture of Australia's YA content but required an overhaul as technology moved ahead. Good news - as of March 08 Inside A Dog will be launched in all of its sparkly brilliance. I am already signed up to contribute reviews under SnarkyWench. Teens and readers in general can create a profile and volunteer reviews on YA titles new and old. Think Goodreads but groovier, younger and much more about peers recommending good reads (pun unintentional). There is professional content for teachers and teacher librarians (and trust me as an educator, its amazing) as well as a writer's in residence program. Each month a new author is spotlighted and contributes three (or more) posts per week over their time on a range of subjects. Previous contributors have been John Green, Scott Westerfeld, Justine Larbalestier, Melina Marchetta, Simmone Howell, Penni Russon, etc
As for me, I shall be manning the Inside A Dog blog with competitions, interviews, spotlighted reviewers, book gossip, interactive discussions and a whole host of other things. While the website isn't up for another three weeks you can hit the link and enter your email address to be advised when it's open to the public. It's pretty, it's awesome and you will love it.
CYL e-newsletter
This little puppy is send out every second month and contains links to our reviews of Australian and international titles, upcoming events and important news. It's very simple to subscribe and we won't inundate you with emails. And yes, I will be creating content and writing reviews for this too :)
Twitter
I am also manning the two twitter feeds for Inside A Dog website @insideadog and our general organisation feed @youthliterature should you be interested.
So hopefully that answers your queries (thanks for the emails) about where to find more Adele YA-content.
Wednesday, 16 February 2011
Sunday, 13 February 2011
Book Blogger Controversy...again?
The bloggerdom must be pretty bored at the moment as there has been controversy after controversy these past few weeks. I’ve been asked to contribute my thoughts in response to claims last week by a self-published author that bloggers are lacking in objectivity and professionalism etc etc.
While I could give my thoughts in similar lines to last week’s post on the viewpoint that book blogger’s don’t sell books…I won’t. Ultimately writing blogs and reading blogs come down to one singular thing. Choice. You choose to read them or you don’t. You choose to read worthy blogs or you don’t. You choose to paint all book bloggers with the same brush or you don’t. You choose to flame others based on your own subjectivity or you don’t. Objectivity has nothing to do with reviewing, blogging or flaming. Everyone can provide reasoning for their choices but that doesn’t mean they are correct.
I often get caught up into the negativity that surrounds the dregs of book blogging. It takes up much more time than I have to give and it doesn’t have any bearing on my personal blogging. Except when I blog about it. You see I’ve chosen to harp on and on about it numerous times. It’s time for me to let it go.
The only thing in life (and blogging) we can control is ourselves. Our choices. I choose not to read blogs lacking in a voice or that present memes and contests as their only point of view. I choose to read bloggers that are passionate, strongly voice their perspectives and pitch books that are worthy of a readership.
Authors have no power over what a reviewer writes but they do over their reaction. Similarly a blogger has no control over an author’s reaction to their reviews. This is where professionalism comes into play – side with the person who demonstrates the most integrity. The individual that wrote a review justifying their opinions or the person flaming someone for not appreciating their work and blanketing an entire community with a broad stroke. Who showed the most finesse in this situation?
I would argue no one did in the outcry following. It got messy and emotional and stirred the anger of many. This is the primary reason I choose not to write anything about this situation in the days immediately following. It has happened before, it will happen again. But there is a fine line between having the right to speak your thoughts and be attacked when another doesn’t agree with them. Ugliness abounded this issue. Even some commenters, with who I agreed, were particularly noxious in the way they chastised the author in question. It made me feel a little dirty - there’s a huge difference between righteous, well expressed debate and outright hatefulness. While the author was a little sheltered in her ideas, she didn’t deserve the barrage of tut-tuts she received either.
Authors can’t control what a reviewer writes but they can influence the decision on which bloggers receive their books. Whether it be identifying a selection of bloggers who might respond favourably (and with influence) to their work and presenting that to their publisher or asking that a specific blogger not receive a copy. Perhaps ask that a marketing campaign not target bloggers as they are unprofessional (if you feel that way). I would be curious to see if this was a position the author held before or after her work was critically examined. Regardless the author wasn’t reviewed by a blogger lacking skills; in fact she received a critical yet not unkind review. It’s a pity the author didn’t show the same restraint towards the blogging community and the reviews in question.
What is becoming more and more apparent to me is that bloggers who receive ARCs need to be identified specifically for each title. (I understand this creates work, which takes time, which costs money but it’s an idea). Until there is a more selective approach to who receives ARCs we will continue to have these issues. Sure authors might continue to feel betrayed by less than positive reviews regardless but good marketing is knowing your audience. (Had the reviewers bought the author’s book then this is beside the point.) Until publicity departments stop seeing all book bloggers as the same, we will continue to be seen in entirety as the lesser of ourselves.
There are more and more book bloggers coming into the community with every week. Fantastic! But with that come thousands of different subjective perspectives, genres preferences and specific issues. The controversies of the past fortnight point to a larger issue – the community and its sheer volume. A year ago there were murmurings that there should be blogger guidelines, rules if you will. But that was never going to happen. Who has the right to tell you what is right for your blog? No one does. It’s not the answer.
But there are standards of decency. Reading Lindsey Leavitt’s post about a specific person (who identified themselves as a blogger) simply horrified me. But that happens to be a person without common sense or any freaking clue…who also happens to be a blogger. Had I been the publicist nearby (there would have been), I would have written that name down and removed them from EVERY list known to man. Authors can be generous, warm and delightful, they can choose not to be. The same can be said for bloggers. All publishers aren’t the same, all agents aren’t the same and neither are all public restrooms. There are many pizzerias, not all of them can make a great pie. I am a YA blogger, as is Lenore from Presenting Lenore*. The only thing we have in common in regards to our book blogs... is that we blog. She likes dystopian, I like contemporary. She lives in Germany, I live in Australia. She’s married, I am not. She loves cats, I am allergic to them. She doesn’t get Jellicoe Road, I don’t get Before I Fall. I could go on and on. What Lenore and I do have in common is a love of books, a sense of decency in the way we interact with our blogging brethren and author community and a love of Dexter and Mad Men. I might be over simplifying but to be honest, I am making this more complex that those that throw blanket statements of unprofessionalism and accusations of worthlessness.
*Lenore chosen randomly.
As for the claim of unprofessional behaviour, bloggers aren’t. Professional implies it be a profession (aka job) and a salary. Bloggers will tell you that the hours are like a job and the payoff doesn’t come in the form of a pay check. I will speak for myself as I’ve chosen to talk specifics – in the height of my YA blogging days I was devoting 40 hours per week to my blog between reading, writing, emailing, interviewing and networking. That’s a full time position. The only thing guiding me was my own ethics and standards that directed my choices in reviewing and my behaviour toward others.
I am not saying I am an angel. But I think I’ve mostly made good choices. Choices that I can stand by.
In the end that’s all you’ve got.
And I think a few bad ones were made this week.
Opinions expressed here are my own and do not represent my employer's stance.
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