25 October 2007

'The Librarians' is coming

Starting next Wednesday 31st October at 9:30 pm this new comedy on ABC is set in a public library. Frances O'Brien (Robyn Butler) is the highly-strung Head Librarian of the Middleton Interactive Learning Centre, and is completely insensitive to the needs of her eclectic group of employees and the public in general.

Immersed in planning for Book Week, her focus is diverted when her ex-best friend and nemesis, Christine Grimwood (Roz Hammond) applies for the Children's Librarian's position. While completely unsuitable, Christine desperately needs a responsible job before fronting court on drug trafficking charges. Frances refuses but soon finds herself forced to hire Christine.

It will be interesting to see how accurately libraries and librarians are portrayed. The reviews so far have been positive. Debi Enker this morning on 774 raved over it.

24 October 2007

Books rule

In an earlier post I commented on the fact that travelling by public transport was a way to spy on what Joe Public is reading. Harry Potter remains a favourite. In the past few days I have observed fellow commuters reading Harry Potter volumes 4, 5 & 7. Other popular titles include the latest Nicci French and university textbooks. Paperback detective novels remains favourite as do fantasy novels. My reading varies according to mood.

It is good to see also those who spell doom for books and reading being proved wrong. Sure there are numerous passengers plugged into the their MP3 players and others tapping away on their laptops but there are still substantial numbers reading books. Have MP3 listeners and laptop tappers abandoned reading? I suspect not. They either still read books or never did anyway.

The doomsayers forget the convenience of the traditional book format. It doesn't need batteries and the technology is almost fail safe. The price of books has come down over the years and one can always borrow them. There are no ridiculous, restrictive licencing agreements attached. You an read them at the beach or on the park and they are much easier on the eye than electronic formats.

Funny books on trains

This morning I was reading on the train as usual. The passage was very funny and I started chuckling. Interesting to observe the reactions of fellow passengers. Curiosity mostly but some seemed to think I was nuts. I must do it more often. For those of you who want to know the book was 'Trick or Treat' by Kerry Greenwood.

03 October 2007

iPod

I've put in my order for a new iPod so I can store more podcasts and talking books. I have a nano but the storage capacity is limited so I want to upgrade to the new 160 GB. There is a delay but I'm not impatient. The store is getting frustrated because they have customers who are nagging them for a time-frame. Now a load of 340 has been stolen from a courier depot. Apple have very successfully marketed their new product and demand is exceeding supply.

I love using these devices for talking books, so much less cumbersome than CDs and once you have read/listened to the book you can delete it. Great for long walks and for when the train is packed and it's difficult to read a book and hang on to whatever to maintain your balance. The podcasts from the ABC & BBC are great. I hope they don't start charging for them.

Stereotyping books and readers

It's funny how we assume that a particular author or book will appeal to a specific group of readers. This morning while spying on my fellow passengers on the 7:00 to the city I observed a middle-aged balding gent reading Stephanie Laurens 'The Power of Seduction'. Somehow I had assumed that this would be read more by female readers, although not my taste. the I thought about the book I'm reading at the moment. 'In Search of Africa' by Frank Coates is probably more often read by male readers so I should have know.

Spying on the reading habits of other commuters is quite interesting. You not only observe what people are reading but whether or not they are borrowing from libraries. If libraries are interested in marketing their 'brand' then a distinctive label on the cover (back or front) would be seen numerous people daily. Every time a commuter reads a library item on public transport it will be seen by other commuters just like branded shopping bags.