April 27, 2006

Preventing Plagiarism – A Novel Idea

Having spent years in the publishing industry, I’ve been following the recent controversy about the young Harvard author, Kaavya Viswantahan, and the discovery that she had inadvertently plagiarized internalized content from author Megan McCafferty, who wrote Sloppy Firsts and Second Helpings for her own first novel, How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a Life

Viswantahan garnered a huge amount of publicity due to her age and the fact that her publisher, Little, Brown, paid her gobs of money for the book.

We blame the author. We blame the publisher. We blame the book packager, 17th Street Productions. But let’s stop looking at blame, and solve the problem! Here’s an idea – let’s let a big company with an already-existing huge presence online and lots of money scan all the books out there, index the content and make it freely searchable on the Web. Then, when a publishing house has a manuscript, they can pick a sampling of passages and run a search, to see if the verbiage has been previously published. And this whole mess can be avoided.

As an extremely profitable by-product of this effort, the publishers and owners of the scanned content can add links to purchase the book, either directly, or from booksellers, both chain stores and independent bookstores (the few that are left), based on the searcher’s ZIP code. Readers will be exposed to content they otherwise might not have found, and there will be a huge, new revenue stream for publishers!

Oh. Wait. Google has already tried to do that. And the publishers are suing them. Never mind.

April 02, 2005

New Children's Books

The other day, I got a hankering to go book shopping.  I really love the intimate experience of going to a nice bookstore, touching the books, taking my time, and chatting with the store owner. 

Oh I forgot - those stores are all gone now.  So I went to Barnes & Noble, which has all the intimacy of an airplane hangar, and spent most of my visit in the children's section.  I spent over a decade in publishing, and I love children's books.  Honestly, I thought that things were getting a bit stale and I was worried about the future children's publishing, with those tired old themes of diversity and world peace.  There's so much competition now from video games, reality TV and the Internet, and it's good to see that books for kids are becoming more exciting, up-to-date and interactive.  Here are some neat new ones that I spotted:

  • A Pop-up Book of Razors
  • My Touch and Feel Book: Let’s Visit the Junkyard
  • Tom the Touch-Me Priest
  • Jenny Gets a Training Bra
  • Orphans, Missing Moms and Dead Dads: A Disney Anthology
  • An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Nails, Screws and Tacks
  • Where Does that Burger Come From? A Teach-Me Book of Fast Food
  • Scratch-n-Sniff Book of Carcinogens
  • Marathon-Running for Growing Bodies
  • My First Book of Serial Killers: An Illustrated Encyclopedia
  • Social Security, Rain Forests and World Peace: Things That Won't Be Here When You Grow Up

The “When I Grow Up Series” teaches children about various occupations, by following fun cartoon characters and their daily adventures:

  • Phil the Phlebotomist
  • Marvin the Mortician
  • Matty the Moyel

The “My First Visit” Series prepares kids for their first trip to what could be difficult places. These books provide guidance and wisdom to help children with that first trip into new territory.

  • Grandma's Dead: My First Visit to the Funeral Home
  • A Burst Appendix: My First Visit to the Operating Room
  • Daddy Went to Jail: My First Visit to a Prison
  • Grandpa Doesn't Remember My Name: My First Visit to a Senior Citizen’s Home