A bit late in the day on this beautiful cover for The Book of Fathers by Miklós Vámos… The collage is by Swedish artist Nicole Natri. The design is by John Gall. Lovely stuff.
And on the subject of book design, I recently stumbled on The Jacket Museum an AMAZING book cover blog curated by Ferran Lopez, a book designer at Random House Mondadori in Spain. With this and The Covered Up Blog now up and running, I might as well pack up my bags and go home…
Comrade Stalin Calling — Will Self on playwright and author Mikhail Bulgakov in The Guardian:
On 18 April 1930, Mikhail Bulgakov ate his lunch in his Moscow flat and then lay down for his customary nap. However, he was soon roused by the telephone ringing, and shortly after that his second wife, Lyuba, came in to tell him that someone from the Central Committee (of the Communist party) wished to speak to him. Bulgakov assumed it was a malicious trick of some kind – such things were common at that time, a grimly antic precursor of the persecutions to come – but when he picked up the handset he heard a voice say, “Mikhail Afanasyevich Bulgakov?” and, when he affirmed this, “Comrade Stalin will talk to you now”.
Bulgakov’s novels The Heart of a Dog and (of course) The Master and the Margarita are wonderful. His play The White Guard is currently being performed at the National Theatre in London.
Metadata is Marketing — Craig Riggs on why publishers need to improve their metadata:
[W]e’re… discovering books in very new ways. For one thing, our filters are shifting. Newspaper review sections are shrinking, and there are fewer independent bookstores hand-selling books. But it’s the Internet that is really moving the needle on book discovery: the Web is where we go to find out about things, and increasingly it’s where we go to find books… This is more than a change in behaviour. It also marks a sea change in book marketing. It used to be that the press release or catalogue was the foundation of the marketing plan. No more. Now it’s the metadata: the title information that publishers send out into the world about their books.
And finally…
The Cult of Busy — Scott Berkun, author of The Myths of Innovation and Confessions of a Public Speaker, on time management:
I choose not to say Yes to everything. For to do so would make me too busy, and I think, less effective at what my goals are. I always want to have some margin of my time in reserve, time I’m free to spend in any way I choose, including doing almost nothing at all. I’m free to take detours. I’m open to serendipity. Some of the best thinkers throughout history had some of their best thoughts while going for walks, playing cards with friends, little things things that generally would not be considered the hallmarks of busy people. It’s the ability to pause, to reflect, and relax, to let the mind wander, that’s perhaps the true sign of time mastery, for when the mind returns it’s often sharper and more efficient, but most important perhaps, happier than it was before.
What you bring to the table is next to none. Keep trucking. You bring goodness to my day.
I own an advanced reader copy of The Book of Fathers by other press. Unfortunately my verson features a low rez shot of that lovely collage. I need to snag the actual copy from Other press’ booth at the Expo this year. I always raid their shelf, what with all the covers by Carin, Chip and John gracing the shelves…
The quote on busy-ness (in business?) is spot on. It is during the times when we do nothing that things actually happen: like the body, the mind needs rest.