‘Neats’ and ‘scruffies’ in AI research.
Emily Dickinson is not an AI… yet.
Happy birthday to poet Tess Gallagher, wife of the somewhat overrated minimalist writer, Raymond Carver.
This article talks about various ways of protecting bookstores, with American versions being mostly ad hoc strategies that frequently fail and also fail to say: Bookstores are a public good and the public good has a price.
The anti-tax extremists have so commandeered the national conversation that we cannot admit aloud that there is a price to be paid (usually in the form of taxes) for the kind of society we truly want (in the broad strokes, Americans may sketch out a Randian dystopia, but once one drills down into the details, the picture is far more New Deal-esque).
Just to bring attention to a particular line in the article about the French law that helps secure the future of literary culture in France:
We have failed to properly explain how it is that something can ‘transcend market value.’ Though the right wing may have cornered the conversation of religious principles, it is the right wing’s rapacious economic arguments that have blinded us to the truth of things greater than monetary self-interest and bookstores are just one casualty.
This article asked a bunch of folks about the books they have re-read numerous times over their lives. Naturally, many a young adult or children’s books.
For me, it’s probably Tolkien’s Middle Earth novels, from The Hobbit through The Return of the King. Though the latter is the one Middle Earth novel I have re-read the least (including The Silmarillion) because the ending is just damn sad and hard to get through. All that struggle, just to come back and find that your home has been warped into a nightmare of the early industrial age (of course, Tolkien was capturing was he felt coming back from the Great War to a pastoral England that had changed while he was away). But I can still read The Hobbit over and over and hear those opening descriptions of what a hobbit hole is (and is not).
E-books might be killing books, but that’s okay, because a different of something dash book will come along and kill e-books, so it’s all okay, don’t you see? No? Me, neither.
E-books cost money to make and don’t fool yourself into thinking otherwise.
When all else fails, count on the French to save literary culture (again).