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How can we combat the greed and misperception that perpetuate e-reading illiteracy?

1 Mar

When I ask someone if they read e-books, I usually get some version of that meme about “the smell and feel” of a “real” book. But when I show someone an e-reader they say,  Wow!  When I pull my e-reader out in a public place to read, it always attracts attention and I happily answer questions and show people how easy it is to use. Very few people know what an e-reader looks like or how to acquire an e-book and read it. And that’s a shame, because there are so many free digital repositories of knowledge and great literature. After helping find e-reading solutions for a woman who’d given up reading because she was paralyzed but for the minimal use of one hand, I realized promoting e-reading literacy could be life changing on many levels for a wide range of people.

I teamed up with author Shara Lanel to arrange public demonstrations of e-reading in places where readers gather. In approaching book sellers and libraries about working through them, I couldn’t land one yes to the idea. I think with time, education and persuasion I can change that.

In some instances a lack of knowledge and fear of something new motivated the resistance. In other cases greed and the battle to control the market barred the doors. I’m not here to name names or point fingers. I don’t think that’s how to solve this problem. I’m on a crusade to educate readers about e-reading and the muliple options for reading e-books. I’m planning to have demos at fairs and festivals during the spring and summer. I’ll be doing an e-reading workshop this fall with some other authors. I’m not normally a put-yourself-out-there person, but I’m passionate about this cause.

I’m not the only e-reading crusader. Read an E-Book Week, March 7-13th is an annual event to promote e-reading, started by Rita Y. Toews. You can visit the event’s central website for a list of other activites planned. To celebrate Read an E-Book Week I’ll be blogging on e-reading and e-readers March 1-15. I’ll have guest bloggers joining me to promote the cause. The official twitter hashtag for e-book week is #ebookweek. Tweet about the e-books you’re reading and events you’re participating in.

If that isn’t enough to make you bounce in your chair and shout hallelujah, I’ve got the coolest prizes to give away. I put mini e-libraries on one gig flash drives and installed an e-reading program right on the drive. All you have to do is plug the drive into the USB port on your PC and you have all you need to start e-reading. I’ll include links to resources for e-books on the flash drive and install a mini-browser that runs from the drive, so you can use it to download more books. I’ll hold a drawing to give away one flash drive each day during read an e-book week. All you have to do to enter is leave a comment on my blog or sign up for my E-Book Evolution newsletter. You get one entry in the contest for each relevant comment at the blog (no spamming the comments for extra entries) and one more entry if you sign up for the newsletter.

I was thrilled when I learned my novel, The Tiger’s Tale, will be released March 12th during Read an E-Book Week.  I’ll include a free copy of my book on every drive I give away and some great reads from some of my favorite authors.

The next e-reading post is about the launch of my E-Book Evolution newsletter, so put this URL in your feed reader and get ready for two weeks of e-book fun.

If you’re as passionate about e-reading literacy as I am, please get in touch. I’d love to brainstorm ideas about how we can promote e-reading. If you’re doing something to promote e-reading literacy, let me know and I’ll promote your efforts here.

How long until pigs fly?

21 Feb

be khe on Flickr

The day when pigs fly might not be as far ahead of us as the day when humans first flew is behind us. The real question might be, will humans create a flying pig or will pigs create their own method of flight.

The following are realities:

Chinese scientists at the Shanghai Second Medical University in 2003 successfully fused human cells with rabbit eggs. The embryos were reportedly the first human-animal chimeras successfully created. They were allowed to develop for several days in a laboratory dish before the scientists destroyed the embryos to harvest their stem cells.

In Minnesota last year researchers at the Mayo Clinic created pigs with human blood flowing through their bodies.

Animal-Human Hybrids Spark Controversy

The Mouse Transplant Experiments

As part of the research leading to the isolation of human brain stem cells, Weissman, Uchida and other colleagues at the firm StemCells Inc. began transplanting human brain stem cells into the brains of SCID mice with normal murine brains. (SCID mice were again used to avoid an immune system attack on the human cells.) The human brain stem cells were placed in a brain structure called the lateral ventricle, which, in mice, connects to their brains’ quite large olfactory bulbs. Weissman’s group was able to show that the human neuronal stem cells engrafted in a brain stem cell niche called the subventricular zone, near the injections. Those cells also migrated to a second niche, the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. In these niches the human cells divided and many of them migrated toward the olfactory bulb (Tamaki et al. 2002; Uchida et al. 2000). Samples of the brains of these mice showed that the human neurons had survived and had connected to the mouse brain.

Thinking About the Human Neuron Mouse

The last quote is from a paper discussing the ethics of chimera research and how it should be regulated. I would have thought the time to regulate would have been before the research began. I don’t think you can unbite this apple. I wonder if I would if I could.

I wonder what will happen to animals with human brains? How will they be treated? Will any have a human level of intelligence and consciousness? How will we know? What happens to humans if they one day lose their status as the smartest animal on the planet?

When I started doing research on genetics to find a somewhat plausible premise to build my Tiger’s Tale therianthrope characters around, I did not expect to discover human animal chimera already exist. A portion of my fiction had already become reality.

I suppose I was still trying to process how I feel about the idea as I wrote the story. At one point a female character is imprisoned in tiger form, her human awareness intact. It was done for her own good and without consent. What she endures could save her race from extinction. These are not things she knows or understands. It was interesting to look at the struggle in each character’s mind as beings who were both human and animal struggled with their feelings about the ethics of the  chimera research.

I don’t know how objective I can be about this idea. I’m not picking a side. I’m asking questions. I’m asking you to ask questions. As I interpret the discussions I’ve read, some of the researchers feel that if you leave human tissue out of the animal brain, there is no ethical problem. Others feel a small percentage of the brain can be human without conflict. Still others worry that you elevate the moral status (elevate the moral status???)of the research subject by inserting human tissue into the brain. What percent human does an animal have to be to acquire the rights and status of a human. If you have a human body but animal brain, you’re not human? If you have a goat body and human brain you are? Many of these researchers resist the idea that ethics are a concern here, say that the conflict arises out of our inappropriate attribution of human emotions to animals. They maintain this research is necessary to cure disease and end suffering. They insist idea of producing an animal who can think and experience the world at a human level of consciousness through this type of experimentation is about as likely as tigers that can turn themselves into people, or as likely pigs flying. Maybe.

Maybe.

This used to be the stuff of imagination:

For my own part, I declare I know nothing whatever about it, but looking at the stars always makes me dream, as simply as I dream over the black dots representing towns and villages on a map. Why, I ask myself, shouldn’t the shining dots of the sky be as accessible as the black dots on the map of France?— Vincent van Gogh, 1889.

Space Quotations: Seeing The Future in Space quotes

In van Gogh’s time, they would have said that’s crazy.  In our time, space exploration has progressed to the point that most of us agree traveling to the stars will be a given in the not too distant future.

As to pigs flying…what do you think?

This was written in repsonse to the Sunday Scribblings Prompt: When Pigs Fly. Click here to see what other Sunday Scribblers wrote.

If you’d like to read an excerpt from my novel, The Tiger’s Tale, you can find it here. The release date for The Tiger’s Tale is March 12th, and you will be able to purchase a copy here.

The Fantasies That Keep Us Going

21 Jan

thetigerstale_msr

I began my journey with The Tiger’s Tale at the end of January, 2008. I attached my story to a contest entry form, took a deep breath for courage and hit send. I was hoping for useful feedback and was stunned by a win. Winning was a start, but there was a long trek between the win and landing a publishing contract.

When I’m running in a long distance race, I use mental tricks to get myself through the tough spots, those places where I don’t believe I can put one foot in front of the other one more time. I might visualize the clock as I cross the finish line, or imagine a handsome volunteer hanging a finisher’s medal around my neck. I can’t believe some of the miseries I’ve endured for the sake of a finisher’s medal.

I got the author’s version of a finisher’s medal yesterday — my first book cover. Nice!