Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

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Oh, Say Can You Say?

Love the book True Grit. Fantastic dialogue. Even those who’ve only seen the movie are inclined to comment on the manner of speech.

It’s partly because our language is disappearing.

The OMGs and LOLs are contributing, no doubt, but words were becoming a problem long before cellphones and texting. We can’t say long words anymore. I don’t know if we’re unable to mouth them, or just don’t have the time.

One of the latest of the bothersome abbreviations: APP. There have been any number of comics strips in the newspaper touching on it. Pickles, the grandfatherly strip carried daily in the Tulsa World had its main character remark that he’d seen so many commercials about “an app for that,” that he had to lay down and take “an app.” Naps notwithstanding, there is confusion among the non-techs about the meaning.

Application. Say it. Application. It does take a little longer, and in the commercial it would have been impossible to repeat over and over “there’s an application for that.”

As a language lover, I find it is troublesome to lose words over fads, products, or altered perceptions. Application has become App, at least in this application.

Cellular phones became cells. With further abbreviation they turned into cels. Lose a pesky L. Facsimile machines became faxes. We used to have medications, now just meds. The Miami Hurricanes became the ‘Canes. Florida Seminoles? The ‘Noles. The temperatures got too extreme and became temps. Where amused responses once ruled, there is merely an 😉 .

Kristen Glover touts her Dad’ll-Do-It!’s car dealership at “I-44 Memorial.” The intersection disappeared. It is no longer at I-44 AND Memorial. Anywhere we can lose a word or a syllable or two – apparently, we must.

ROFL.

Therein lies the guilty pleasure of True Grit. It is set in the late 1800’s, when people still enjoyed the eloquence of conversation, sentences filled with words of the literate in quantities sufficient enough to require commas. There was nothing else to do back then but listen to the speaker, and speak they did.

Download the book, if you must. There’s an App for that. Let’s read.

Yawna? (Do you want to?)

Are Books Dead?

I get asked the question often. The word dead isn’t always put forward, but the intent is the same, and the conversation is posed by people who have a genuine concern.

Book and Reader

Paper or Plastic: the Future of Book Publishing

More than ever, I am certain that there are people who are firmly committed to holding a parcel of paper and ink to read the words on the page. I am advised regularly that “I just can’t read a book on a screen.” On the other hand, there are people sitting in cars in the parking lot in front of this bookstore every day, caught up in electronics.

The Kindle, Nook, and iPads are not going away.

This, I believe, more than any other media change, defines the generations. Video games created some chalk-outlines into which some people fit and others did not – games, though, don’t appeal to everyone. Others grow out of them – for whatever reason.

The book survival question is important only to readers. There are plenty of folks with iPads who use them as yet another gaming device, and would have absolutely no reason to download a novel.

Readers will decide. Already there are fence-sitters, those comfortable with the technology, who embrace novelty and change, who have grown up in front of a screen and consider it as an obvious method for receiving education or entertainment. The fence-sitters can weigh one against the other, the plastic or paper dilemma, and make a decision.

My prediction is that in later years, there will be no fence-sitters. Those who are learning to read in this era will have no reservations regarding the screen and will view the book as an outdated delivery system. The landline telephone is in the same boat, and any surviving dial-phones (they were before touch-tones, as they were initially called…) will simply be held as oddities.

Books will continue to be published.

As long as there are wealthy politicians, film stars, and the occasional literary genius writing books, there will be a desire to have a physical copy of the work. It’s just not the same downloading your book to show it to friends and family. Regardless of the reading method, books are impressive on their own merit. They may not be produced in the quantity as today’s publishing totals, which are already low by comparison to previous years, but some will find their way onto UPS trucks from Amazon warehouses. Maybe by then, they’ll be so small as to be called warehuts.

As for the long-term prospect – I believe the book will take its place as an art form, like sculpture or paintings, and those who are appreciative of the media will collect them where possible, or visit them in museums.

Those places we currently call libraries.

It’s Official: Tulsa to lose a Borders

Cutting a third of their locations, Borders officials will have a tough time sparing cities and book lovers used to browsing the stacks.

The list of closings, on the heels of the Borders bankruptcy filing, was released Wednesday afternoon and includes two Oklahoma stores. The Tulsa location at 81st and Yale will be shuttered, along with an Oklahoma City location on Northwest Expressway.

The Tulsa store #264, occupies some 25,000 square feet in a free-standing building just northeast of the intersection. Officials have said that closings will begin as early as Saturday.

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