Over a year ago I was laid off from a job that I had had for years. It was my third place of employment, and all of the jobs I had held had been offered to me. I had never had to look for a job, and didn't even have a resume. Luck had always been on my side. Well, left shivering out in the cold...ok fine it was June; it was like a bucket of ice water had been dumped on me. I put together a resume and started hitting the craigslist pavement (among many others). 8 months later I was able to find a job willing to take on a student's schedule. It was a huge learning experience; not just about how the job world works but about my family as well.
First, my grandmother is a card sender and phone chatter- email, not so much. I had called to thank her for this beautiful handwritten congrats card she sent me, and she started telling me about her job history. (Her desire to join the war effort, when the people at Arbach's told her she was pretty enough to be an elevator girl, her job as a lab tech, my grandfather starting in the mail room and working his way to management.)What emerged from this conversation was a look at the people my grandparents had been at my age.
Handwriting can inspire us to imagine a person's character, but their is something about the inflection in a voice that tells us so much more. I have since set out to film whatever memories my Nana wants to share. My grandparents are a living history book, and I thank them for every page.
Exploring how people connect with books and the written word in the digital age.
Monday, December 6, 2010
Book Sale Nuts
Every year the County library system has a giant book sale. They send all of the books they want to sell to one library. Hardcover books are a buck, paperbacks 50 cents, books on tape...dvds..cds...blah blah blah. Now a buck is still a good price for a book, but on the last day of the sale it gets crazy. In the last few hours, they will put out a bunch of pretty good sized cardboard boxes. You can fill it up with whatever you want and each box is a dollar. $1 for the ENTIRE box of stuff. Any deal like this gets people all hyped and crazy - turns out book people are no different. It was a frenzy of book and box grabbing. Great way to grab a book or two...or five hundred.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Digital Love Letter
A few days ago this article appeared as a link on MSN's homepage. Suckered in by many a catchy title, I clicked on whatever vague wording they came up with. I viewed the video, read the article, got to the end and was amazed at the cynics' comments. It seems that YouTube scams and promotions have jaded a great many people.
The way I see it: Guy misses Girl. Guy wants to take advantage of the small world we now live in. Buddies help make video for Girl. Guy wants Girl to stumble upon "love letter."
It's like a modern day message in a bottle, that is traveling across a sea that is both never-ending and yet neighborly. It's "handmade" in the digital age.
The way I see it: Guy misses Girl. Guy wants to take advantage of the small world we now live in. Buddies help make video for Girl. Guy wants Girl to stumble upon "love letter."
It's like a modern day message in a bottle, that is traveling across a sea that is both never-ending and yet neighborly. It's "handmade" in the digital age.
Digital Doodles
Wow, it seems that a few people had something to say about cursive writing. I would say the vote is that cursive should still be taught in schools.
But what about books?
With the explosion of the digital age, ebooks or etextbooks are much more common. You don't have to haul around 35 lbs. of books as you hike across campus. You don't have to worry about getting that crappy used copy, although much cheaper, that somebody doodled to death and used every color highlighter known to humankind. You get a perfect copy that you can access digitally.
Yeah, you can sometimes type notes in the margins and user a highlighter function. Yeah, you don't have all that dead weight. But call me old fashioned, I like a copy that I can hold in my hands. I'm a tactial doodler who likes to handwrite my notes. Whenever I have a reading assignment that's accessed online, I always find myself wanting to print it. I find it easier to whip out a few pieces of paper from my bag that I can read anywhere. So what are your thoughts on the subject?
But what about books?
With the explosion of the digital age, ebooks or etextbooks are much more common. You don't have to haul around 35 lbs. of books as you hike across campus. You don't have to worry about getting that crappy used copy, although much cheaper, that somebody doodled to death and used every color highlighter known to humankind. You get a perfect copy that you can access digitally.
Yeah, you can sometimes type notes in the margins and user a highlighter function. Yeah, you don't have all that dead weight. But call me old fashioned, I like a copy that I can hold in my hands. I'm a tactial doodler who likes to handwrite my notes. Whenever I have a reading assignment that's accessed online, I always find myself wanting to print it. I find it easier to whip out a few pieces of paper from my bag that I can read anywhere. So what are your thoughts on the subject?
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