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We seem to be having another Monday. I don't even remember having a weekend. Nevertheless, the Internets carry on. Here are a few of the highlights marching across my screen today.
Titlepage.tv launched today, bringing a star-studded literary conversation to the web video screen. That's a picture of the host--editor superhero Daniel Menaker--over there. Everybody's got an opinion, but every self-respecting literary junkie should still check it out.
Memoirs are in the air lately. Over at Papercuts, Gregory Cowles muses on the latest creative liberties taken by a memoirist, with this report on author Misha Defonseca:
"The author was never trapped in the Warsaw ghetto. Neither was she adopted by wolves who protected her from the Nazis, nor did she trek 1,900 miles across Europe in search of her deported parents or kill a German soldier in self-defense. She wasn’t even Jewish."
To chill yourself out after a long Monday, check out Jeffrey Yamaguchi's pictures from India, complete with a good morning greeting for each location on his epic trip.
This is something I've always wondered, but it took The Longstockings to voice it perfectly. On their site someone asked the following question:
Can I ask you guys a couple slightly more technical questions? Do you get your author photos done professionally? Or have a friend take them? What are your opinions on acknowledgement sections? Long or short? Who to thank?? I'd be interested to hear what you all think about these kinds of things...
Well asked. A couple answers have come in thus far from the authors who work the blog, but I'm curious about the rest of youse folks. Photographs are difficult little things. Where do you have them done? Who does them? Sometimes I'll stare and stare at an authorial photo and wonder why they went with the one they did (I ain't naming names).
Any opinions on the matter?
Luckily, one of the other Disco Mermaids is married to a newspaper photographer. He seemed just as excited to have his work put on the jacket of a novel as I was with the results. We took it in a tunnel beneath a freeway to get a myserious background glow, which was his idea...and I loved it! I've always liked author photos that added to the tone of the novel.
- Jay
(And, no, my profile pic is not my author photo...thought there is a nice glow around me.)
I have a friend who is a professional photo-journalist, and she took my author photo. Actually, she took about one hundred author photos and we managed to find one that I loved. (My fault, not hers. Cheesy grins are a bad habit of mine.)
A friend took my first author photo but it wasn't his work that was the problem... it was my horrific what-was-he-thinking-this-wasn't-even-cool-back-then haircut. Eventually I wised up and started drawing my image for the back flap, usually as a space alien, a dog or a caveman. Better for everyone, in the long run.
Jenni found a photographer down in MD who does her (and my) author photos--as well as a ton of shots of her son. The photographer took about 300 shots of us (which was not uncommon in ye olde filme days of yore, but is absolutely no big deal in the modern, digital age), then we picked a bunch we liked, and she went to town adjusting those particular shots.
I think for my solo shot, I actually later took a pic that had Jenni in it and cropped her out.
Of course, for our book jackets, Babymouse does the portraits.
One word: tripod.
Five words: Years of mediocre author photos.
P.S. Hi, Tim.
Hi Matthew and Jenni. I need the name of your photographer.
Actually, the author picture I'm using right now was taken by a volunteer mother, whose 12 year old son was babysitting my then 3 year old daughter while I was part of a huge multi-author event in Western Maryland. I just grabbed my display model of the Wright brothers' flyer, held it up to one side of me, handed her my camera which had three (count them, three) pictures left on the roll, and had her take 3 pictures of me. One of them turned out great.
All other pictures of me, including some by professional photographers, were rotten, rotten, really, really bad. But that's me, not their fault.
For years I'd show up for an event and the organizers would not belive it was me because I didn't look like my picture. Now I've got one that not only makes me look good -- but seems to look like me, too.
-wendie old, also in Maryland
Wendie:
Here she is:
http://www.jottephotography.com
She came to Jenni's home and we did the shots in her dining room; it looks like Jodie has a studio, now, so I'm not sure if she's still making house calls or not.