/ / For The Win, News


Hey, Austinites! I’m headed your way tomorrow (Thurs) for the next leg of my book-tour. I’ll be reading at BookPeople at 7PM, and then heading to EFF-Austin’s WhuffieFest, a fundraiser/party at Amelia’s RetroVogue and Relics, 2213 South 1st Street in the 78704. I haven’t been to Austin since SXSW 2003, and I can’t wait to get back!

Tonight’s my last night in San Francisco, and it’s the capstone of the Bay Area leg: the Electronic Frontier Foundation fundraiser/party at the 111 Minna Gallery at 7:30. I’m really looking forward to this — a great way to end a fantastic stop in one of the cities of my heart.

After Austin, it’s off to Cary, NC (Saturday) and Chapel Hill, NC (Sunday), then New York and Brooklyn, and finally Toronto, my hometown. Here’s the full tour schedule.

A reminder to fans of the free download: there’s an amazing list of libraries, schools, youth shelters, halfway houses and other worthy institutions that are looking for donations of copies of the book. If you liked the ebook and want to thank me, the best way to do that is to donate a copy to one of them.

/ / News


Hey, Austinites! I’m headed your way tomorrow (Thurs) for the next leg of my book-tour. I’ll be reading at BookPeople at 7PM, and then heading to EFF-Austin’s WhuffieFest, a fundraiser/party at Amelia’s RetroVogue and Relics, 2213 South 1st Street in the 78704. I haven’t been to Austin since SXSW 2003, and I can’t wait to get back!

Tonight’s my last night in San Francisco, and it’s the capstone of the Bay Area leg: the Electronic Frontier Foundation fundraiser/party at the 111 Minna Gallery at 7:30. I’m really looking forward to this — a great way to end a fantastic stop in one of the cities of my heart.

After Austin, it’s off to Cary, NC (Saturday) and Chapel Hill, NC (Sunday), then New York and Brooklyn, and finally Toronto, my hometown. Here’s the full tour schedule.

A reminder to fans of the free download: there’s an amazing list of libraries, schools, youth shelters, halfway houses and other worthy institutions that are looking for donations of copies of the book. If you liked the ebook and want to thank me, the best way to do that is to donate a copy to one of them.

Review:

Rick Kleffel

Expect Doctorow’s usual skill with plotting, prose and pace to ensure that you’ll finish this book with the same fever any much-desired title will instill. There are a lot of great Big Ideas rattling around in here, told in a manner that even adults can grok. ‘For the Win’ is already a winner.

Rick Kleffel, Trashotron

/ / News

My latest Guardian column, “Saying information wants to be free does more harm than good” asks that we collectively kill the expression “Information wants to be free,” in favor of better, more comprehensive slogans such as “People want to be free.”

It’s time for IWTBF to die because it’s become the easiest, laziest straw man for Hollywood’s authoritarian bullies to throw up as a justification for the monotonic increase of surveillance, control, and censorship in our networks and tools. I can imagine them saying: “These people only want network freedom because they believe that ‘information wants to be free’. They pretend to be concerned about freedom, but the only ‘free’ they care about is ‘free of charge.'”

But this is just wrong. “Information wants to be free” has the same relationship to the digital rights movement that “kill whitey” has to the racial equality movement: a thoughtless caricature that replaces a nuanced, principled stand with a cartoon character. Calling IWTBF the ideological basis of the movement is like characterising bra burning as the primary preoccupation of feminists (in reality, the number of bras burned by feminists in the history of the struggle for gender equality appears to be zero, or as close to it as makes no difference).

So what do digital rights activists want, if not “free information?”

Saying information wants to be free does more harm than good

/ / News

Vancouver’s Sophia books got a special thank you in FOR THE WIN. Today, Sophia’s Chris Eng wrote:

Hey Cory,

As a fan of your work, I was excited (okay, really excited) when I saw that For the Win had gone live on your website last week. I will definitely buy a hard copy, but since I was between paycheques (and because I’ve discovered I genuinely enjoy reading books on my phone) I was thrilled to be able to start reading it immediately.

I’ve been reading it when I can over the last several days and just now–midnight, Pacific time–got to the point where you thanked Sophia Books. As a staff member, I can’t thank you enough for the acknowledgement. The personalized scene dedications to all the various bookstores in the ebook version is a fantastic touch which I enjoy immensely anyway, but to have our store singled out is a thrill and an honour that I know will resonate in all the staff.

So, it’s with a heavy heart that I have to break some bad news to you–Sophia Books will be closing its doors at the end of the month. We’ve done our best and done what we could, but in the end it wasn’t flagging book sales or changing mediums or any of the other problems that people cite when they talk about the ailing book industry that brought us down: our building got sold, our lease came up for renewal and we got slapped with an increase that no one could afford. We looked into moving, but it just wasn’t feasible–rents have spiked across the board. And the worst part is that this is becoming endemic. Since January, the city has lost Duthie’s, one of the longest running independent bookstores (and once a thriving chain), Once Upon a Huckleberry Bush (a children’s bookstore) and Elfsar (a well-respected and loved comic shop), all, so far as I have been led to believe, for more or less the same reason. This is the new face of Vancouver–an artistic and literary city that no longer has any independent booksellers (of new books) in its core. A metropolis where you have to go far out of your way to be able to browse through new releases. By way of example, White Dwarf, a science-fiction and fantasy bookstore, is the better part of an hour out of downtown. I don’t think they’re doing that well either, though their location and relative real estate rates might be a saving grace at this point.

I’m not sure what the future holds for Vancouver. I have a great love of ebooks as well as dead tree media (I am a bookseller, after all), and I’m sure there’s room for both of them to coexist in the years to come, but Vancouver as a city (with grossly disproportionate commercial rents) seems to have consciously or unconsciously made up its mind about the role of booksellers in its boundaries. And it’s a decision that rather depresses me. Sophia Books will continue its role as a wholesaler to schools and libraries, but from an office space, and there will no longer be a storefront where someone can browse through and randomly find a book of Pablo Neruda’s poetry with English and Spanish on facing pages, no longer discover vocabulary books of Nepali or Inuktitut. Yes, there are still several used bookstores and a few resilient sellers of new books in the Metro Vancouver area, but their presence isn’t something we can take for granted anymore. And even if it wasn’t horribly bad sales that did the latest raft of bookstores in, maybe that’s the lesson that can be taken away from all this: that bookstores are a privilege, not a right, and we should treasure what we have while we have it, because things can be snatched away so very, very quickly.

Yours Sincerely,
Chris Eng

P.S. Please feel free to reprint some or all of this if you think it’s relevant. P.P.S. ‘For the Win’ is great. I don’t want to get fanboyish at the end of what’s turned into quite a downbeat missive, but I will say that it’s entertaining, educational and extremely important and I’ll attempt to force a copy of it into the hands of anyone I know in their teens and several I can think of who aren’t. Thank you for writing it.