Wrong About Japan
short book, 150 odd pages, plus a few full page pictures thrown in. Decent sized font, with good kerning and line spacing, very easy on the eyes. The margins are big to, so the line length is pretty short. A real non-readers book this, tho rubbish smelly paper. I knocked out a chapter in Waterstones, bought it, and read another chapter in Starbucks… and I’m now about quarter of the way through the book. The story is a journal type thing about a dad discovering the hidden messages within Manga and anime history with his obsessed son Charley. Its an alright read, nothing stunning, you may learn something about japanese history, Godzilla being an animated response to the A-Bomb for an example, however Manga fan will probably enjoy this book the most. I felt a bit embarrassed carrying a pink Anime covered book about, luckily it fitted in my pocket tho.
Archive for June, 2007
Wrong About Japan
June 15, 2007Selecting a good book…
June 8, 2007How do I select books?
I stand infront of a section of shelves and quickly scan each book, looking for bright colours, funky fonts and thin books. Once the ‘first pass’ is complete, and assuming I haven’t picked any off the shelf to look at. I scan the entire section again, this time a bit slower, reading the words on the spines. I’m looking for cool titles, catchy words, contemporary words. Once done, if I still haven’t selected a book I move on to the next section. This continues for the entire Fiction section of the bookshop (if I have time) and I can do a decent sized Waterstones in 20mins.
When I find a title that looks interesting. I’ll pick it off the shelf. Immediately feeling the weight of the book, which indicates the quality of the paper, and viewing the cover. If the artwork looks good, nice photography or design etc… I’ll ‘thumb fan’ the pages, looking at the font and formating and paper quality. If the font is small, kerning tight and bad formatting, there’s a very high chance it’ll go back on the shelf without a thought for reading any of the (inside) pages. If the font is a decent readable size, the line-spacing, marginsĀ and kerning is good… and a big bonus, being printed on decent white paper… then I’m on to a winner.
Its very rare that I read the back cover or inside the covers, if I don’t like the paper and formating. If the book is well presented throughout, I can stomach any genre or storyline.
Shorty Loves Wing Wong
June 5, 2007Shorty Loves Wing Wong
Bit of a late find this one, I was almost out of the shop. 90 pages, half of them pictures of odd looking cat figures in modern poses and humanal(?) situations. Read the back cover and it sounded really good, contemporary and relavant to todays world. Easy on the eye. didn’t notice any thing about the paper (so it was probably average) … a little hardback tho if I recall. The only bad point imo was the standard formating of the text (small font, tight kerning, standard linespacing etc) and a complete absence of paragraphs. One could argue that the ‘chapters’ are only paragraphed sized, but c’mon, a little sentence break in the odd place would have helped people (ie: me) a little. That minor detail prevented it getting a full 5stars from me. However, I’m more than happy to give it a generous 4. Turns out it was written by michael smith who also wrote The Giro Playboy which looks equally as readable.
The 5 people you meet in Heaven
June 5, 2007The 5 people you meet in Heaven
230 pages, not particularly good paper, and a bit smelly too. Not sure what made me pick this one up, probably didn’t look too thick to read and if I recall the title was a bit odd. Turns out a guy dies and instead of being embraced by everyone at the pearly gates, he’s confronted with 5 key people from his life. Might read this if I get loads of time on my hands.





