Tuesday, 16 September 2008

Labelling and Rating

LABELLING

When you write a review, please give your post the label (aka tag or category) of book review. This way we can filter out the reviews from any other stuff we feel inspired to post here. I'm already trying to turn you into geeks (label = blog) and I think it's only a matter of time before Emmajane sets us one of her frightening quizzes (label = reign of terror?. :) So, if you do feel inspired to blog, use an existing label or add a suitable new one at the end of your post and we can be highly organised.

RATING

I've been looking for a way of recording our "thumbs" against each review. I've found a simple method that I think will do.

Each blog post now includes a star rating widget. Just click on the number of stars you think most nearly corresponds to your virtual thumb position. The stars are conveniently rated Bad; Boring; OK; Good; Excellent - which seems almost (but not quite) as scientific as the ISO recommended Warnock® Evaluative Thumb Methodology™. Obviously this is only really relevant and necessary for book review posts but will be there on all posts.

So - please pop off now and rate The Ladies.

Tuesday, 9 September 2008

Need Feeding Up?

IE7 FeedsThis blogging business is OK but I'm going to need to keep going to the blog to see if my playmates have shared a pearl of wisdom.  I'll not remember to look and I'm going to miss exciting things!  Well, no actually.  I mean - there will be exciting things but you needn't miss them.

Ignore me if you know this already - but "web feeds" are your new best friends if you want to easily track web content that updates - and blogs are a case in point.

A web feed is a broadcast of what's new on the blog.  You can subscribe to the feed and easily see something new has happened when you're using your browser when you're ReadItSwapIt-ing, Amazon-ing, YouTube-ing etc.

There are two feeds for our blog:

In Internet Explorer 7, it's really easy to subscribe to a feed.  I don't know much about the other browsers but apparently it should be quite straightforward in recent versions of those and works on similar lines.  Click one of the links above, a page will open and (in IE7) you'll get an option to Subscribe to that feed.  Click that and you'll then be asked how you want to save it - just like you do for favourites / bookmarks.

Once you've subscribed you've started building a list of feeds like your favourites / bookmarks list - as in the picture.  Feeds with new and updated content show in bold.  Once you've read a feed you can mark it as read.  When you're looking at a feed you can read the content there or click on a link to see the original post in all its glory.

Newer versions of browsers (like IE7) flag up when feeds of a web page or site are available - look for a button with this logo Feed Button logo and you can start subscribing to web feeds from The Archers to Lolcats.

I think that using feeds gives a blog a chance of being more active - and it makes it less effort.  Hope that helps!  I like it anyway.

Wednesday, 3 September 2008

The Ladies of Grace Adieu

We discussed this at our meeting on Tuesday 2 Sept 2008. I had suggested it after enjoying her previous novel "Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell" so much but was left feeling disappointed. This was pretty much the view of all us that evening although one person did give it a very definite thumbs up.

To summarise our comments - most of us felt that short stories did not work well although we enjoyed some of them (the title story being one of the favourites) and thought they should have been expanded to develop characters and plot more. We think she is a very creative writer and admire her sense of imagination and story telling (although the re-work of Rumpelstilstkin was considered a bit of a cheat). We appreciated the fascination of the blurring of two worlds - human and Faerie - especially in stories like Mrs Mabb.

The Ladies of Grace AdieuBut, in comparison to the epic JS&MN this collection did not fare well and there was some cynicism amongst the group about the fact that the stories had been gathered together for publication on the back of the success of the former (although noted that some of the stories pre-date the novel.

This is the first post on this Red Deer Readers blog - hope it is not the last!!

Jan
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