Better World Blog
Better World Blog
Funding Literacy ... By the Book!

Welcome to the Better World Books Blog! We created this forum to connect you with other members of the BWB community and to help you stay informed. We think this will be a powerful tool for all of us as we continue to grow and expand our support for world wide literacy.

» Thursday, April 17, 2008
Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist

Check out this interview with our social enterprise/green pro/co-founder/general expert at stuff, Xavier Helgesen!




Good times! They kinda were quick with the whole "Oscars thank you music ending" though, no?
Posted by Jack on 4/17/2008 UTC
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Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist

Senior Director in the Southeast, Mary Murphy, forwarded me an email indicitave of the great efforts being put in around the country (and Canada!) as book drives begin to pop up (at over 1400 campuses this semester!)

I received all of the boxes and the posters so thank you for sending all of that so quickly!  We have already started the drive and have began collecting!  I just want to tell you how much I appreciate all of your hard work, this is a wonderful company and it is people such as yourself that truly make the world a better place!  Thank you again from myself and the entire Charleston Southern Family!

Alissa

Posted by Jack on 4/17/2008 UTC
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» Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist

If you're near a computer, come 6:35pm EST, check out this live interview
hosted by "RSS Ray" about Green business with our own Xavier Helgesen!

Posted by Jack on 4/16/2008 UTC
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Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist



Seattle Green Festival = major success.  First of all I'd like to thank our lovely volunteers who helped us collect 3 pallets of books(!) at the festival and looked good doing it.



Next I'd like to thank all the people who came by the chat it up with us lads, about the environment, books, and pretty much anything else (and whoever bought Jaime's hide-a-book (as I put it, to hide things from your friends who don't read), enjoy that awesome piece of craftsmanship).




Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, I'd like to thank the burrito place, for making delicious, delicious, organic burritos, AlterEco for their myriad delicious chocolate selection (try the mint, wow!) and HonesTea for the case of lemon black tea that I nabbed at the end of the conference.  Muy delicioso!  OK, OK, so more thanks to the people who came to talk to us (including the gent who said he had bought 60+ books from us and knew our business model better than some of us did, wow).




Book your tickets now, Chicago, May 16, making it happen as the official bookstore of their Green Fest!
Posted by Jack on 4/16/2008 UTC
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» Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist



On one hand, I'm tempted to post this just because of its prose, which is beautifully done.  On the other hand I'm tempted to post this because it's a Nobel lecture for literature, which is certainly a worthy post.  But what made me give in to temptation was her involvement with getting books to the African continent (something we know a little about, having shipped 920,000+ books to our partners...)

I am standing in a doorway looking through clouds of blowing dust to where I am told there is still uncut forest. Yesterday I drove through miles of stumps, and charred remains of fires where, in '56, there was the most wonderful forest I have ever seen, all now destroyed. People have to eat. They have to get fuel for fires.

This is north-west Zimbabwe in the early eighties, and I am visiting a friend who was a teacher in a school in London. He is here "to help Africa," as we put it. He is a gently idealistic soul and what he found in this school shocked him into a depression, from which it was hard to recover. This school is like every other built after Independence. It consists of four large brick rooms side by side, put straight into the dust, one two three four, with a half room at one end, which is the library. In these classrooms are blackboards, but my friend keeps the chalks in his pocket, as otherwise they would be stolen. There is no atlas or globe in the school, no textbooks, no exercise books, or biros. In the library there are no books of the kind the pupils would like to read, but only tomes from American universities, hard even to lift, rejects from white libraries, or novels with titles like Weekend in Paris and Felicity Finds Love.


There is a goat trying to find sustenance in some aged grass. The headmaster has embezzled the school funds and is suspended, arousing the question familiar to all of us but usually in more august contexts: How is it these people behave like this when they must know everyone is watching them?


Read on at the Nobel site

Posted by Jack on 4/15/2008 UTC
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» Friday, April 11, 2008
Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist



Today if you want to find five good looking guys who are into supporting literacy by selling books (as well as bicycling, basketball, and Patriot League sports/Notre Dame football) then swing by the Washington State Convention Center in downtown Seattle.  There, if you can wade through the awesomeness at the Greenfest you'll find, Rudy (of ARC fame), Xavier, Justin, Geoff and myself making the rounds and reppin' BWB at our booth.  Come by, get a shirt, tote or just say hey!

Expect some new enhanced (ooooo!) content this weekend.

Posted by Jack on 4/11/2008 UTC
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» Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist

Over at www.gawker.com, flagship of superhip internet empire: Gawker Media, they've posted an obituary sure to dishearten all of us English majors and nerds: the death of the semicolon.

Over at The Guardian they have posted a fabulous set of contrasting viewpoints
on the topic:

"I love a good semicolon, but this sounds like one of those Literature is Dead! Stories that The New York Times likes to run," he says. "I've never heard from a reader confused by one of my semicolons, and I don't remember ever throwing a book aside for being semicolon-free."

The late Kurt Vonnegut, meanwhile, takes the subtle approach and compares semicolons to cross-dressing she-males: "If you really want to hurt your parents, and you don't have the nerve to be a homosexual, the least you can do is go into the arts. But do not use semicolons," he has cautioned. "They are transvestite hermaphrodites, standing for absolutely nothing. All they do is show you've been to college."

Where do you stand on the topic?

Posted by Jack on 4/9/2008 UTC
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» Tuesday, April 08, 2008
By Christian Blue, Account Representative


From left to right: David Hoffman, Christian Blue, Chris Johnson, Walter Sears (center left), Tom Warth (center right), Jacob Fu, Pat Plonski and Dustin Holland.

I wanted to share a couple of highlights from the Library Division’s trip to Minneapolis to exhibit at the Public Library Association’s biannual conference.  We tend to measure our impact on literacy through books donated or revenue raised and no doubt, that’s important.  What was interesting about this week was the impact some of our key literacy partners had on us! 

The 1st day we spent almost entirely with Tom Warth and Pat Plonski, the Founder and Executive Director respectively of Books For Africa.  With their warehouse in St. Paul, we also had the good fortune of touring their facility later that evening.  For Tom and Pat to take their time that weekend with the Better World Books crew, made a big impression on me.  Two of the nicest guys you’ll ever meet and you know exactly where their hearts are in terms of ending the book famine in Africa.


BFA Headquarters

In keeping with our Non Profit Literacy Partner’s involvement in the conference, we kicked off the weekend by attending John Wood’s opening keynote address.  This really helped me understand more in depth the business model that Room to Read employs.  His speech clearly struck a chord with all who were in the room because the conference was buzzing all weekend with Room to Read’s cause.  John was gracious enough to mention Better World Books’ support for his mission and that resulted in a firestorm of visitors to our booth to find out how their library can utilize our Library Discards & Donations Program to benefit Room to Read.  Thanks John!

Thursday evening, after the exhibits closed, we were treated to the New Orleans Public Library’s Master Plan Party.  We started off at the swank digs of Meyer, Scherer & Rockcastle where we were given a taste of the vision and direction that the NOPL Foundation has taken in their efforts to ReBuild New Orleans Public Libraries.  As MS&R’s spokesman touched on, there is a deeper relevance that exists in an architect located at the start of the Mississippi River, providing services to the rebuilding effort down at the mouth.  It’s remarkable to think of it in that sense; the ability of one terrible event to engage a nation of people. People like Irvin Mayfield who sits on the board of NOPL’s Foundation and with a hot jazz trumpet and complementary band, encapsulates the rebirth of New Orleans.  Following the presentation at MS&R, the Better World Books crew had the unique opportunity to attend Irvin’s live performance that night.  He played a total of 3 nights in Minneapolis and all raised funding for the New Orleans Public Library.


Irvin Mayfield, Jazz Trumpeter

How about that!  A summary of highlights from Minneapolis and not one mention of the Mall of America!  Whoops!





Posted by Jacob on 4/8/2008 UTC
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» Monday, April 07, 2008
Posted by Abby Rae LaCombe, Rocky Mountain Regional Director

So, a couple of weeks ago, the Better World Books list servs were on fire with reminders about Earth Hour (If you haven’t heard of it, Earth Hour started in Australia in 2007. 2.2 million people and 2100 businesses in Sydney decreased the town’s energy usage by 10.2% by turning off non-essential lights for one hour).  

I was revved for the newest of alternative holidays and had a bunch of folks were over to enjoy a nice candlelit dinner between 8-9, central time.  I turned out every light, unplugged each appliance, followed the instructions to a T.  I even unplugged things like unused phone chargers – no energy seepage allowed.  Once the house was dark and we were ready to go, it turned out that in my whole house – seriously the whole house -- there was only one candle.  Oops...  So, our candlelit dinner was the darkest candlelit dinner of my life.  Dark like “How far is the fork from my mouth?” dark.  Next year, I will have enough candles that folks walking past will think there is a raging fire inside my house.

Our participation stemmed from all the e-mails that circulated here at Better World Books (word of mouth is always the best form of promotion).  That got me wondering how many other folks participated this year.  I can’t find any real estimates of bodies involved, but I do know (from Earth Hour’s website) that in 2008, 38 countries participated in Earth Hour!  

Among these were both Canada and the US, and get this: 146 cities in 12 of the 13 Canadian provinces participated!  This then made me realize that since the Rocky Mountain Region was expanded to include Canada, I’ve communicated with so many generous, globally conscious students and bookstores that of course Canada would have rockstar representation.

So, my point: If Sydney can reduce energy usage by 10.2% in one hour, imagine the awesome results of having 38 countries involved!  Imagine the results of just the 146 cities in Canada!

There are 1000s of easy ways to help keep our planet green, but Earth Hour is a crazy easy way to support a greener globe. So, spread the word to your friends and family that Earth Hour 2009 starts at 8 p.m. local time in roughly 356 days.  While spreading the word, remind your loved-ones to buy some candles.

The Earth Hour website highlights some energy saving tips for your home/school/work life -- but our purchasing habits are another great place to make a difference!  All the books you buy from Betterworld.com are shipped to you carbon neutral and most of them are used; so buy a book, save some trees, reduce some carbon outputs – hooray!

Posted by Jack on 4/7/2008 UTC
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» Friday, April 04, 2008
Posted by Jack Hanlon, CBO & Evangelist


Tom Wolfe, A Man in Full

Hey readers, I was just checking out the New York Times when I saw that their feature "Reading Room" was tackling Tom Wolfe's great-text-cum-awful-movie, Bonfire of the Vanities.  "Reading Room" is an excellent discussion about a text.  In this case it begins with an hour long podcast with Wolfe, discussing everything from journalism to his thesis to his works and then moves forward with some really fascinating discussion about race and the book as a period piece (which I would say, and they would agree, that it is most certainly not).

Anyway,
here's the beginning and here's the rest (N.B. like any blog, start at the bottom to sift through the lot).
Posted by Jack on 4/4/2008 UTC
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