Books

WBT has an archive of books below.

Book Distribution is the hardest thing.

I have been doing a little digging on book distribution and related matters. This is what I came up with. If you have any other suggestions please leave them in the comments section down below.

ISBN
All books should have an ISBN. Pls note – an ISBN / ISSN does not mean the book is copyrighted but is makes it easier for a book to be found.  Therefore an ISBN aids in distribution. Also a CIP (Cataloguing in Publication) provides a bibliographic record for library distribution.


Copyright
A copyright is exclusive legal right to the creator of original works to print, publish, perform, or record literary works. Remember that J K Rowling is obscenely rich (£820 million) partly because of the laws of copyright permit her to sell the rights to popular Harry Potter books at a premium.

Libraries
Books should be deposited with municipal, state and national libraries. This generally the job of the publisher but the author should make sure this happens.

Municipal or local Library 
BCC – Unfortunately some years ago, the Brisbane City Council outsourced its book purchasing to Peter Pal Library Supplies – Unit 7, 14 Randall St, Slacks Creek, QLD, 4127  Ph (07) 3209 3922. I wonder what role Peter Pal actually plays in the decision making. They seem to prepare the books for the BCC (Special Binding) but I suspect the decision to purchase a book lies elsewhere … where is the question? The BCC website states that you can email a question to the reference section at https://brisbanecity.libanswers.com/form?queue_id=3076 
The library states that it takes library members wishes into account when developing the collection. However it is none too specific about how. I have emailed the BCC Librarian asking how these decisions are made, by whom and using what criteria.

State Library
State library of Queensland (SLQ) – You can make a legal deposit, you can donate the book or ask the library to buy the book because it has some unique association with Queensland. You can request the State Library to purchase a book at http://askslq.altarama.com/reft100.aspx?pmi=tIPWCGkmGC  The SLQ website provides some help … see 

Legal Deposit in Libraries through NED
Are you an author or publisher of an e-book in Queensland?

If so, you are required under the Libraries Act 1988 (Qld) to deposit one copy of any new publication published in Queensland (physical or digital) with the State Library of Queensland, whether it is a book, serial publication (such as a newsletter, annual report, magazine or journal), map, music score or videorecording.

Legal deposit with the State Library of Queensland is required for print, electronic and audio-visual publications, including government publications, in accordance with the Libraries Act 1988. If both print and electronic formats are available, electronic is preferred and may be lodged with National edeposit (NED) @ https://ned.gov.au/resources/about.html  File format is important. This and other questions can be found at https://ned.gov.au/resources/making-a-deposit.html 

International Library

Internet Archive is a non-profit borrowing library of millions of free books, movies, software, music, websites, and more. You can upload your book to this website.

If a publisher does not qualify for legal deposit it can ask the SLQ to purchase the book or simply donate the book to the library stating its relevance to Qld.

Ian Curr
15 Nov 2021

Image: Radical Books collection held by the Institute of Social Ecology at the Ellen Taylor Community Centre West End, Brisbane (AHIMSA house now held at Common House 74b Wickham St in Fortitude Valley) – plenty of manifestos here but where are the answers as we hit the wall?

Common House’s Library and Social Centre opening hours this week are: Monday: 4-7pm (Anti-Poverty Network QLD drop in hours)Wednesday: 11-4pmThursday: 12-5pmFriday: 7pm – Film Screening: Maggots and Men (100 Years of the Kronstadt Rebellion)

Links to Books in the Karl Marx library in Alphabetic order:

A

After the Waterfront – the workers are quiet” by LeftPress

C

Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels

The Curr Family in Far North Queensland 1862-1925 by Frederick Carlton Curr Edited by Eleanour E. Freeman

History of the Curr Family from 1798 till 1955 by Margery Curr

D

Dawn to Dusk: reminiscences of a rebel by Ernie Lane

G

Gone Tomorrow – Australia in the 80s by Humphrey McQueen

H

How To Make Trouble And Influence People by Iain McIntyre

I

“Iraqi Icicle” by Bernie Dowling

K

The Killer Cop and the Murder of Donald Mackay by John Jiggens

L

Land Rights Now! by Garey Foley

“Liberating Pine Gap” by Jim Dowling (ed.)

The Lemon Tree by Sandy Tolan

Love Letters from the Bar Table by Shane Dowling

M

“Minyung Woolah Binnung” by Lionel Fogarty

N

Not Quite White: Lebanese and the White Australia Policy 1880 to 1947 by Anne Monsour

P

“Pig City: from the Saints to Savage Garden” by Andrew Stafford

R

Resistance – a childhood fighting for East Timor by Naldo Rei

Recollections of Squatting in Victoria by Edward M Curr

S

“The Sydney Connection” by John Jiggens

T

Towards Peace – a workers journey by Phil O’Brien and Bernie Dowling

V

“Vuelo Lan Chile” by Marcial Parada

Book Launch of “VUELO LAN CHILE” by Marcial Parada

Books are also listed on the blogroll (on the right hand side).

Christina Stead’s Poor Women of Sydney, Travelling Into Our Times.” Journal for the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, JASAL. 15.3 (2015).https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:379211/UQ379211_OA.pdf

“Resistance and Sovereignty in Some Recent Australian Indigenous Women’s Novels.” Journal of English Language, Literatures in English and Cultural Studies, Ilha Do Desterro. 69.2 (2016):17-31.https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/issue/view/2359/showToc

“Preoccupations of Some Asian Australian Women’s Fiction at the Turn of the Twenty-first Century.” E-Tropic: Electronic Journal of Studies in the Tropics. 16.2 (2017): 118-140. Doi:10.25120/etropic.16.2.2017.3619

6 thoughts on “Books

  1. The Boundary says:

    An award-winning crime novel that breaks new ground in Australian fiction

    Winner of the 2009 David Unaipon Award

    Long ago, Meston Park in Brisbane’s West End marked the city’s boundary. A curfew kept its Aboriginal population outside the city limits after dark.

    When the park becomes the site of a multi-million dollar development, the Corrowa People vow to fight and file a native title claim. Hours after rejecting the claim, Justice Bruce Brosnan is brutally murdered.

    Some believe it is the work of an ancient assassin, returned to destroy the boundary.

    While the investigation forces Detective Jason Matthews to confront his buried heritage, lawyer Miranda Eversely battles a sense of personal failure at the Corrowa’s defeat

    How far will it take her to the edge of self-destruction?

    Review at http://www.couriermail.com.au/ipad/book-reviews/story-fn6ck8la-1226128323427

  2. Literacy Inquiry says:

    Reading is content driven

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RiP-ijdxqEc]

    A great little video which supports the model of reading we support.

    Peter Curtis
    Email: pedrocurtis@bigpond.com

    [Peter Curtis is teacher and a member of the Australian Education Union.
    His blog spot can be found at: http://criticalconsciousness.wordpress.com/2009/07/
    (Link doesn’t work? Please paste it into the address bar of your browser)

    Campaign for the equitable provision of resources to students in the public education system.

    Join other teachers, parents and citizens who care about education and are Opposing standardised testing and the Federal Government’s support of school league tables.

  3. Parallel Importation says:

    Thanks to Sheryl Gwyther for her comments.

    My response below is to Hunters & Collectors enter the fray and The anti-Parallel Import Petition goes to Canberra.

    The focus of the campaign against Parallel Importation of Books [Saving Aussie Books Petition] is on overseas publishers partcularly those in the USA. ‘Our’ culture is being ‘americanised’.
    Sheryl Gwyther from Saving Aussie Books campaign with the petition in Canberra
    Photo: Sheryl Gwyther from Saving Aussie Books campaign with the petition in Canberra

    People draw paralells between the music industry and the book industry.

    Why stop there? There is the film industry.

    It is not only our culture that is americanised. What about the food industry with the paralell importation of californian oranges?

    And why stop with America? There is a huge trade in films & bootleg music in the form of DVDs and CDs made in various parts of Asia, from Thailand, from Taiwan, and also China.

    What have ‘Australian’ publishers ever done for writers here in Australia? And what did the big record companies ever do for musicians?

    As in the USA, in Thailand, in Taiwain and in China, they looked after their profits and never gave much to the creators of the books, or the music, or the film. Unless you are a Peter Carey or a Delta Goodrem.

    The problem with the book industry like all the others is capitalism not merely its latest manifestation in paralell importation. Hence our opposition to the paralell importation of books should extend to opposition to the big publishers everywhere using profit as their motive.

    Ian Curr
    October 2009

    1. Reading is content driven says:

      Reading is content driven

      [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RiP-ijdxqEc]

      A great little video which supports the model of reading we support.

      Peter Curtis is teacher and a member of the Australian Education Union.

      His blog spot can be found at: http://criticalconsciousness.wordpress.com/2009/07/

      (Link doesn’t work? Please paste it into the address bar of your browser) pedrocurtis@bigpond.com Campaign for the equitable provision of resources to students in the public education system. http://www.forourfuture.org.au/ Join other teachers, parents and citizens who care about education and are Opposing standardised testing and the Federal Government’s support of school league tables. Go to: http://www.soscanberra.com/

  4. Two book notices

    Scribe have produced a local edition of The Open Veins of Latin America
    by Eduardo Galeano.
    The Unmaking of the Middle East
    Rather than chronology, geography, or political successions, Eduardo Galeano has organised the various facets of Latin American history according to the patterns of five centuries of exploitation. Natural resources—such as gold, coffee, and copper—are the veins which he traces through the body of the entire continent, up to the Rio Grande and throughout the Caribbean, and all the way to their open ends where they empty into the coffers of wealth in the United States and Europe.

    ‘The book flows with the grace of a tale; it is impossible to put down. His arguments, his rage, and his passion would be overwhelming if they were not expressed with such superb style, with such masterful timing and suspense.’
    Isabel Allende

    ************************************************************

    Jeremy Salt’s The Unmaking of the Middle East
    will be in paperback in sept-october.

    The Unmaking of the Middle East

    The Unmaking of the Middle East: A History of Western Disorder in Arab Lands
    By Jeremy Salt
    Publisher – University of California, 399 pages, ISBN 9780520255517, hardback
    Written for those who want to know more than the mainstream media is willing or able to tell, this book begins be examining a question that has been widely asked since September 11, 2001: “Why do they hate us?” Jeremy Salt offers the background essential for understanding the Middle East today.

  5. Parallel importation of books

    Hi all

    You may have seen Allan Fels last night (7th July) having a go at authors saying how the culture of Aust books will be destroyed by lifting the PI restrictions.

    Hunters & Collectors enter the fray…

    This is my little go back at him. Hope he gets to see it somewhere in the ether.

    So pass it on and link it out as widely as you can!!

    http://sherylgwyther.wordpress.com/2009/07/11/hunters-collectors-entry-the-fray/
    Cheers
    Sheryl
    Sheryl Gwyther – author

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