Top ten countries for work/life balance.

Having worked as a full-time employee, freelance writer and unpublished novelist I’ve always struggled with balance. I still feel guilty about devoting time to art when I should be doing more responsible things. But then the feeling passes and I crank out a short story, add a chapter to my latest novel or doodle dark humour.

This article caught my eye and I think it’s worth sharing. Credit to Daily Brew. You can read the entire article on their blog.

The top ten countries with the best work-life balance:

1. Denmark
2. Norway
3. Netherlands
4. Finland
5. Belgium
6. Switzerland
7. Sweden
8. Germany
9. Portugal
10. France

Canada was ranked 14th.

The Great White North has a high female-employment rate, at 76 per cent, compared to the average of 64 per cent. Seventy-one per cent of mothers return to work once their children begin school. And while Canada performed well in a number of family indicators — fertility rates, gender pay gaps, child poverty and children’s educational achievement — childcare enrolment lags behind OECD standards.

Pop Sandbox on the telling of stories.

This post is a profile of Pop Sandbox and content is taken from their site.

About: Pop Sandbox is an award-winning multimedia production & publishing company with a focus on original projects rooted in graphic novel and film. It is a small boutique operation centered on innovative and meaningful storytelling across platforms.

Pop Sandbox’s inaugural release was the ground-breaking 300-page journalistic comic book, KENK: A Graphic Portrait, which was recently named a Best Book of 2010 by Quill & Quire (Canada’s top literary magazine). It is being released into the US and abroad in 2011, and is currently being developed as a fully animated film.

KENK: A Graphic Portrait is an award-winning 300-page journalistic comic book about Igor Kenk, “the world’s most prolific bicycle thief” (The New York Times and The Guardian). In the summer of 2008, Kenk was arrested and nearly 3,000 hot bicycles were seized in what became one of the biggest news stories of the year. Built from an incredible mix of found footage, filmed interviews and archival material, treated with a dazzling visual style, KENK is a thought-provoking and surprisingly funny journalistic profile (in the tradition of New Yorker masters Joseph Mitchell and A.J. Liebling) of an outsize neighborhood figure and a city in flux.

KENK is a one-of-a-kind profile—a mash-up of mediums that culminates in a marriage of thorough investigative journalism and the comic book form in an entirely new way. A fully animated film treatment is currently in production with award-winning commercial director Craig Small, who helped develop the Academy Award™ nominated animated film Madame Tutli-Putli.

Pop Sandbox. Great home page.

Drawing inspiration.

92 in the Shade, by Thomas McGuane.

Drawing inspiration from great writers, such as McGuane, can often be more useful than flipping through the design annual that you stole from the agency. The Wheatsheaf Literary Society recently reviewed ’92 in the Shade’, a 1973 novel by Thomas McGuane. It was agreed that McGuane was somewhat difficult in places but overall and an exceptional storyteller.

92 in the Shade‘ is an excellent example of literature that captures time & place. In this sense, it feels a lot like the work of Cormack McCarthy and Tom Wolfe. In our day jobs, as writers, content creators and creators of customer experiences, it’s sometimes our job to create a sense of time & place.

So expense a copy of whichever McGuane novel you choose and have a read. Bill it to ‘reference material’ and enjoy. My own fascination with McGuane began when I learned of his connection to the late Richard Brautigan, a favourite of mine when I want to get my ‘hippy’ on.

Tagged with:
 

How to Write a Sentence by Stanley Fish.

I liked reading ‘How to write a sentence‘. It’s on my iPad and made for good subway reading. This is definitely for the word nerds out there. If you aren’t directly responsible for writing, approving or editing copy, it might not be the most useful desktop resource.

But if you appreciate the craft or writing, there are some good tips for writers and readers. We sometimes forget that all the great lines in advertising, film and literature were written by someone just like us – someone who woke up to a blank sheet paper and tried to do something better, more original, more thoughtful.

The publisher’s blurb is below and you can always click on The Writer’s Bookshelf for more suggestions on great reads and influential books on the craft of writing.

Book description from Harper Collins: Some appreciate fine art; others appreciate fine wines. Stanley Fish appreciates fine sentences. The New York Times columnist and world-class professor has long been an aficionado of language: “I am always on the lookout for sentences that take your breath away, for sentences that make you say, ‘Isn’t that something?’ or ‘What a sentence!’” Like a seasoned sportscaster, Fish marvels at the adeptness of finely crafted sentences and breaks them down into digestible morsels, giving readers an instant play-by-play.

In this entertaining and erudite gem, Fish offers both sentence craft and sentence pleasure, skills invaluable to any writer (or reader). His vibrant analysis takes us on a literary tour of great writers throughout history—from William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, and Henry James to Martin Luther King Jr., Antonin Scalia, and Elmore Leonard. Indeed, How to Write a Sentence is both a spirited love letter to the written word and a key to understanding how great writing works; it is a book that will stand the test of time.

For anyone struggling with basics or aspiring to write with greater clarity, I recommend ‘When You Find an Adjective, Kill It‘.

Tagged with:
 

Perspective on the Phenomenon of Rebecca Black.

This is an except from Heidi McCulloch’s blog, ‘Curated‘. It’s bang on.

The recently circulating music video made by Rebecca Black, Friday, has at the time of this writing has received more than 68 million views on YouTube. That is incredible.

Rebecca Black’s Friday is an incredibly low budget music video production for a song called Friday, ‘sung’ by Rebecca Black. The lyrics can only be described as pedantic, the film common and ‘done’. There is no real value in this video: no musical talent, no entertainment appeal, no artistic element. Yet, it is a YouTube viral phenomenon. Rebecca Black is a YouTube viral phenomenon.

Or is she?

Read the rest of the post on Curated…

Tagged with:
 

A wonderful first novel by Joshua Ferris.

‘Then We Came to an End’ has been out for a few years but its bullseye wit has not gone out of fashion. Anyone who has spent time in an advertising agency will laugh, cry or both. You’ll love it or hate it.

Here’s a little bit from the New York Times review when the book launched. You can read the entire content here.

It is a brave author who embeds the rationale for writing his novel into the novel itself. But 70 pages into Joshua Ferris’s first novel, set in a white-collar office, we meet Hank Neary, an advertising copywriter writing his first novel, set in a white-collar office. Ferris has the good sense to make Neary’s earnest project seem slightly ridiculous. Neary describes his book as “small and angry.” His co-workers tactfully suggest more appealing topics. He rejects them. “The fact that we spend most of our lives at work, that interests me,” he says. “A small, angry book about work,” his colleagues think. “There was a fun read on the beach.”

Tagged with:
 

The writer’s bookshelf. Stuff Hipsters Hate

Stuff Hipsters Hate, Ulysses Press.

My brother-in-law (a far superior intellect) Mike McNeil gave me a copy of ‘Stuff Hipsters Hate‘ for Christmas. I’m loving this book but seriously wondering how he really feels about ME (and my super-cool John Varvatos casual wear).

Brenna Ehrlich and Andrea Bartz have created a great reading experience. It’s full of notes, illustrations, random thoughts and photos.

They are talented, funny and good writers. Love their style.

Here’s a backgrounder from the publishers site.

Based on the author’s popular tumbler blog stuffhipstershate, which has been called Depressingly astute by theThe New Yorker and Wickedly funny by The Frisky, comes the ultimate book on hipsterdom. From the dive bars of Brooklyn’s Williamsburg to the dirty alleys of San Francisco’s Mission, the urban hipster has redefined American cool with a sighing disdain for everything mainstream. Hipsters are easily identified by their worn-out shoes, fixies and PBR tallboys, but until now no one had investigated beyond the hipster look to the even more hilarious hipster psyche. With personally researched articles, revealing illustrations and helpful charts and graphs, Stuff Hipsters Hate exposes the bottomless well of impassioned scorn that motivates the ever-apathetic hipster, including: MATING AND SOCIAL HATES (buying you a drink | monogamy | texting back in a timely fashion), APPAREL AND GROOMING HATES (high heels | muscles | being asked about their tattoos) and WORK AND LIFE HATES (full-time jobs | knowing their bank balance | enthusiasm).

Tagged with:
 

If you received an e-reader or a bookstore gift card this Christmas, here are a few recommendations for winter reading. Many of these suggestions come from members of the barely famous Wheatsheaf Literary Society in Toronto.

A Fan’s Fare Adam Uxley

A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius David Eggers

Billy Bathgate E.L. Doctorow

Blood Meridien Cormack McCarthy

Dirty Sweet John McFetridge (Toronto writer)

Disgrace J.M. Coetzee

East of Eden John Steinbeck

Factotum Charles Bukowski

Fight Club Chuck Palahniuk

For Whom The Bell Tolls Ernest Hemingway

Getting Away With Murder Howard Engel

Gould’s Book of Fish Richard Flanagan

High Fidelity Nicolas Hornby

I Know This Much is True Wally Lamb

Legends of the Fall Jim Harrison

Love in the Time of Cholera Gabriel García Márquez

Master and Commander Patrick O’Brian

Moby Dick Herman Melville (See “Why you should read Moby Dick“)

Skinny Dip Carl Hiaasen

Suttree Cormack McCarthy

The Great Santini Patrick Conroy

The Long Goodbye Raymond Chandler

The Mambo Kings Sings Songs of Love Oscar Hijuelos

The Man Who Was Late Louis Begley

The Night Manager John le Carré

The Rotters Club Jonathan Coe

The Sportswriter Richard Ford

The Stowaway Robert Hough

The Van Roddy Doyle

Tropic of Cancer Henry Miller

Trust Fishing in America Richard Brautigan

The Things They Carried Tim O’Brien

The Final Confession of Mabel Stark Robert Hough

The Unbearable Lightness of Being Milan Kundera

The General in his Labryth Gabriel García Márquez

The Road Cormack McCarthy


Tagged with:
 

Interesting phone stats.

Regardless of your thoughts on peak oil, these images and numbers are fascinating.

Tagged with:
 

At the core of this great little book is a fundamental question: How do we create value? Charles Saatchi, like all great advertisers, knew how to create perceived value in the products his agency sold. He practiced the same basic formula that all of use to one extent or another. We turn features into benefits and hope to create a value proposition that’s powerful enough to influence choice.

This term “value proposition” shows up in most briefs north or south of “positioning” in the list of jargon. Value is, and always has been, the relationship between price and quality. At some price the bundle of a product’s rational and emotional benefits become worth it. But art is a different story.

The value of a painting is arbitrary. There’s no accounting for the cost of materials or the time spent in its creation. There is only the emotional and economic value assigned to a thing for it’s rarity. All technical aspects aside, all paintings are just canvas and coloured goo. What makes one worthless and another worth four hundred million is purely a matter of perceived value.

In ‘Artoholic‘, Saatchi answers questions about his life in advertising and his role in the art world. He denies, or a least downplays, his power as a rain maker but there’s no doubt that he’s a factor in the perceived value of the art that he collects or unloads. That’s what make the book so interesting.

See also: Charles Saatchi on Mad Men.

If you like this post, please comment.

Tagged with:
 

Shop Symantec shop

http://www.prosoftwarestore.com/

Shop Windows Software

Shop Borland Software shop

Software Store VMware Software Microsoft Software MAC Software Autodesk Software Shop Software Adobe Software