Archive for July, 2008

Taking a Break from the Book

Ever since the start of this year, I’ve been working like mad on my third book, the business book on New Trends in International Public Relations. It’s been fascinating exploring the web in search of great examples of how businesses and individuals are using blogs and other social media and also making contact with bloggers and others to interview them for their views and experiences of using social media tools for communications. But it’s been very “full on” and exhausting as I’ve been working on the book at weekends and on my days off as well as following up contacts in the evenings after work or during my lunch hour. I’ve now got one more chapter - the rounding up and final views chapter - before I finish the first draft.

So I’m taking a break from the book for the next couple of months.

I’m really enjoying having the time to do a bit more of my own blogging, which I’ve neglected somewhat due to all my time being taken up with the book. I’ve also got into reading books again - having spent almost a year, maybe more, reading blogs, newspapers and magazines to keep my finger on the pulse of what’s going on in fast-moving world of social media. What books I have read related almost entirely to blogging, marketing and social media so I’m really enjoying indulging my eclectic and varied taste again. I’ve recently finished the e-book version of 1968: The Year That Rocked the World, a social history of that tumultous year and an audiobook of 1776: America and Britain at War, a history of the critical year of the American Revolution and I am currently reading Steven Pinker’s The Stuff of Thought:: Language as a Window into Human Nature (Penguin Press Science), about how our use of language reveals the way we view or construct the world. And my poor garden that has been unloved for so long is finally getting some love and attention - it’s been great getting out there, pruning and chopping and mucking around in the dirt, getting it looking tidy and lovely again.

Hopefully, the break will give me perspective on what I’ve written so far and help me with forming my conclusion for the upcoming final chapter. It’ll also mean that I can go back to the book refreshed and rested and ready for the next stage, which is reviewing and editing the first draft into a more publishable form. After that is stage three, which is to review with my co-author Silvia Cambie both my parts of the book and hers and work with her to sew the patchwork of the two manuscripts into one cohesive whole, ready to be delivered to our publisher, Kogan Page, in November.

Photo: thanks to Gianluca Neri from flickr.com (CCL)

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, July 4th, 2008 at 2:00am

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Digital Spaces Panel - Resources

Here are the links to articles and other resources on the web which formed part of my research for the Digital Spaces Panel discussion at the Bookseller’s Digitise or Die conference today. The list shows only the latest 30 items - to see more items, click on “Digital Spaces Panel - links” to be taken to all my research items on this topic.


I’m also grateful to the following people who kindly shared with me their knowledge about the use of digital spaces in publishing:

Ian Metcalfe, Hodder Faith and Hodder General - Publisher, Bibles and Digital Media

Lucy Luck, Lucky Luck Associates - Literary Agent

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Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, July 3rd, 2008 at 2:00pm

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Malaysian Authors Making a Splash

When Hodder & Stoughton in the UK published by two novels in 1998 (The Flame Tree) and 2000 (Mindgame), I was pretty much the only Malaysian novelist who had been published internationally at that time. That remained the case for a few years as I wondered where everybody else was who might be scribbling away about Malaysia. And then in the last few years, I’ve been pleased to see a number of Malaysian writers making a splash on the international writing scene.

The most recent ones that come to mind are:

Tash Aw - The Harmony Silk Factory

Tan Twan Eng - The Gift of Rain

Siew-Chiah Tei - Little Hut of Leaping Fishes

Shamini Flint - A Malaysian Murder

It’s great to see that Malaysia is becoming known as a literary contender through these new writers and hopefully, many others coming along the way!

I’m sure there are many more Malaysian novelists who have been published internationally that I’m not aware of - please add a comment to help me compile a comprehensive list.

Photo: thanks to eshare from flickr.com (CCL)

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008 at 2:00am

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Portrait of Yang-May Ooi

Fusion View is created by Yang-May Ooi, author of The Flame Tree and Mindgame, legal thrillers set in Malaysia and London, first published by Hodder & Stoughton.

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