March 7 Informal Bookfuturists Meetup at Lord Hobo

Posted: February 26th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: events | No Comments »

The next evening of presentations will be in early April. In the meantime, please come out to an informal meetup at Lord Hobo in Kendall Square, (92 Hampshire St. Cambridge, MA 02141) for a free discussion of all sorts of topics at the intersection of books and technology. What do you think about the Google Books Settlement? What are your thoughts on the iPad? Working on a transmedia storytelling experiment and looking for a collaborator? C’mon out!

Sunday, March 7, 6:30pm
Lord Hobo 92 Hampshire St. Cambridge, MA 02141
Facebook event page.


Bookfuturists Meetup at Microsoft NERD 1/29/10 7-9pm

Posted: January 13th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: events | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

Boston Bookfuturists: Introducing experiments in storytelling and publishing  — exploring the intersection of books and technology.

The first ever Bookfuturists Meetup is this month at Microsoft New England Research & Development Center near the MIT campus in Kendall Square. Come listen to presentations on experiments in storytelling and publishing. The event is free. Please RSVP:

Boston Bookfuturists 1
7-9pm
January 29
Microsoft New England Research & Development Center
One Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA

Please RSVP

Interested in presenting at future events? Please contact us: info@bookfuturists.com

Host: Joanne McNeil, The Tomorrow Museum

Presenting:

Joshua Glenn, a Boston-based journalist and scholar, is coeditor of Hilobrow.com and co-curator of Significant Objects, an online experiment that pairs writers with secondhand junk, then sells the junk on eBay (using the story as an item description), in an effort to answer this question: “What makes things meaningful?”

Peggy Nelson is a new media artist whose work encompasses film, augmented reality, performance art, and reenactments. In Search of Adele H is a Twitter movie, a re-imaging of the life and fictionalizations of Victor Hugo’s daughter Adèle. But as with a book, the moving images are intentionally missing. The Twitter movie happens in your head, much as the main character’s life happened in hers.

Stona Fitch writes powerful novels that have earned an international following. His novel SENSELESS is now a UK feature film and a cult classic that critics often refer to as the most disturbing novel ever written. St. Martin’s is publishing his next novel, Give + Take, in April. He has been selected as one of the Boston Public Library’s 2010 “Literary Lights.” In 2008, Stona and other writers/thinkers founded the Concord Free Press, the world’s first generosity-based publisher, which publishes original novels and gives them away in exchange for voluntary donations to worthy causes or people in need.

Matthew Battles has written about technology, language, and culture for such publications as the American Scholar, the Atlantic, and the Boston Globe. He’s cofounder of the blog Hilobrow.com and author of the book Library, an Unquiet History.

Sean Fizroy is an Internet media strategist and consultant, filmmaker, and technologist. Most recently, Sean helped build the future of Internet TV at Brightcove. He also teaches as a member of the Interactive Media Design faculty at The New England Institute of Art, where he designed the curriculum for the baccalaureate concentration in Digital Video. Sean is a frequent speaker on the effective use of social media for media arts professionals, organizations, and non-profits, digital filmmaking and distribution strategy, and disruptive technologies in digital media.