Thursday, October 8, 2009

Humanities Tennessee Launches New Literary Website

Posted by Liz Garrigan on Thu, Oct 8, 2009 at 11:25 AM

The folks who bring us the incomparable Southern Festival of Books, whose annual event this weekend is previewed extensively in the fresh Scene, today launched a new website called Chapter 16. The online journal -- "a community of Tennessee writers, readers & passersby" -- offers rich Tennessee-centric content, including book reviews, author Q&As, news about upcoming events and a selection of handy literary links. The site also will offer reviews of non-Tennessee writers who are making reading and/or signing appearances anywhere in the state.

Humanities Tennessee has been so engrossed in planning and preparing for the book fest, which begins tomorrow and will feature more than 200 authors, that the website launch is only a soft one. New features will be added during the fall, and they'll include sections for podcasts, book clubs, original poetry by Tennessee authors, bios and photos. Enough from the messenger. What follows is an excerpt from Chapter 16 editor Margaret Renkl (former Scene book page editor):

Welcome to Chapter 16, an online journal about the literary side of life in Tennessee. There's a certain irony in the whole concept of a website devoted to celebrating books. (Wags might claim there's also an irony in the concept of a literary life in Tennessee.) The Internet can be a dispiriting place, where total cranks and nincompoops effortlessly assume the mantle of authority, and anonymous comments savage the most enlightened points of view. Internet publications tend to be instantaneous and often incompletely considered -- the very opposite of a book. Plus, it's a sensory wasteland, lacking the satisfying heft of a book, the rustle of pages, the lovely scent of glue and ink.

But with newspapers shuttering book pages all across America, readers hoping for news about writers not named Dan Brown must turn increasingly to book-centered sites like IndieBound and Beatrice.com, and to blogs like Maud Newton and Bookslut. Like those sites, among many others mushrooming around the blighted landscape of old-media book coverage, Chapter 16 aims to use what's best about the web -- the feeling of community, the opportunity to get news out fast -- to promote what's best about books.

Because this is a project of Humanities Tennessee, we're focusing on Tennessee writers. Here you'll find book reviews, interviews, and profiles featuring the home team -- and original essays and poems by our authors, too. But we're taking a very broad definition of "our" writers: Once a Tennessean always a Tennessean, as far as we're concerned, so look for stories about all kinds of writers with a Tennessee connection, present or past, and news of notable out-of-state writers who are giving readings or signing books anywhere in the state, as well.

Be sure to register on the site so you can make comments and send us feedback -- about what we're doing right and where we could stand to shape up a little. Think our reviewer totally nailed a nuanced and complicated book? We want to know -- and we want to hear, too, when you think we've missed the mark. One of the best things about the Internet is that book reviews on the web aren't pronouncements from on high. They're conversation starters, the first volley in a back-and-forth we hope to have with you, and that we hope you'll have with each other.

Every Thursday we'll post new stories like those you see today. And watch for a raft of new features that we'll be rolling out, one at a time, all fall: original poems by Tennessee poets, profiles of book clubs around the state, photo features of bookcases and nightstands owned by folks whose lives you might like a peek into, podcasts from the Southern Festival of Books and other author events, even a searchable database of all the writers our state has produced, along with biographies and links to more information about them. And that's just for starters.

So poke around while you're here, write a comment or two, and then make a note to check back next week. At Chapter 16, the conversation is just beginning.

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an irony in the concept of a literary life in Tennessee
Really?
http://imagesmaury.com/index.php/site/articles/culture/columbia_athenaeum_offers_annual_girls_school_week
-- among several other educational institutes of higher learning that were in Maury County, Tennessee, from the early 1800s on. Columbia, Tennessee, was known as an educational center for both males and females, and a couple of the literary clubs that still meet in Maury County date back to the early 1900s at least.

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Posted by Donna Locke on 10/08/2009 at 6:24 PM

Aside of their content, books have an visual value that is hard to explain. This esthetics manifests itself by the storage in a bookcase in a visible in a bookcase. It is as if bookcase tells something about their owner.

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Posted by bookcase on 01/17/2010 at 5:47 PM
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