Showing posts with label uk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uk. Show all posts

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Beetroot Books is collaborating now with Eco-Libris (our first store in the UK!)

We're happy to announce on a new bookstore that is collaborating with Eco-Libris - Beetroot Books, the first bookstore we're working with in the UK!

This unique online bookstore is joining Eco-Libris bookstores program and will offer the store's customers the opportunity to plant a tree for every book they buy there and receive our "One tree planted for this book" sticker with their new book!

Why buying books with Beetroot Books (besides the fact they're partnering with us)? Here are some convincing reasons that will also help you to get to know them better:

They specialize in titles that enable you to think, act, learn, challenge, enjoy. They’re a one stop shop for everything sustainable, alternative, green and active – for all ages. Also, every one of their books is hand-picked – if you need advice or recommendations about any of our books or subjects we’ll be willing, able and happy to help you.

They stock and promote titles from independent publishers and unpublished writers. They also donate £1 for every gardening book sold to disability charity and £1 for every children’s book sold to child literacy charity Springboard for Children. Last but not least, Beetroot Books is powered 100% by renewable energy.

Bottom line: Beetroot Books is different from corporate stores - While corporate stores care what they sell, Beetroot care on how they sell. they offer you the best prices but won’t exploit in order to do so.

You can visit them at http://www.beetrootbooks.com/

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting Sustainable Reading!


Monday, February 7, 2011

Save Our Libraries Day in the UK against coalition plans to close 450 libraries

Last Saturday was Save Our Libraries Day in the UK with more than 100 protest events where librarians, writers, and readers stormed local branches to protest the government’s possible plans to close 400 libraries.

The events, as The Bookseller reported, included read-ins, storytelling events, workshops and gigs.

The 400 libraries might be closed due to budget cuts, and these are bad news not only to book lovers, but for everyone who appreciate valuable public services and spaces such as libraries. As a son of a librarian I'm really sorry to hear these news and I hope this protests will be heard on Downing Street and help saving these libraries from closing down.

A crowd of around 100 gathered at Holyrood, Edinburgh to read sections of their favorite books. See the Guardian's video below:



Here's also a cartoon protest against spending cuts (Photograph: Ros Asquith):



We keep our fingers crossed, hoping this fight will succeed and will let you know once we'll have more updates about it.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Author Sarah Barnard is going green with Eco-Libris!

We're happy to announce on a new collaboration with author Sarah Barnard to green up her three books: The Map and The Stone, The Portal Between and The Portal Sundered.

Sara Barnard is offering readers who wish to buy her book on Ethics Trading's Books page and on her own website for The Portal Series a way to make your book buying a little bit more Green. There is now the option on these webpages to add a Tree Sticker to your order and in return our "One tree planted for this book" sticker will be added into your book order and a tree will be planted on your behalf, for that book as well.

Here's a a brief summary of each of Sarah Barnard's Books:.

The Map and The Stone
released Aug 1st 2010
Rhys is 10 years old and he has a problem. There's a Darkling on his bed and it needs his help. In a race against the withering effects of the space between worlds, Rhys must find the magical Nexus and help the Darkling and his people find their way home before it's too late.


The Portal Between
Sam has been missing for 2 years and no-one knows what happened. Kate always hoped and believed that Sam was alive. Now, in a flurry of magic and chaos, Sam is back - but she's being chased and needs to turn and face her demons.




The Portal Sundered
Having discovered some of who she really is, Sam tries to rule the world beyond the Portals. But it's all going wrong and she faces trouble on all sides, even while she sleeps and Lily can't, or won't, help her this time.

You can also find Sarah Barnard on Facebook and follow her on Twitter.

For more information on authors and publishers that green up their books with Eco-Libris check our authors/publishers page.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris


Eco-Libris: Promoting sustainable reading!

Monday, July 5, 2010

Sell Your Mobile For The Best Price With SellMyMobile.com

Today we have a guest column from our friends at Sell My Mobile who present the important green service they provide - a mobile phone recycling price comparison site.

Mobile phone recycling is still a fresh new idea of earning yourself some extra cash, and people across the world are still very much unaware to the potential that is behind this new money earning arrangement.

If you have any old mobile phones lying around the house, no matter how old or cosmetically damaged they are, then now is a great time to trade them in for a cash return, and the course of action couldn’t be any easier to send them off to the recyclers. Sell My Mobile compare all the UK’s leading mobile phone recycling companies to give you the greatest price viable on your phone, saving you time and money from having to physically make notes of each company’s quoted cost.

The process of selling your phones for cash is clear-cut and will only take you a few minutes to finalize. Using the succeeding four steps can see you receive your cash within a couple of days and with payout of up to £350 your phone could be worth a lot more than you suppose.

1. Search for your mobile phones model in the search box provided
2. A list of results will be displayed giving you a range of prices with the best price displayed at the top with the phone recycling company that will offer it you.
3. Visit the company website that offers you the best price and fill in your details. You will then receive an email with instructions on how to send your phone away (freepost)
4. You will receive a cheque in the post within 1 – 3 days on average.

Why Choose SellMyMobile.com To Sell Your Old Mobiles?

• We currently compare over 30,000 prices on over 4,000 phones everyday – and currently have the best search comparison engine in the market
• The original and the best! - SellMyMobile.com was the 1st mobile phone recycling price comparison site in the UK
• 147,000 visits per month
• Comprehensive comparison table identifying phone recycler payment methods, best prices offered and freepost options.
• On average 650 phones are sold per day on Sell My Mobile
• 68 million phones are lying around in people’s homes, unused
• The most valuable phone to recycle/sell is the Apple iPhone 3G S 32GB, which can be sold for £302 (May 2010).

In conclusion you are not spending a penny when you recycle mobile phones with Sell My Mobile, yet you’re acquiring additional money to put towards a luxury or unpaid bill, plus you are helping out the environment that we live in.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

An interview with Fiona Robyn, an author with a new novel offered to read for free online!

Fiona Robin is not only a supporter of Eco-Libris, but also a gifted author who has released lately her latest novel, 'Thaw' with an offer you can't refuse: you can read it online for free!

This is definitely a bold move (although there's a growing evidence that such steps actually help to boost sales of printed titles), and we thought it's an opportunity to speak with Fiona about her books and her innovative marketing strategies. We also have a signed copy of the book we're giving away, so check the details at the end of the post.


Hello Fiona and congrats on your new novel. Can you tell us what it is about?

Thank you. ‘Thaw’ follows 32 year old microbiologist, Ruth, as she thinks about whether or not to carry on living. She gives herself three months to decide, and the novel is her journal over these three months.

What was your inspiration for this novel? for the characters?
My characters always appear ‘out of nowhere’, and it was the same with Ruth. As I got to know her, the story emerged. I knew she was a troubled character, and that she used photographs as a way of staying sane, and then I realised she would want to have her portrait painted, and so the Russian painter Red came into being…

This is the fifth novel you publish within only 3 years. How do you it?
I had a head start! I’d been writing for six years when I found my publisher, Snowbooks, and they wanted to publish all three of my novels. There will be more of a gap before the next!

\You decided to do something quite radical and enable readers to read it online for free - why?
It is radical. It’s an experiment, really – my hope is that some people will read it online and then want to buy my previous novels, or that some people will want to read to the end before waiting for it all to appear online. We’ll see if it helps or hinders my sales in the long run!






















You're not just a fruitful and talented writer, but also an innovative marketer - can you share with us couple of the strategies you used so far to market your books? what do you find the most effective?

Thank you. I’ve always tried to find marketing strategies that will feel like fun, whether or not they help me to sell more books. I’ve always enjoyed writing my blogs, and I’ve had great fun on my virtual book tour and with the Thaw project. It’s difficult to know what is most effective, but it does seem to be a cumulative thing, and patience is essential. There is a very fine line between asking people to help and becoming annoying, and maybe it’s inevitable that you cross it with some people, so a thick skin is also helpful!

What do you find more challenging - writing a book or marketing it later on?
Both are very challenging, and both are great fun. It takes a very different kind of energy to write a book – a reflective, introspective kind of energy – whereas marketing is all about putting my energy out there. Both activities can be very tiring in different ways, and I need to have a recharge after finishing a book and after a marketing campaign.

Do you think social media is really working? Is it just a better way to communicate with your readers or also a marketing tool?
I do find new readers for my books on Facebook and Twitter, and so I think it does work as a marketing tool, but you have to be even more careful about putting people off – nobody wants adverts for books on their Facebook page all the time. I try to use these tools more as building a profile for myself, by writing about the things that interest me, and then hopefully if people like my writing style they’ll also check out my novels.

How many hours a day do you spend on facebook, twitter and other similar social media platforms?
Hmm, a good question! Maybe an hour or two (or sometimes three). I COULD spend an hour or less if I was focused and I didn’t end up going off on random tangents.

You are an ongoing supporter of Eco-Libris and I know the environmental issue is very important to you. Do you find similar awareness and concerns among readers?
I don’t think people tend to think about the environment when they’re reading a novel. Balancing out our paper consumption by paying for Eco-Libris to plant trees is such a brilliant idea – everyone should be doing it!

Finally, what is your next project and when we can expect your next novel?
My next novel, ‘The Most Beautiful Thing’, is on the horizon, and follows 14 year old Joe as he spends the summer in Amsterdam with his aunt Nel. I already have the NEXT novel queued up in my head, but I’m hoping to take a break yet. I’m looking forward to a quiet summer!

Thanks Fiona!

You can read more about 'Thaw' and the other novels written by Fiona Robyn on her websites - www.fionarobyn.com and www.plantingwords.com

GIVEAWAY ALERT!!

We're giving away a signed copy of Thaw, courtesy of the author, and of course a tree will be planted for the copy!

How you can win? Please add a comment below with an answer the following question: What do you think about enabling readers to read a book for free online? Will it benefit the authors eventually? Submissions are accepted until next Tuesday, March 16, 12PM EST. The winner will be announced the following day.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!

Friday, June 27, 2008

BookRabbit: the new generation of online bookstores

Springwise is a great resource for innovative ideas in the book world. Few books ago I read there about WEbook. Last week they brought to my attention an innovative combo of online bookstore and community I didn't know about - BookRabbit.

So what's so special about it? well, firstly that's probably the only one that allows readers to upload photos of their own bookshelves (if you're only interested in bookshelves, check out the great site Your Shelves! -
http://yourhomelibrary.wordpress.com/, or of course our series 'my green bookshelf').

But it's more than just the opportunity to check out other people's bookshelves. BookRabbit explain it
on their website : "BookRabbit is an online bookshop that dynamically connects readers, authors and publishers through the books they own. Using BookRabbit, readers can share their passion for books, make recommendations to other readers as well as creating their own personal bookcase and catalogues online – anything from medieval falconry, through bestsellers, to educational publications for schools. BookRabbit has a simple aim – to claim back book selling and book buying, enabling readers to discover the right books for them."

So how you can interact with fellow readers on BookRabbit? well, there are many options. You can join an ongoing discussion like 'books for rainy days?' or 'books by models?' or start a new one. You can take a look a people's bookshelves, see what books are there and if you like what you see, you can send them a friend request. You can review a book, or read others' reviews, create your own categories for books, share recommendations and much more.

BookRabbit (http://www.bookrabbit.com/), which was founded by Kieron Smith and went through its public launch last month, is also a bookstore. They have more than 4m books on sale, and even more important they decided to offer the best prices on the top 100,000 titles, so they are cheaper than Amazon for these books. And they also offer free delivery within the UK.

BookRabbit is what I see as the online bookstore 2.0, combining two powerful lit applications of the digital age that so far went on different routes and never met - the online bookstore and online bookish communities/networks.

Book readers love to communicate and interact, whether it's on Facebook, Bookmooch, blogs, or other online platforms. BookRabbit understands that as an online bookstore, it makes sense to provide them with such a platform in-house, giving them useful and innovative tools to interact with each other. This way there's a much better chance that the next purchase of these readers (and it seems that many of them are avid readers) will eventually take place on the website.

I like BookRabbit's concept very much - firstly, they provide innovative interaction tools and not just copy others (kudos on the bookshelf idea!). Second, they have a real bold pledge that it's not easy at all to keep ("every week we check our prices against the top 100,000 books on Amazon UK to make sure we're cheaper"). They understand that with all the competitors out there, it's not enough to provide readers with cool platform and useful interaction tools, and count on their good will, but you also need to provide them with competitive pricing that will be compelling to their pockets.

I don't know if they'll grow to become the next Amazon (or Amazon 2.0), and I am not sure at all if that's their goal. But I am positive that they will become a model for the next generation of online bookstores (not the only one, but an important one) and we're going to see in the near future many that will try to follow them and create their version of BookRabbit.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: plant a tree for every book you read!

Saturday, June 14, 2008

The green side of the British Book Awards

I was very happy to read this week that not only the American Booksellers Association is going green, but also the British one.

The Frankfurt Book Fair 2008 reported in its June newsletter on the British Book Industry Awards, the Oscars of the British book business, which took place on May 13. The Awards, reports the newsletter, were first set up 19 years ago by the independent trade newspaper "Publishing News" and are organised today in cooperation with the Booksellers Association (BA), having become a firm fixture for the industry.

And here's the green part of the newsletter that made me happy and I wanted to share with you :

Riding the green wave
The event had been preceded by a two-day conference of the Booksellers Association. Despite the sunshine and the attractions of the nearby beach, the programme was well attended, with around 400 delegates from the world of publishing and bookselling. The dominant topics were digitisation and ecology.

"Going green" was the slogan and experts like Sir David King, one-time scientific adviser to the UK government, asked what sort of contribution the book industry could make. In the discussion featuring Managing Director Gerry Johnson from Waterstones bookshop chain and Ashley Lodge from Harper Collins, it became clear that the industry is serious in its intentions. Even if the industry is not the main cause of climate change, there was still an urgent need to take action, as BA President Graham Rand reminded delegates: "We do not want to sit back, lose the agenda and allow ourselves, perhaps justifiably, to be targeted by any environmental group."

I can't agree more with BA President Graham Rand about the need to take action, and not only because of the fear to become a target of criticism, but because it's just the right thing to do.

We reported last December on some steps that were taken in this direction in the British book industry and were looking to see more bolder steps to follow. It looks like this two-day conference is definitely an important step in the right direction and I hope we'll hear more soon from the BA about further efforts to go green.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

UK book industry goes (a little bit) green

The Guardian reported yesterday that the UK books trade "has taken a step towards a greener future, setting a target of a 10% reduction in carbon footprint from 2006 levels by 2015."

According to the article, the 10% reduction target has been adopted by the industry's Environmental Action Group (EAG), a panel set up earlier this year by the Booksellers Association and the Publishers Association, where you can find high-level figures from Penguin, HarperCollins, Hachette, Random House and Faber.

This is indeed very encouraging to see that leading organizations in the UK book industry are taking action and moving in the right direction.

But isn't 10% reduction too little? not to mention the fact that the reduction will be from 2006 figures. The Kyoto Protocol for example referred to 1990 figures as the basis for CO2 reduction calculations (although, there it was only 5% reduction of 1990 figures).

Not only that, but it's also only a recommendation. Tim Godfray, the chief executive of the Booksellers Association, explained that the figure is a non-binding target they are "encouraging publishers and booksellers to adopt".

Still, I think that it is better than doing nothing and it shows that the UK book publishing industry do not ignore the environmental impacts of the industry. I truly hope to see bolder steps following this one.

Andy Tait from Greenpeace also addressed this issue on the article saying "however, the target is an encouraging start, but it's not enough...Encouraging booksellers and publishers to reduce their carbon footprint by 10% is a positive gesture, but a much more serious impact would be made if the publishing industry insisted that the pulp and paper industry that supplies them cleans up its act. Energy efficiency, clean renewable energy and an end to using paper from ancient forests could transform the industry that supplies the raw materials for our books and magazines."

I join Tait in his call to the industry and would like to add to his list also the urgent need to significantly increase the use of recycled paper.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris

Eco-Libris: a great green gift for the holidays!

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

SmartPlanet - green news from the UK



















I want to share with you a new green blog I learned about today: SmartPlanet.

SmartPlanet comes from the UK, where it was launched by CNET Networks UK. It's a one-stop guide to creating a smarter, greener and fairer planet, with an emphasis on energy-saving, ethical and organic products. You can find there the latest UK news on ethical shopping and living, from the hottest organic fashion and fresh Fairtrade grub to new solar gadgets and the coolest hybrid cars.

Today, for example, when I checked it out, I read 5 tips for HallowGreen celebrations (compost your lantern), learned about SHIBBY, which utilizes old billboard advertising banners to make bags, got updates from the Tokyo Motor Show on Mazda's hydrogen-fuelled future cars, and saw a video on Londoner’s carbon footprints.

Most of the green blogosphere, and especially the part dealing with green lifestyle, is dominated by US-based blogs and is very US oriented. Therefore, it is great to see another green website bringing us cool green news and updates from the UK, where a lot of interesting green stories take place.

SmartPlanet's editor is Adam Vaughan, co-founder of Hippyshopper, blogger at thegreenguy.co.uk and helps with Friends of the Earth's Green Living pages. He is also the guy who is standing to the right of Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

Good luck to Adam and SmartPlanet! I'll check this blog regularly. You are welcome to do the same.

Yours,
Raz @ Eco-Libris