When I read books I use white paper bookmarks so that I can jot down new words to look up. or pithy statements or clever insights worth quoting in TYWKWDBI. The best bookmarks are cut-up greeting cards, which have white expanses and the proper stiffness.
Embedded above is a scan of the top portion of a bookmark I recently found in a pocket while doing laundry. And to my dismay I had no idea what book I had been reading at the time, or how long ago. I can still look up words, but how to retrieve the "advice" from some page 61? (I had already decided to skip the "cure for lesbianism" on page 32).
Does anyone want to try to guess the book, based on the words harvested? Answer tomorrow.
Addendum: I could not for the life of me figure out which book I had been reading. So I asked AI:
I immediately remembered the book, which I had read because it was longlisted for the Booker Prize. I had returned it to the library many weeks ago. So I looked at my list of "Books read" and there it was - graded with a "2+" on my personal scale of 0-4.
That rating meant it wasn't worth a potential future reread and not worth reviewing for TYWKIWDBI, so I won't be recommending the book here. I may add attercop, inchwell, swingle scutch, becks, and casemate to my huge list of interesting words (sigil is already there). And I've requested the book from the library again to see whether the "cure for lesbianism" or the "advice" are worth blogging.
I'm posting this now not for the book per se, but to make note of the amazing power of artificial intelligence. I used the commonly-available and free "AI mode" on Google. What amazes me is that it appears that 127 pages of this book have been loaded into a database. So I wondered whether the book could be reproduced by asking the AI to "regurgitate" it passage by passage ("give me a sentence, give me the next sentence etc...). This morning I asked...
That was followed by links (to New Direcrtions Publishing and to Penguin Books Australia) where I could purchase the book. Interestingly there was no link to a third-party seller like Amazon, and (to my disappointment and that of John Farrier) no suggestion that "you can get this book from your local public library."
All of this would seem to be within the boundaries of copyright law, but it still amazes me that a book just published this past year has already been scanned into storage into a massive data warehouse that is guzzling cooling water somewhere in a rural agricultural area.