Friday, August 29, 2008

Breaking Dawn review contest winners

The suspense is over—behold, the winners of the Breaking Dawn review contest!

When the contest closed on the 15th of August, there were already 119 reviews in (for a book that had been out just two weeks). As promised the top three reviews (those with the most "thumbs-up" when the contest closed) win a $50 gift card to Amazon, Abebooks, Booksense, or any independent bookseller of their choice, a LibraryThing t-shirt and a year's free membership (to keep or give away).

The top three are:
Seven runners up (the next seven reviews with the most "thumbs-up") win a LibraryThing t-shirt and a year's free membership (to keep or give away).
And then forty reviewers were randomly chosen from everyone who both wrote a review and voted for others' reviews. They'll each receive a year's free membership (to keep or give away).
Congratulations to everyone who participated! Winners, email Lindsey: info@librarything.com to claim your prize (include your user name)! If you won a tshirt, include your mailing address, and preferred t-shirt color and size (see the choices here).

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Thursday, July 31, 2008

Twilight Review Contest

In mere hours (at midnight on Friday night), the fourth book in the Twilight Saga, Breaking Dawn will be released. And I'm sure I won't be the only person up reading all weekend, and then waiting to talk about it as soon as I'm finished.

We figured it was a good time to have another review contest! We did this before when Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows came out, and it was great fun.

The prizes:
That's right, that's FIFTY winners.

How the winners will be chosen:
  • The top three reviews--with the most thumbs-up--will get the big prize. The next seven will get the next prize.
  • The remaining forty winners will be randomly picked from all members who both wrote a review and voted for others' reviews.

So, when you finish reading, get writing! When you're done writing, take some time to read other reviews, and give the thumbs-up to the ones you think deserve it.

The contest ends on Friday, August 15th.

And then? Well, there are a ton of Twilight groups where you can stop by and join a discussion on Breaking Dawn, Bella, Edward, Jacob, and more. Here are a few:

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Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Book pile contest

It's been a while since we've had a bookpile contest, so we figure it's time to bring back that LibraryThing tradition. We're also nearing the 30 million books milestone as well as coming up on our third anniversary—time to start celebrating!

As you know, we've been doing a lot of work on the home page lately. As we announced last month, every member now has a personalized, customizable home page. Next up is redesigning the home page that everyone sees when they first visit LibraryThing (the signed out home page). We're considering a new book pile (see the current one to the right)—that's where you come in. We're not guaranteeing we'll use it, but we figured we'd see what LibraryThing members can come up with!

So, the contest! We want book piles. Remember, your pile should represent LibraryThing itself, however you choose to interpret it (is it all about the cataloging for you? The talking about books? Connecting with other members?). Given the international flavor of LibraryThing, extra points if you include non-English books in the pile as well.

The rules
  • Post your photos to Flickr and tag them "LTbookpile" (also tag them "LibraryThing"). If you make a new account it can take a few days for your photos to be publicly accessible, so post a URL to them in the comments here.
  • Or, post your photos on WikiThing here.
  • Or, if all else fails, just email them to abby@librarything.com and I'll post them for you.

The deadline
Get your photos in by Friday, August 15th at noon EDT.

The prizes

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Thursday, February 28, 2008

Groundhog day book pile contest winners

Well, the groundhogs were divided, it's still snowy here in Boston, and yes, I was late in picking a winner to the Groundhog Day Book Pile Contest. Here we go!

Drumroll.... Congrats to our grand prize winner, paghababian, with "6 More Weeks of Reading". What can I say, I'm a sucker for shadow puppets.


And I have to give credit to someone who actually appreciates winter, so our runner up, with hedgehog style is "Hedge2" by compskibook.

See all the entries here on Flickr and on WikiThing.

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Thursday, January 24, 2008

Groundhog Day Book Pile Contest

Photo credit: Flickr member x-eyedblonde; CC-Attribution

In honor of being sick of the glorious New England winter, I hereby announce the newest book pile contest theme: Groundhog Day.

Interpret it as you like! Extra points if you can raise the temperature in Boston. I'm cold.

More about Groundhog Day on Wikipedia, and of course, the Bill Murray classic.

The rules:
  • Post your photos to Flickr and tag them "LTGroundhog" (also tag them "LibraryThing"). If you make a new account it can take a few days for your photos to be publicly accessible, so post a URL to them in the comments here.
  • Or, post your photos on the wiki here.
  • Or, if all else fails, just email them to abby@librarything.com and I'll post them.

The deadline: Friday, February 8th at noon, EST.

The prizes: One grand prize winner will receive a LibraryThing t-shirt, and one runner up will get a yearly gift membership (to keep or give away).

Find inspiration in our archive of past book pile contests.

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Friday, January 11, 2008

Holiday book pile contest winners



Now that the holiday season is behind us, voila, the winners of LibraryThing's holiday bookpile contest. First prize winner, Teampoush, gets a LibraryThing t-shirt for the subtly cool "Joy to the world" photo (look at closely at the books in the background if you don't see it at first).

The two runners up are melannen with the impressive "New Year's Day Bookpile" (what a way to start the year!) and SanityDemolisher with "Sleigh of Books"). Each will get a gift membership.




See all of the submissions here and here.

SantaThing report. I think SantaThing, while a little rushed, was a success! Almost 300 people picked out books for strangers, and had fun doing it. Next year, we'll certainly make some changes*, but it was a good start. My sincere apologies to anyone whose books came after Christmas—we tried our hardest to get them in time, but it didn't happen in every case. If you want to see what everyone else picked for their various Santa-ees, or if your Santa left you a personal message (most messages were transferred onto the Amazon order slip, but long ones didn't fit in), go check it out!

UPDATE: we fixed the SantaThing page so you can peek at the suggestions on your own page.

http://www.librarything.com/santathing.php

The ordering process was actually kind of fun—I started to see themes of popular books. How many people got a copy of The Prestige by Christopher Priest? (Enough that I decided I should probably buy a copy for myself, if that many LibraryThingers recommended it).


*I think we'll start the whole process earlier to give everyone more time to pick out books, etc. We also need figure out the shipping and billing logistics better! We ended up stuck with Amazon billing us separately each time we changed the shipping address (300 times) which hit our bank account's daily limit on the number of transactions. Who knew? Well after Tim and I ended up using up our personal credit cards and spending over a week clicking on Amazon links, we decided - next year, yup, we'll do it differently :)

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Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Holiday book pile contest

It's been a while, but I hereby bring back the book pile contest. I want holiday bookpiles! Make of it what you will—they can be holiday themed (the picture to the right is the winner of last year's Christmas book pile contest, by thelee -- I'd love New Year's piles, or Solstice, Kwanza, Hanukkah), books you received, books you're giving, SantaThing books*—use your imagination!

The nitty gritty:
  • Post your photos to Flickr and tag them "LTholiday" (also tag them "LibraryThing"). If you make a new account it can take a few days for your photos to be publicly accessible, so post a URL to them in the comments here.
  • Or, post your photos on the wiki here.
  • Or, if all else fails, just email them to abby@librarything.com and I'll post them.
The deadline:
  • Monday, January 7th at noon, EST.
Grand prize winner will receive a LibraryThing t-shirt. Two runners-up will each get a yearly gift membership (to keep or give away).

Find inspiration in our archive of past book pile contests.

*Still a few days to sign up for SantaThing!

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Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Help out with default covers!

LibraryThing now shows a special blank cover whenever a book lacks one.

We think we can do it better. We'd love members to be able to pick a different cover, and even different default covers for different books. For example, I'd love to have a default cover for the Loeb Classical Library's Latin (red) and Greek (green) books.

So, let's open it up. LibraryThing members have time and again shown they take better pictures than us. So let's have a contest!

UPDATE: Two people sent in some very slick covers, in a rainbow of colors. I think they're pretty cool. Check them out below. I also set up a wiki page for the contest.

What do to: Take a photo of your favorite, probably old book. Make sure you take it from directly above and the image is clear.

The image.
Quality is key. The image need to be large and clear. You don't need to Photoshop it yourself—slicing it out of background and removing the title, if there is one—but it has to be doable. Shadows are killer.

The rules. We'll give out three-to-five free accounts, but we reserve the right to use any image submitted. All images will be credited on the page where you choose them, if you want it.

Sent today!:
Image:book-cover-violet.jpg Image:book-cover-black.jpg Image:book-cover-brown.jpg Image:book-cover-blue.jpg Image:book-cover-green.jpg Image:book-cover-red.jpg

Current page:


Google's default covers:

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Sunday, November 04, 2007

Twenty Million Books / Three-hundred thousand members.

We recently hit another big milestone—20,000,000 books and 300,000 registered members!*

The exact twenty-millionth book was All Day Every Day by David Armstrong (2002), added by BernardYenelouis last Wednesday night. BernardYenelouis, who gets a gift-account for his good luck, has a library filled with interesting photography books. In this case, he was actually the first to add the book.

It's an interesting light on the books members have. I usually stress how books bind people together. I once almost broke the system proving that while, as the idea goes, everyone may be six-acquaintances away from everyone, if you consider books as the connection, they're more like three books away. But people's reading tastes are also amazingly diverse. Over 1.7 million books are singletons on LibraryThing, and five million books belong to a work in ten or fewer members' libraries. Sure we have a hundred-thousand Harry Potters, but the "long tail" of books is very long.** Chris Anderson has shown this in book sales, but the long tail of ownership is much longer.***

Twenty million feels pretty big to us, but we're not quite sure where it puts us on our—admittedly asterisked—climb up the global libraries list. We're in the top five, it seems. The largest, however, the Library of Congress has 30 million books. That's going to be a fun one!

We're also announcing the winners of the 20-million/Halloween photo contest. The Halloween winner is Bluesky1963's wonderful Oz-inspired photo (right).

The Halloween runners-up was micketymoc's wonderful "Scary Stories." (What sort of stories do books tell around the camp fire? Termite stories, of course!) Micketymoc's profile's also great. As for the 20-million photos it was a tie between erelsi183's candles and the cake-and-numbers photo by white_Dandelion.





I enjoyed all the others, but thought I'd post a few, including AnotherJennifer's "Annabel Lee, Shakespeare, and the devil celebrate Halloween together," mekela05's Steven-King/spiders pile and Mojosmom's horror pop-up.


Four more pictures deserve a mention. Abby and Sara invited Lisa, Liam and I over for dinner in Cambridge, and I brought along the bottle of champagne that my brother had given me in commemoration of LibraryThing's one-millionth book. It was time to drink it, and it was good.

The other two are the only costume photos we received. One Thingamabrarian who wants to be known as Christine submitted her MySpace profile costume. She gets ten points for originality and loses them for not going around as her LibraryThing profile! The other photo is just nepotism.



*Of course, not all 300,000 are active, and a small number of our books are really DVDs or CDs—which are harder, but not impossible to enter. Against that, however, many records combine multiple volumes in a single entry, so the number of uncounted volumes may well balance out the non-book stuff.
Around the same time we hit 26,000,000 tags and 600,000 user-contributed covers. Still, I spent half an hour trying to find the cover for my copy of the Complete War Memoirs of Charles de Gaulle, the one with him very tiny in a big white Cross of Lorraine, a cover I feel like I've seen in a thousand used bookstores! No dice, on LT or elsewhere. I don't usually understand the desire for the right cover, but this one got me. Unfortunately, my scanner is non-functional. In related news, we're going to announce something really exciting about covers sometime this month.
**It seems to me that LibraryThing really comes into its own in the sweet-spot between very obscure and very common, perhaps 25 to 500 members. After all, there are ample real-world opportunities for discussing Harry Potter or the latest hot novel, and when only a few LT members have a book you can't be sure any will be actively engaged with the social-networking side of the site. About eight million books belong to works between 25 and 500 members.
***And of library collections. I found a good quote in the short essay "The Long Tail and Libraries" by Tom Storey (in Developing Cyber Libraries, 2006, not yet in LT!). "If Anderson's theory is correct, and all media are in the throes of radical change, libraries may be well-positioned for this new. The Long Tail is something they understand and have practiced for years." (p. 238)

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Thursday, October 25, 2007

Photo contest: Twenty-million/Halloween


Back when we had five million books!
We're about to hit twenty-million books cataloged. It should happen Monday or Tuesday. Then Halloween is coming up later in the week.

So we're doing a photo contest (see past ones)! Some ideas:
  • Make a spooky halloween book pile. Scary books and severed hands?
  • Make a twenty-million pile, or better, I'd love to get photos of people blowing out candles on books or whatever. Since we're all virtual now, I'm going to ask all the LT employees to blow out something on a cupcake. Come join us and we'll make a big montage of fire and puffed cheeks.
We'll give out a winner (lifetime account) and two runners-up (year's account) for each of the two categories. And glory, lots of glory.

Directions:
  • Post your photos to Flickr and tag them "LT20millionhalloween" (also tag them LibraryThing). If you make a new account it can take a few days for your photos to be publicly accessible, so post a URL to them here or do 2.
  • Or, post your photos on the wiki here.
  • Or, if all else fails, just email them to tim@librarything.com and I'll post them.
Contest ends MIDNIGHT Thursday, November 1.

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Friday, October 19, 2007

Pirates and haikus and contest winners

At long last, the contest winners!

Pirate book piles



I'm giving out two awards for the Talk Like a Pirate Day book pile contest, so congrats to
-Mr-Dustin-, with Treasure of Knowledge, and Emma*, for Here be Pirates—a delightful combination of books plus skull.

See other photos on Flickr, under the TLAPDLibraryThing tag, linked to in the comments of this blog post, or here on WikiThing.

Haikus

Are pirate haikus
truly art? Or attempts to
bring meaning to bilge?
-megacoupe


The age old question. Well, I love the LT haikus. More than words can describe. Especially now that I get emails which start "The haiku told me to email you about..." Priceless.

Here are a few of my favorites—gift memberships are winging their way to the authors of these gems.

But no one must see
all my birdwatching manuals!
Hide all your books here.
-gemmation

New to LibraryThing.
The day is gone. Tomorrow,
A new boss awaits.
-peter.g

Though ye sail under
many flags, your Tag Mirror
shows yer true colors.
-SilentInAWay

Cutlass, cannon, argh!
The never-ending battle.
Splitters and lumpers.
-larxol

Common Knowledge is
Uncommonly addictive
Leaves lie yet unraked
-tardis


Look at all the LibraryThing Haikus on WikiThing—there's help in haiku, general LT haikus, Library 2.0 haikus, and even Talk Like a Pirate Day themed ones.

Look, even Thomas Jefferson approves!

I delight, knowing
That my library lives on,
On the Internets.
-ThomasJefferson



*email me (abby@librarything.com) - I don't know who to give the gift membership prize to!

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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Talk Like a Pirate Day. arrgh

Arrr, make me walk the plank, because I only just remembard that today's a 'ery important day. Aye, Talk Like a Pirate Day, o' course. Ye'll ne'er get me buried booty! (Luckily, I found a useful pirate-speak translator).

So let the fun begin with a couple of contests (as if the sheer glory of Talk Like a Pirate Day weren't enough). This photo by Topper was last year's winner of the Talk Like a Pirate Day bookpile contest, and we're looking for this year's! So, the first contest is a good old fashioned LibraryThing book pile contest.

Book pile contest: the rules
  1. Pile up your books. Be creative.
  2. Take a photo.
  3. Post the photo. You can do either of the following:
  4. Wait for us to crown a winner
the deadline: Wednesday, September 27th at noon EST (just over a week, so get cracking)

The second contest is a a haiku contest. One of the greatest things to come out of the launch of WikiThing (in my humble opinion) was the creation of help in the form of haiku. Started by tardis (a genius), LibraryThing Haikus now holds a place of honor on WikiThing, and has expanded to include not only Help, but also general LT haikus, and Library 2.0 haikus.

Haiku help contest: the rules
  1. Write a haiku. Or seven.
  2. Post them to the LibraryThing Haikus page on WikiThing.
the deadline: well, you can keep adding them forever, but we'll pick a few winners at the end of the month.

Here's a few for inspiration.

How to create
account? Put user name and password
in green box on home page
-tardis

Can we have wishlists?
Yes, they are coming to us
with the winter winds...
-readafew

All the books you've read,
an endless field of poppies;
Try UnSuggester!
-Felius

Bonus points for combining haiku, LibraryThing help, and Talk Like a Pirate Day. Tim's attempt (note he even respects the generic weather rule):

When autumn seas change
Scurvy dogs to lubbers, aye,
Get a blog widget.

PRIZES: Yes. There will be prizes, for both contests. Possibly in the form of buried treasure, possibly in the form of gift accounts.

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Harry Potter Review Contest—57 Winners


UPDATED to include readafew*

The winners of the Harry Potter review contest, picked by you! The reviews for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows came pouring in—there were 288 by August 6th (the day the contest ended), and 364 as of right now!

As we said, the top six seven winners get a $50 gift certificate to Amazon, Abebooks, Booksense, or any independent bookseller. These were choosen because they were the reviews that got the most thumbs-up, using our new rating reviews feature. We intended to award the top five, but of course, there was a tie for second, so we're giving out seven top prizes, total.

Without further ado, the winners:

LadyN's review was by far the top ranked, with 28 "thumbs-up" when the contest closed (it's even higher now!). LadyN captures the book perfectly, I think, when she writes:
"In Deathly Hallows, Harry gradually finds himself without several things he has previously believed he relied upon, the truth growing ever more apparent that his true magic is drawn from friendship, loyalty, protection, courage and the pursuit of what is right."

The next five were all tied, with 19 thumbs-up votes.

sinister_wombat's review was less glowing, rating the book only 2 stars.** sinister_wombat found fault with the consistency of Rowling's world, and notes that: "Harry's quest for the hallows feels like a clunky story haphazardly thrown into the main narrative with no real point or purpose."

xicanti's review appreciated the way the entire series built to this final book, saying, "Many, many times, I found myself crowing with glee as a long-running plot point was summed up, or when one of my theories proved correct."

ablueidol's review sums it up by saying, "Expect that the story and the consequences are darker. Discover that loose ends from the various stories are tied up. And that all that glitters is not gold."

invisiblelizard, it appears, read the book through the night (as many of us did). The review notes that the "ending ... timed to coincide with the first rays of sunlight after a long night, felt warmer to me. Even with several main characters left on the floor."

Kerian's review celebrates the Boy Who Lives—"Filled with surprises as well as chapters that had me crying all the way through them, this is a book I will reread for decades to come. J.K. Rowling has created a marvelous series, full of love, tears, and laughter. Without a doubt, the Muggle world will never forget the name Harry Potter."

readafew's review was a great (and spoiler free!) journalistic commentary: "What? You want to know about Harry Potter? Sorry, I can’t answer any questions about on-going investigations...."

The other fifty winners were pulled randomly from all the members who both wrote a review and voted for others' reviews. It's kind of neat to see how many people participated all around.

These 50 winners get a free membership to LibraryThing*** and a CueCat for entering their books.****

Fenceexa137mummimammakconcannonsulkyblue
RhinoaAerodynamicslittorinaMerriwynsedelia
Sassmprkcscnrennerbadgerthorazinesarahthelibrarian
little_mrslittlebookwormjrepmanmissylcjbd1
lampbanemystfromtheseaDaveFragmentsCozyLoveryoyogod
zeitgeistxxedfinnfeaelinAnksFrogPrincessuk
codynepratchettfanPollyWannaBookalisonswsusiepie
MisterJJonesdonutgirlmrsradcliffeejp1082szarka
capnk8malisitaphilosojerkgaskellagwoodrow
Phantasmaalchemiahero120499lewispiketeampoush



Congratulations to all, and thanks for writing. These were truly fun to read.

*So we pulled the top winners by calculating the number of votes minus the number of flags against that review, as of Aug 6, when the contest closed. But it mistakenly counted flags against the review that had been applied *after* the fact, which counted readafew out. So thanks to all for setting me straight, and thanks to the Hogwarts Express crew, who noted the correct winners, waited patiently for me to blog this, *and* wrote a fantastic song... :)
**I think this allayed a lot of concerns about the "thumbs up" review voting feature—that people would only give positive reviews a thumbs up. Good job, folks.
***You've already got one? Pass it along to a friend!
****We're sending you a profile comment if you won, but if you have comments disabled, or if we miss you somehow but you see yourself listed here, then send an email to info@librarything.com to claim your prize.

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Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Harry Potter book pile contest winners

Thanks to everyone for entering the Harry Potter book pile contest, and providing me with yet another incredibly creative batch of entries (you certainly don't make judging easy!)*


The winner! j2.0 (janetmck on Flickr), with the aptly named "Parceltongue?" gets a $50 gift certificate to use at a bookstore of their choice.






Second prize—and a lifetime gift membership—goes to ellen.w (et al.), with proof that reading is social :)



And because there were just too many great entries, I'm also giving annual memberships to 5** runners up—pictured below.***

amarie with the Weasley clock bookpile.

Sabrinanymph with
"McGonagall goes after the quill".











Jenglo with
"...he who shall not be named..."
Hogwarts student's desk











And lastly, playful, who reminds us that there is life (and indeed, books!) beyond Harry Potter...


Stay tuned, we'll announce the winners of the Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows review contest soon.

You can see all of the entries under the LibraryThingHarryPotter tag on Flickr, and check out our own book pile archive for all the past contest winners.


*I blame the delay in posting the winners entirely on J.K. Rowling. After finishing book 7, I had to go back and re-read 1-7 again (thus cutting into my nightly work hours).
**For a total of seven winners—coincidence? I think not.
**Email me (abbylibrarything.com) to claim your prizes! Oh, and include your LT user names so I can update this post with the right attributions...

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Harry Potter book piles

Just a reminder, you've still got a few hours to post your photos for the Harry Potter book pile contest...

The submissions so far (plus some more listed in the comments of this blog post).

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Friday, July 20, 2007

Harry Potter Review Contest: 50 winners

It's almost 12:01 here. Any moment now, the first copies of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows will come available, and LibraryThing members across the US will start reading. (Some other parts of the world have already begun.) I wouldn't be surprised if the first reviews were posted by noon tomorrow. Sounds like a good excuse for a contest, right?

We already have a Harry Potter Book Pile photo contest (one entry shown on the right). Well, how about a review contest too? The deal:
  • Five reviewers get a $50 gift certificate to Amazon, Abebooks, Booksense or any independent bookseller.
  • Fifty get a free membership (for them or as a gift), a handy CueCat barcode scanner, for entering more of their books, and eternal glory.
  • We end it Monday, August 6.
LibraryThing is a gloriously supportive community. So we're going to do it a little differently:
  • We're going to use the new review-rating feature.

    Liam Weasley, with Scabbers

    As many know, this only allows "thumbs-up" ratings.
  • The five reviews with the most thumbs-ups will win the bigger prize.
  • The rest will be randomly picked from all members who both wrote a review and voted for others' reviews.
That is, we're rewarding participation and generosity most of all.

I'm looking forward to seeing how it turns out.* We're going to have anti-abuse measures in place, and we think the top five will be clean.** The interest level will be very high. After all, the Harry Potter group on LibraryThing has seen some 11,532 messages.

Have fun tonight. Me? I'm watching over the littlest Weasley, while my wife and niece party with the wizards.

*If we get a lot of sock-puppet votes, we may make the top-five part of the contest only count votes from established members.
**But I won't be reading the reviews myself. I am stuck in book five, recently restarted. Arg.

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

AbeBooks book review contest


Just passing along a link to a Summer Reading contest that AbeBooks.com is running. Write a book review, win $200 cash!

The contest (and rules - note, it closes August 31, 2007, at 9:59am PST).

(And remember our own Harry Potter bookpile contest!)

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Thursday, July 05, 2007

Harry Potter book pile contest

You probably already know that the seventh and final Harry Potter book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling will be released at 12:01 a.m. on July 21. (I love that so many bookstores have midnight parties).

Of course, we're going to celebrate LibraryThing style, with a book pile contest.

So gather all your wizard and wizardry books (head to Diagon Alley for any supplies you're missing), pile on the creativity, and take a photo.

The rules.
1. Take a photo of your books.
2. Post the photo to Flickr. You'll need a Flickr account to do this (it's easy and free).
3. Tag your photo on Flickr with "LibraryThingHarryPotter"
4. If your photo doesn't show up right away on Flickr's tag page (a problem if you have a new account), then post a link in the comments of this blog post. We'll make sure to find it.

The prizes
First prize—$50 to use on Amazon or AbeBooks.com
Second prize—Free lifetime membership on LibraryThing

The deadline
July 31, 2007 (so you'll have plenty of time to actually read the book too.)

And once your photo is submitted, don't worry, the fun isn't over. There's plenty of Harry Potter games, discussion, and speculation happening in the Groups.

Join the Hogwarts Express group to discuss all things Potter. Or check out the Watching Harry Potter 7 topic to weigh in on the following:
1. How long will it take to break 10000 copies on LT?
2. How long will it take to become number 1?
3. How many copies are going to be listed in LT the day BEFORE the book is released?

Enjoy! (And remember, if you're sharing your copy, read fast so the second person doesn't have to wait too long...)

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Monday, February 19, 2007

Book pile bonanza winners

We had an amazing amount of fantastically great entries for the 10 million books / valentines / presidents book pile contest. That's a lot of superlatives, I know, but trust me, it's worth it. There were Valentine's Day themed piles, President's Day themed piles, and a whole bunch of people took us up on the "best damn book pile ever". (See the entries here, under the Flickr tag "LibraryThing10mil").

Several themes emerged, and not just Valentines and Presidents. We had several variations on a heart, showing love from Harlequin to Latin. There was fun with numbers and words, sweet stories, and a surprising number of floating shelves (I'm covetous). Overall, a fantastic collection of book piles. You can see them all here (and several that hadn't posted to Flickr yet are linked to in these blog comments).

Without further ado, our grand prize winner. madinkbeard's "We heart LibraryThing" was a stand-out. As an added bonus, you can see all 86 books that were used to create this red spine-d heart here. Madinkbeard will be getting one hundred dollars—to be spent entirely on one book.


We also have five runners up, who will each get a year's gift membership to LibraryThing.*

Runner up. First, I loved parelle's "Bookpiles and my love life", which chronicles a relationship, from a bookstore meeting. The story starts here and is continued here.




Runner up
. "Presidents", this wall of presidents by Pesky Library was beautiful, and, I think, entered by a small library?


Runner up. jadelennox's "Ten million books and counting" was one of our number themed entries—starting low and going up high. From zero to pi to infinity (and beyond?)!

Runner up. "Books are love!" by j2.0 brings book piling to a whole new level (and also gives us our first nude photo blog post)!


Runner up. And lastly, "Never Enough Time for Reading", by Munzerr solves the all important question of having a "good body:books ratio" (as mentioned in the photo's comments).



There are a couple of other photos that we'd like to highlight (let's call them the the honorable mentions, for lack of a better term).

Honorable mention. Narrisch's "Babel in Translation" was fantastic (and extra points for using the phrase "book-a-ganza").


Honorable mention. skullfaced's Skull stacking managed to combine natural history with Valentine' s Day and Darwin's Birthday, and all on a bathroom floor!

Honorable mention. Kristy's "Pursuit of Love Bookpile" I had picked as a winner, until I realized that she was John's girlfriend, and that that probably meant she couldn't win an actual prize.**


Honorable mention. Lastly, we had a soft spot for the books in the truck, nicely packed into their "car seats".


*Will the winners please email me (abby@librarything.com) so I can send the prizes your way?
**Even though we never explicitly stated it, I think that wives, girlfriends, and children of LT employees, though welcome to submit photos, can't actually win. Hey, we can make up rules as we go along, can't we?

UPDATE For some reason, one of these photos that previously contained books now is showing up as a chicken salad (I think. The vegetarian in me isn't quite sure). In the meantime, Flickr's down page reports that they're having a massage (I'm jealous).
UPDATE part deux Apparently Flickr is having a cache problem, leading to "weirdness" (a technical term). So you might see chicken salad, you might see a book pile. Enjoy either way.

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