Rich Shapero (born 1948) is an American venture capitalist, [1] self-published novelist, and musician. He is the founder of TooFar Media and the recipient of the 2015 Digital Book World Award for Best Adult Fiction App. [2]
Shapero grew up in Los Angeles and attended UC Berkeley where he graduated in 1970 with a degree in English literature. [3] Prior to founding TooFar Media, he was a partner at the venture capital firm Crosspoint and a board member at AristaSoft and New Edge Networks. [1]
Rich Shapero founded TooFar Media in the mid 2000s to produce and distribute his multimedia stories and future works. He collaborates with a team of artists to create his projects, and TooFar Media publishes and distributes them across the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia. [4]
TooFar Media App
After the founding of TooFar Media, an app was released combining Shapero's novels with the visual art and accompanying music normally provided on CDs. The stories included in the app are described by TooFar Media as "immersive story experiences" [5] and the TheApp Times says the app "captures the imagination through experiential immersion." [6] The TooFar Media App includes Shapero's novels and corresponding audio tracks.
Distribution
Shapero's novels are almost always distributed for free, with the majority being handed out on college campuses. [7] In addition to free distribution the author has coordinated guerilla-style events to promote his works including public dance and improv ensembles, book clubs, and participation in book and arts festivals. [4] [8]
Shapero has been self-publishing since 2004, starting with Wild Animus (2004), Too Far (2010), The Hope We Seek (2014), Arms from the Sea (2016), Rin, Tongue and Dorner (2018) and Balcony of Fog (2020). [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]
Wild Animus
Wild Animus was published in 2004. From the author's website: "Wild Animus tracks the reckless quest of Ransom Altman, a young Berkeley graduate who—roused by his literary heroes and love for his girlfriend, Lindy—resolves to live in a new world of 'inexhaustible desire.'" [9] The initial idea came to him during his time at Berkeley in the late 60's and deals with the primal nature of man in pursuit of true self in the Alaskan wilderness. [14]
The novel was released under the imprint Outside Reading with three accompanying CDs, The Ram, The Wolves, and Animus, featuring musicians including Jim Keltner, James "Hutch" Hutchinson, Charles Bissell, Marc Ribot, and Iva Bittová, with art by François Burland and Adde Russell. [15] [16]
Reception was mixed, with Publishers Weekly praising Shapero's "vivid imagery," [17] while others have called it "bizarre." [18] It was promoted with a 13-city book tour across America and an advance printing of 50,000 copies. [19]
Too Far
Too Far is Shapero's second novel, published in 2010. It tells the story of Robbie and Fristeen, two six-year-old children who explore the forest outside their home during a tumultuous time in their families. [10] The story was partially inspired by his young daughter's interest in the fantasy genre, and Shapero incorporated her ideas on character development into the final draft. [20] Shapero's daughter also created the title font for the cover and some interior graphics. [20]
The CD component, Dawn Remembers, features musicians including Maria Taylor (Azure Ray), Andy LeMaster (Bright Eyes), Joe Gore (PJ Harvey, Tom Waits), Marc Ribot (Tom Waits), Eric Drew Feldman (Captain Beefheart/PJ Harvey). The art was by Eugene Von Bruenchenhein. Though Von Bruenchenhein passed in 1983, Shapero collects his paintings and displays them in an online gallery. He used works from his estate to complete Too Far and other novels, saying the paintings "... seemed to carry with them a complex history, as if they were glimpses of a world distant from our own." [21]
The Hope We Seek
The Hope We Seek was released in 2014 and follows the story of "Zachary Knox, a sharpshooter known as 'the Bull's-Eye Telepath,' [as he] heads north in search of gold. On his way he meets Sephy, a magnetic woman on the trail of her lost brother. But on arrival, they find the mining camp is home to a cult." [22] The novel deals with "the extremes to which we go to find meaning in our lives."
The accompanying music for the novel was released on the album Songs from the Big Wheel on the label Outside Reading. The songs are performed by Marissa Nadler and accompanied by Marc Ribot, Robert Powell, Andy LeMaster, Joe Gore and Son of Dave with Shapero on acoustic guitar and mandola. [23] The art for The Hope We Seek was created by Donald Pass. The app version of The Hope We Seek won the 2015 Digital Book World Award for Best Adult Fiction App. [2]
Arms from the Sea
Arms from the Sea is the story of "Lyle [...] a young man who hates his life in the State of Salt, a cultural and literal desert. He vandalizes a State icon, then swallows a poison pill that transports him not to death, but to a liminal realm—blue, aquatic, and wholly alien". [12] The novel deals with themes of creativity and change through the metaphor of the Polyp, a god-like entity. [12] The novel was described as "a tangible encounter with the creative spirit." by Moses Hacmon. [5]
The visual art for Arms from the Sea was by Eugene Von Bruenchenhein. [24] Unlike with previous stories, the music was a collaboration and not solely produced by Shapero. Orenda Fink was brought on board to write the music, Shapero provided lyrics and Fink contributed vocals. [25]
Rin, Tongue and Dorner
Rin, Tongue and Dorner was released on July 19, 2018. [13] The plot "imagines a future in which humans are driven by the encroaching glaciers of a new ice age to live in a weather dome, "Clemency," where citizens are encouraged to regulate "temp"—both temperament and temperature—for the sake of the colony's survival." [13] The central conflict of Rin, Tongue and Dorner is the suppression of internal desires for the greater community and the internal cost of those choices. [13]
The art was once again by Eugene Von Bruenchenhein [26] but Shapero went with new collaborators for the music. Montreal-based band Elsiane was brought in for the album, with the vocals of Elsieanne Caplette used to portray "Tongue," [26] a character described as "a weaving chorus of beckoning, provocative voices inside Dorner's head." [27]
Balcony of Fog
Balcony of Fog (2020) is about a post apocalyptic time where a person wakes up from a beating to discover himself being tended to by a woman from the clouds. He follows her into the clouds to escape from his life of endless labor as a "toiler." [28]
Dreams of Delphine
Dreams of Delphine (2022) is a novel about a grieving person's dreams of the deceased. [29]
Legend of the Galactic Heroes, sometimes abbreviated as LOTGH, LOGH, LGH or Gin'eiden (銀英伝) in Japanese, is a series of science fiction novels written by Yoshiki Tanaka. In humanity's distant future, two interstellar states – the monarchic Galactic Empire and the democratic Free Planets Alliance – are embroiled in a never-ending war. The story focuses on the exploits of rivals Reinhard von Lohengramm and Yang Wen-li, as they rise to power and fame in the Galactic Empire and the Free Planets Alliance, respectively.
Device – Voice – Drum is a live DVD by American rock band Kansas, released in 2002. The same concert was released as an enhanced double-CD live album. The CD release features the enhanced live track, "Distant Vision".
Emily Gould is an American author, novelist and blogger who worked as an editor at Gawker. She has written several short stories and novels and is the co-owner, with fellow writer Ruth Curry, of the independent e-bookstore Emily Books.
Simon Rich is an American humorist, novelist, and screenwriter. He has published two novels and six collections of humor pieces, several of which appeared in The New Yorker. His novels and short stories have been translated into over a dozen languages. Rich was one of the youngest writers ever hired on Saturday Night Live, and served as a staff writer for Pixar. On January 14, 2015, Man Seeking Woman, a television comedy series created by Rich premiered on the cable channel FXX.
Assassin's Creed is an open-world, action-adventure, and stealth game franchise published by Ubisoft and developed mainly by its studio Ubisoft Montreal using the game engine Anvil and its more advanced derivatives. Created by Patrice Désilets, Jade Raymond, and Corey May, the Assassin's Creed video game series depicts a fictional millennia-old struggle between the Order of Assassins, who fight for peace and free will, and the Knights Templar, who desire peace through order and control. The series features historical fiction, science fiction, and fictional characters intertwined with real-world historical events and historical figures. In most games, players control a historical Assassin while also playing as an Assassin Initiate or someone caught in the Assassin–Templar conflict in the present-day framing story. Considered a spiritual successor to the Prince of Persia series, Assassin's Creed took inspiration from the novel Alamut by the Slovenian writer Vladimir Bartol, based on the historical Hashashin sect of the medieval Middle East.
Debra Cecille Magpie Earling is a Native American novelist, and short story writer. She is a member of the Bitterroot Salish (tribe). She is the author of Perma Red and The Lost Journals of Sacajewea, which was on display at the Missoula Museum of Art in late 2011. Her work has also appeared in Ploughshares, the Northeast Indian Quarterly, and many anthologies.
Criticism of desktop Linux is a history of comment on the perceived shortcomings of the Linux operating system when installed on desktop computers. These criticisms have been aimed at the plethora of issues and lack of consistency between Linux distributions, their usefulness and ease of use as desktop systems for general end users, driver support and issues with multi-media playback and audio development.
Parthian Books is an independent publisher based in Cardigan, Wales. Editorially-led, it publishes a range of contemporary fiction, poetry, drama, art books, literature in translation, and non-fiction. Since its foundation in 1993, Parthian has published some of the best-known works of contemporary Welsh literature including Work, Sex and Rugby (1993) by Lewis Davies, In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl (2000) by Rachel Trezise, Crawling Through Thorns (2008) by John Sam Jones, Pigeon (2017) by Alys Conran, and Hello Friend We Missed You (2020) by Richard Owain Roberts. It is involved in the European literary scene and has also published celebrity autobiographies, such as Griff Rhys Jones' Insufficiently Welsh, and Boyd Clack's Kisses Sweeter Than Wine. In 2019, Parthian was recognised as the Small Press of the Year for Wales at the "Nibbies", the British Book Awards. Parthian's motto is "A Carnival of Voices in Independent Publishing".
Digital Book World Publishing Innovation Award is a literary award sponsored by the magazine Digital Book World for innovation in electronic books. "The Publishing Innovation Awards will honor those making strides in this nascent medium." It was announced in 2010 with the inaugural award given January 24, 2011. Award categories include Fiction, Nonfiction, Children's, Reference and Comics. Each category has one unique judge who chooses the winner from a finalist list of three contenders.
Submissions for mobile apps for iOS are subject to approval by Apple's App Review team, as outlined in the SDK agreement, for basic reliability testing and other analysis, before being published on the App Store. Applications may still be distributed ad hoc if they are rejected, by the author manually submitting a request to Apple to license the application to individual iPhones, although Apple may withdraw the ability for authors to do this at a later date.
Elsiane is a Canadian band composed of Elsieanne Caplette and Stephane Sotto.
Laid-Back Camp, also known in Japan as Yuru Camp, is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Afro. Set in and around Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan, the series chronicles the adventures of Rin Shima, Nadeshiko Kagamihara, and their friends as they travel to various campsites across the country.
The Poppy War is a 2018 novel by R. F. Kuang, published by Harper Voyager. The Poppy War, a grimdark fantasy, draws its plot and politics from mid-20th-century China, with the conflict in the novel based on the Second Sino-Japanese War, and an atmosphere inspired by the Song dynasty. A sequel, The Dragon Republic, was released in August 2019, and a third book, The Burning God was released November 2020.
The Marrow Thieves is a young adult novel by Métis Canadian writer Cherie Dimaline, published on September 1, 2017 by Cormorant Books through its Dancing Cat Books imprint.
Michael Herman Elias is an American writer, film director and producer.
Rin Chupeco is a Chinese Filipino writer of young adult fiction, best known for their books The Bone Witch, The Girl from the Well, and The Never-Tilting World series.
Solarpunk is a literary and artistic movement that envisions and works toward actualizing a sustainable future interconnected with nature and community. The "solar" represents solar energy as a renewable energy source and an optimistic vision of the future that rejects climate doomerism, while the "punk" refers to the countercultural, post-capitalist, and decolonial enthusiasm for creating such a future.
DC Graphic Novels for Young Adults, formerly known as DC Ink, is an imprint of American comic book publisher DC Comics consisting of original one-shots, graphic novels and reprints of books previously published under other imprints. The imprint intends to present traditional DC Universe characters for young adult readers. The first title of the DC Ink imprint, Mera: Tidebreaker, was published on February 2, 2019 and Batman: Nightwalker was the last title to be published under DC Ink. Wonder Woman: Warbringer, the first title of DC Graphic Novels for Young Adults, was published on January 10, 2020.
The City We Became is a 2020 urban fantasy novel by N. K. Jemisin. It was developed from her short story "The City Born Great", first published in her collection How Long 'til Black Future Month? It is her first novel since her triple Hugo Award-winning Broken Earth series and the first in her Great Cities series, followed by The World We Make, released in November 2022.