| Internet
BookCrossing
BookCrossing or BC, is a website,
the idea is to release books into the "wild"
to be found by other people, often strangers.
The analogy is to the ornithological practice
of ringing birds to track their movements.
It is somewhat like an adventure
for books and their new readers. If someone decides
to release a book via BookCrossing, the book has
to be registered in order to get a BCID - a BookCrossing
ID number first so it can be tracked. The person
who finds or catches the book is then requested
to log onto the BookCrossing website and complete
a journal, and then pass on the book.
Membership is free and donations
received will go towards the maintenance of the
servers and continue the exile of pop-up ads on
the website. Members who order Bookcrossing items
through the supply store or BC Newsstand will
receive wings on the sides of their screennames
and additional benefits like fewer advertisements
displayed and having access to the book registration
database.
Process
After registering the books on
the website and attaching a print-out bookplate
with the registration number and information about
BookCrossing, the releaser may follow his or her
books on their trip in the "wild" and
read the finder's opinions or comments, if the
person reports his or her catch on the BookCrossing
website.
More sophisticated forms of BookCrossing
are bookrays and bookrings: a group of people
"subscribes" to a book on the internet
and the book is mailed from one participant on
the list to the next, often across continents.
The only difference is that books in bookrings
will return to the original owner while books
in bookrays do not. Instead, the last person on
the list to receive the book gets a choice whether
to release it or to organise another bookring
or bookray.
Bookboxes function similarly;
each participant, except the original sender,
should however replace a specified number of books
with volumes of his own of the same genre. BookCrossing
members (called BookCrossers) can access forums
from the website, subscribe to an email list,
and attend local meetups.
Official BookCrossing Zones,
which are sometimes called OBCZs or OBZs are located
in places like Starbucks coffee shops, restaurants
or other shops where accessible to the public.
These OBCZs refer to bookshelves placed there
so that BookCrossers could catch or release books. |