The Winners of the 2007 Lulu Blooker Prize

Overall Winner and Non-Fiction Winner

My War: Killing Time In Iraq by Colby Buzzell

My_war

Publisher: Berkley/Penguin ($15.00, paperback) Buy it

The My War blog - www.cbftw.blogspot.com

"Colby Buzzell traded a dead-end future for the army--and ended up as a machine gunner in Iraq. To make sense of the absurd and frightening events surrounding him, he started writing a blog about the war--and how it differed from the government's official version. But as his blog's popularity grew, Buzzell became the embedded reporter the army couldn't control--despite its often hilarious efforts to do so."



"Endlessly surprising…delightfully profane… an unfiltered, often ferocious expression of his boots-on-the-ground point-of-view of the Iraq war." -- Arianna Huffington

Ak_cbftw1_3

"If, in 20 years time, people want to know what it was like to fight in Iraq, they can pick up ‘My War’ and find out. It tells what it's like to be a grunt fighting in the Sunni Triangle – with more power and authority than the best ‘embedded reporter’ could manage. It is something of a triumph for blogs over traditional media." -- Nick Cohen

 

Colby Buzzell lives in Los Angeles, California. He's a blogger and freelance writer.


Non-Fiction Runner-Up

My Secret: A PostSecret Book by Frank Warren


Fiction Winner: The Doorbells of Florence by Andrew Losowsky

Doorbells2b

Publisher: Prandial Publishing/Lulu ($27.99, paperback) Buy it

The Doorbells of Florence photo set - www.flickr.com/photos/andrewlos

"As more than 12,500 viewers (and counting) of the Flickr set can testify, The Doorbells of Florence is cult fiction at its least predictable.

This book contains 36 real Italian doorbells (including some never before seen), each one with a strange story about the people and things that may, or may not, live inside.

This first-ever volume of "flicktion" was written by Andrew Losowsky and lovingly put together by award-winning designer, Nuno Vargas as the mini coffee table book that espresso was invented for."Andrewlosowsky_closeup_3

 

"Let it now be said: "The Doorbells of Florence" could easily become one of the most popular cult books of the decade...The book--images to prose--is absolutely outstanding. The stories are clever and each as unique as a fingerprint, from pages long to one sentence." -- POD-dy Mouth

 

Andrew Losowsky is a British blogger, journalist and photographer based in Barcelona, Spain. He is the editorial director of a small publishing company that produces online travel/entertainment guides to European cities.



Fiction Runner-Up

Monster Island: A Zombie Novel by David Wellington


Comics Winner: Mom's Cancer by Brian Fies

Moms_cancer_2

Publisher: Abrams Image ($12.95, hardcover) Buy it

The Mom's Cancer blog - www.momscancer.com

"The true tale of my mother's battle with metastatic lung cancer. The story describes how a serious illness affects patient and family, both practically and emotionally, in ways that I've discovered are very common. Many readers wrote to tell me how surprised and relieved they were to learn they weren't alone.

Mom's Cancer began as a serialized Internet comic, with new installments added throughout 2004. Readership grew by word-of-mouth. People who needed the story found it and told their friends about it. In July 2005, Mom's Cancer won the comic industry's  Eisner Award for Best Digital Comic, a new category that year."

Fies_photo_small1

"Mom's Cancer takes web comics beyond science fiction parodies and fan boy remixes of superhero comics. The story telling is engaging. The story is important, as well as fun, surprising and rewarding to read. Well-drawn and a real winner." -- Paul Jones, Chair of the Judges



Brian Fies is a resident of Santa Rosa, California. In addition to being a cartoonist, he is a freelance writer and journalist.

The 2007 Short-List

Non-Fiction

Crashingthegate Crashing The Gate
by Jerome Armstrong  - www.MyDD.com
and Markos Moulitsas - www.dailykos.com

$12.95 (Chelsea Green) Buy it

"This book lays bare, with passion and precision, how ineffective, incompetent, and antiquated the Democratic Party establishment has become, and how it has failed to adapt and respond to new realities and challenges. The authors save their sharpest knives to go for the jugular in their critique of Republican ideologues who are now running—and ruining—our country.

Written by two of the most popular political bloggers in America, the book hails the new movement—of the netroots, the grassroots, the unorthodox labor unions, the maverick big donors—that is the antidote to old-school politics as usual. Fueled by advances in technology and a hunger for a more authentic and populist democracy, this broad-based movement is changing the way political campaigns are waged and managed.

A must-read book for anyone with an interest in the future of American democracy."


Mysecret_2 My Secret: A PostSecret Book
by Frank Warren - www.postsecret.com

$19.95 (Regan/HarperCollins) Buy it

"The sensational PostSecret project returns with a never-before-seen collection of postcards created by teens and college students from around the world. Compiled by Frank Warren, postsecret.com founder and author of the national bestseller PostSecret, the handmade cards bear compelling and personal messages that have remained secret--until now. Raw and revealing, My Secret expresses the hopes, fears, and wildest confessions of young people everywhere."


Colby_buzzellMy War: Killing Time In Iraq
by Colby Buzzell - www.cbftw.blogspot.com

$15.00 (Berkeley/Penguin) Buy it

"Colby Buzzell traded a dead-end future for the army--and ended up as a machine gunner in Iraq. To make sense of the absurd and frightening events surrounding him, he started writing a blog about the war--and how it differed from the government's official version. But as his blog's popularity grew, Buzzell became the embedded reporter the army couldn't control--despite its often hilarious efforts to do so."



Sethgodinbookcover Small Is the New Big: and 183 other riffs, rants, and remarkable business ideas
by Seth Godin -- sethgodin.typepad.com

$25.95 (Portfolio/Penguin) -- Buy it


"Collected here for the first time are eight years of his very best blog posts, magazine columns, and e-books. On literally every page, Small Is the New Big offers ideas and stories that can change how your work, what you buy, and how you see the world."


SocloseSo Close: Infertile and Addicted To Hope
by Tertia Albertyn - www.tertia.org

R130.00 (Oshun) Buy it

"What happens when you start trying for a family...and trying, and trying some more? How Far do you go to achieve your dream of having children? So Close is the heart wrenching, exhilarating, devastatingly funny story of Tertia Albertyn's battle with infertility...During Tertia's journey everything that can go wrong does go wrong. Until, finally, everything goes just right."


Words_in_a_french_life_5_2Words in a French Life: Lessons in Love and Language From the South of France
by Kristin Espinasse - french-word-a-day.typepad.com

$18.00 (Touchstone/Simon &Schuster) -- Buy it

"A heart-winning collection from an American woman raising two very French children with her French husband in Provence, carrying on a lifelong love affair with the language."



Fiction

Albert_the_third_low_resAlbert The Third
by Slim Palmer - www.althought.com

£9.99/$15.99 (Exposure Publishing) - Buy it: UK /US

"Albert The Third sees our hero  encounter Witches, Time Travellers and Gargoyles in the further adventures of Albert 'I am NOT a snail' Aiten. The stories are based upon Albert's meetings, adventures, imagineerings and characters from his website. It is the illustrated follow up to The Albert Tales and Albert Tales Too."



Bbcover BreakupBabe: A Novel
by Rebecca Agiewich - breakupbabe.blogspot.com

$13.95 (Ballantine) Buy it

"Life is sweet for Rachel. She’s living with her boyfriend of two years in Seattle and is starting a new high-paying job at the same snazzy computer company where he works. Then Rachel’s system crashes. Her supposedly adoring almost-fiancé cheats on her, lies to her, dumps her, and hooks up with someone else–specifically, her own boss’s boss’s boss. Talk about tacky.

Heartbroken, beyond depressed, and stuck in nine-to-five hell, Rachel follows a recovery regimen that features an arsenal of meds (including General Celexa: "the holy pink pill"), deliciously detailed daily entries in her newly inaugurated weblog Breakup Babe, and a string of dates–from the irresistibly bad Little Rockclimbing Spy, who proves to be full of surprises, to the high-flying ladies man Sexy Boy, who loves weed almost as much as he loves women.

With her shoulder-perched alter egos Sensible Girl and Needy Girl vying for her sanity, and a growing legion of supportive online fans threatening to snap her out of her grand funk, Rachel somehow survives, thrives, and discovers just how risky and liberating love, loss, and blogging can be."


Doorbells The Doorbells of Florence
by Andrew Losowsky - www.flickr.com/photos/andrewlos

$27.99 (Prandial Publishing/Lulu) Buy it

"As more than 12,500 viewers (and counting) of the Flickr set can testify, The Doorbells of Florence is cult fiction at its least predictable.

This book contains 36 real Italian doorbells (including some never before seen), each one with a strange story about the people and things that may, or may not, live inside.

This first-ever volume of "flicktion" was written by Andrew Losowsky and lovingly put together by award-winning designer, Nuno Vargas as the mini coffee table book that espresso was invented for."


Messageslc Messages from the Lost Continent
conceived and edited by Horst Prillinger - www.aardvark.at/messages

24.90EUR (Books on Demand GmbH) Buy it

"Messages from the Lost Continent is a unique and at times hilariously funny blend of thriller, science fiction and fantasy novel, which was originally published as a fiction weblog between June and December 2005.

Five agents are sent to a mysterious continent on a mission so secret that not even they are told anything about it. Their only link back to headquarters is an encrypted e-mail channel through which they receive instructions and report back the results of their investigations. Soon, they find themselves being followed by sinister adversaries who do not hesitate to eliminate them if necessary. As the agents slowly uncover the connections between an 18th century watchmaker, a number of ancient artefacts and a piece of cutting-edge modern technology, they find themselves in the middle of a massive conspiracy that could destroy the entire planet..."


Methuselahsdaughter Methuselah's Daughter
by J. A. Eddy and Dean Esmay - www.3500years.com

$19.96 (Lulu) Buy it

"Zsallia Marieko is a solitary immortal, very much the pagan barbarian at heart, but tempered by her centuries amongst a growing Christian influence in Western Europe. Her tale is by turns pathetic, endearing, unnerving and horrifying as the reader witnesses her climb from nameless slave to terrifying goddess, then her plunge into murderous insanity until she emerges humbled and remade- all this in just her first 1500 years. Concomitant with that tale is the modern narrative where Zsallia is forced to confront what it means to cease living outside society and join the world around her, to take up the benefits and responsibilities of living openly and asking people to simply accept who and what she is."


Monsterisland_3Monster Island: A Zombie Novel
by David Wellington - www.monsternovel.com

$13.95 (Thunder's Mouth Press/Avalon) - Buy it

"In New York City, the dead walk the streets, driven by an insatiable hunger for all things living. From the other side of the planet, a small but heavily armed group of schoolgirls-turned-soldiers comes in search of desperately needed medicine, with a former UN weapons inspector as their local guide. They think they are prepared for anything. On Monster Island they will find that there is something worse even than undeath."


Comics

Megatomeicon Born of Nifty: Sluggy Freelance Megatome 01
by Pete Abrams - sluggy.com

$49.95 (Sluggy Freelance) Buy it

"Sluggy Freelance's First MegaTome is three books in one! It contains every single daily strip from August 25th, 1997 to May 30th, 1999, with full color Sundays. There are also over 50 pages of additional content, with original full bleed splash artwork, the Sluggy Pirate Board Game "Plund-Aaaar," a brand-new 42-page bonus story, and more (yay!)."


Definitionofawesome The Definition of Awesome: Another Joe and Monkey Collection
by Zach Miller - www.joeandmonkey.com

$10.00 (Boxcar Comics/Lulu) Buy it

"Year two of the Webcomic Joe and Monkey. Includes the illusive Nothing Nice To Say crossover with Mitch Clem. Contains the secret of happiness within its pages."

Blogger's note: Zach's previous "Joe and Monkey" collection, Totally Boned, was the winner of the 2006 Lulu Blooker Prize (Comics category).


Momscancer
Mom's Cancer
by Brian Fies - www.momscancer.com

$12.95 (Abrams Image) Buy it

"The true tale of my mother's battle with metastatic lung cancer. The story describes how a serious illness affects patient and family, both practically and emotionally, in ways that I've discovered are very common. Many readers wrote to tell me how surprised and relieved they were to learn they weren't alone.

Mom's Cancer began as a serialized Internet comic, with new installments added throughout 2004. Readership grew by word-of-mouth. People who needed the story found it and told their friends about it. In July 2005, Mom's Cancer won the comic industry's  Eisner Award for Best Digital Comic, a new category that year."

Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain...

For about 8 hours this morning, visitors to this blog would have seen the new Blooker short-list--the official roster of finalists for the 2007 Prize. If you were one of those intrepid early-birds, I thank you for your vigilance. However, I'm sorry to say that I jumped the gun--just a bit--and have taken that post down pending the update of the Blooker Prize homepage. As soon as that goes live, the list will be back for good.

While I'm fessing up to my mistakes, some of you have noticed that I haven't finished posting about all the entries. I still intend to, even after today's announcement of the short-list. Just because only 15 blooks made the final cut, that doesn't mean that all the rest of this year's entries don't deserve their time in the sun, and where I fell behind in February, I will make up for in March and April.

Please stay tuned...

Updated entry lists

Entry to the 2007 Blooker is officially closed, and the last few submissions are trickling in. I have replaced the Entries So Far sidebar list with updated lists broken down by category. If your blook has been removed from the list, that means that we never received the printed, bound version of it (as per the contest rules). If it's on the way (and was shipped no later than January 16), I will add it back to the list when it arrives.

The submitted blooks now go to the review committee that will select the short-list for each category. We will announce the finalists on Monday, March 12, 2007. Until then, I will continue to blog about this year's entries, so if your blook hasn't been featured in a post yet, don't worry, I will get to them all in due time.

To everyone who entered the the Blooker this year, thank you and good luck!

Deadline Extension

Due to an embarrassing oversight on our part, the entry deadline for the 2007 Blooker was scheduled on the same day as the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday--a day when the U.S. Post Office is closed.

Therefore, we will  be accepting entries that are postmarked on the 16th of January, 2007.

We apologize for any inconvenience this has caused.

One month left to enter the 2007 Blooker!

Today begins the final month of entry for the 2007 Lulu Blooker Prize. To be considered for the Prize, all entries must be postmarked by Monday, January 15, 2007. That's the physical blook we're talking about, not just submitting an entry on the Blooker website.

I will also take this opportunity to review the eligibility requirements:

  • Only printed, bound books are eligible. Self-published books are just as valid as those that come from a traditional publisher; however, e-books are not accepted. (Neither are print-outs of screen-captures of your blog for that matter.)
  • The content of your book must have been developed in a significant way online. This can range anywhere from an archive of your blog posts, reproduced verbatim, to general themes, research, or characters. Note: just having your book available for sale online does not make it a blook!
  • Your blook must be written in English (although it can be sent from anywhere in the world). For those of you who blog/write in a language other than English, we'll have big news for you in the coming year--Watch This Space!
  • If you sent your blook in last year, you can't enter it again. However, if you never actually got around to submitting your blook, you've got a second chance!

Please also refer to the Official Rules for the complete list of eligibility requirements.

If you want to enter the Blooker, but are afraid that there's not enough time, there are a several ways to quickly blookify your blog.

LJBook - convert your blog into a PDF, which can then be uploaded to Lulu.com (or similar service)and made available as a print-on-demand blook.

  • Supported Platforms: LiveJournal, DeadJournal, AboutMyLife
  • Cost: Free to make PDF, printing costs at Lulu start at $4.53 + $0.02/page (pricing example)
  • Turn-around Time: 3-4 minutes to produce PDF + 3-5 business days to print book through Lulu.

Blurb - download and install the BookSmart(TM) software that will "slurp" the contents of your blog. The software is also necessary for design/layout/editing.

Blogprinting - Web-based service that prints blooks through Qoop.com

  • Supported Platforms: TypePad, WordPress, Movable Type
  • Cost: books start at $7.50 (first 28 pages) + $0.04/additional page
  • Turn-around Time: 3-5 business days

Coming in from the cold

O, November, where did you go?

You put your head down to work on some other projects and you loose an entire month! Fortunately, this blogger's negligence can't do much to slow the progress of the runaway boulder that is the Lulu Blooker Prize, and we are approaching the bottom of the hill--much to the horror of the doomed townsfolk below.

OK, maybe I took that metaphor a little too far...

Annnnyway...now that I'm back, you might be wondering (if there is anyone out there who hasn't given up on ever seeing a new post here again) what's going on with the Blooker? Entries are still coming in at a good clip. I've updated the Entry list over on the right, and we are currently at about 95 or so--which , of course means it is time for me to repeat the Blooker mantra: SEND IN YOUR BLOOKS! Lots of submissions have already arrived (in fact they are piling up like snow drifts around my desk), but there are several still outstanding. Remember, to be considered for the Prize, a physical copy of your blook must be sent us postmarked by January 15!

A quick spin around the Technorati blog search reveals much public musing all across the blogosphere about the thought of entering the Blooker. All I can say is...

What are you waiting for!?!

BlogHer and Blooker and bears, oh my!

Jason here, and I think I'm finally recovered from my amazing weekend at BlogHer 2006 in cool, breezy, non-humid San Jose, CA. Lulu.com was one of the event sponsors and an exhibitor, and we were there not only to promote Lulu but the Blooker as well. We were a bit overwhelmed by amount of positive response we got from the convention attendees, but I suppose it really shouldn't be that surprising that Lulu appeals to bloggers. After all, they are people who are proactive, tech-savvy, and, most importantly, they have something to say. They embrace alternative media and happily subvert the long-held traditions of publishing and journalism. Plus, many already have a built in audience for their blook, which makes marketing (which is one of the biggest challenges of self-publishing) significantly easier.

 

Lulublogher_2One of the most frequently asked questions at the Lulu booth (seen here with Charlotte and Katie, the other 2/3 of Team BlogHer) was "How can I turn my blog into a book?"

Lulubooks_1

Well, there is, of course, no single answer. As Karen Rani recently pointed out in the BlogHer blog, there are quite a few options out there. Admittedly, I'm a little biased toward the hands-off Lulu model, but the complete control over blook format and design that Lulu allows does mean that the author has to do most of the work. In upcoming posts, I will examine the features of many of the alternate blog-to-book services to help you make an informed decision of how best to blookify your blog.

So, where was I? Ah yes, BlogHer. We met a lot of really cool people--too many to list them all. We hung out with the incomparable Susie Bright and our friends (and fellow North Carolinians) from Blog ads. I got to interview Heather Powazek Champ, community director at Flickr and co-editor ofBlogher JPG Magazine, for Lulu Radio, the official podcast of Lulu.com. (I'll post that here once I get a chance to edit it.)

Blooker judge Arianna Huffington was there to give one of the keynote addresses. Unfortunately, since I was in the booth all day, I didn't get a chance to meet her. In fact, this is about a close to her as I was able to get!(She's sitting at the far end of the hall to the left of the screen.)

All in all, it was awesome to be around such a dynamic and creative group of people, and I hope that each and everyone one of them enters the Blooker!

Bear_blogher_2

(Special thanks to Maria Benet of the Alembic blog for permission to post this photo!)

 

Blooker 2007 is open for entry!

The Lulu Blooker Prize is back, and it promises to be bigger and better than ever!

The prize for the Overall Winner has been increased to US $10,000, and the two category winners will receive US $2,500 each!

Another exciting change this year is a larger international panel of judges:

  • Paul Jones, director of ibiblio.org, returns to the Blooker, and this time as Chair of the Judges.
  • Arianna Huffington--author, nationally syndicated columnist, and editor of the HuffingtonPost.com.
  • Julie Powell--author of Julie & Julia, Overall Winner of the 2006 Lulu Blooker Prize.
  • Rohit Gupta--Bombay-based blogger, journalist, author and "sidewalk philosopher."
  • Nick Cohen--London-based author, blogger, and columnist for The Observer and The New Statesman.

The entry deadline for the 2007 Blooker is Monday, January 15, 2007--so you have plenty of time to submit your blook, or to "blookify" your blog or website if you haven't done so.

We have some cool new features planned for the coming months, so check back with us for information on those, as well as all Blooker news and developments.

And the Winners are...

We are very excited to announce the winners of the first annual Lulu Blooker Prize!

Overall Winner (and Non-Fiction Winner): Julie & Julia by Julie Powell

Fiction Winner: Four and Twenty Blackbirds by Cherie Priest

Comics Winner: Totally Boned: A Joe and Monkey Collection by Zach Miller

Congratulations to all the winners!

Sound + Vision

Russel Davies has posted an mp3 of his recent interview with BBC Radio 5 in his eggbaconchipsandbeans blog. (I particularly like his description of brown sauce -- "the British Empire in a bottle.") In the same entry, he also has some very interesting things to say about the relationship of blogs and books.

In other news, The Blooker gets vlogged! (Courtesy of MobuzzTV)

Sorry, I just had to say it...

The Short-List

Non-fiction (6 finalists)

All The President's Spin: George W. Bush, the Media, and the Truth by Bryan Keefer, Ben Fritz, and Brendan Nyhan

  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (paperback, $14.00)
  • Source blog/site: Spinsanity - www.spinsanity.com

Belle de Jour: The Intimate Adventures of a London Call Girl by Anonymous

Biodiesel Power by Lyle Estill

  • Publisher: New Society Publishers (paperback, $16.95)
  • Source blog/site: Piedmont Biofuels Energy Blog - www.biofuels.coop/blog

Egg Bacon Chips and Beans: 50 Great Cafes and the Stuff That Makes Them Great by Russell Davies

Julie and Julia: 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen by Julie Powell

Stone Cold Guilty - The People v. Scott Lee Peterson by Loretta Dillon

  • Publisher: self-published through Lulu (paperback, $16.50)
  • Source blog/site: Observations of a Misfit - www.misfitting.com

Fiction (5 finalists)

Action Poetry: Literary Tribes for the Internet Age edited by Levi Asher, Jamelah Earle, and Caryn Thurman

  • Publisher: Authorhouse (paperback, $17.50)
  • Source blog/site: Literary Kicks - www.litkicks.com

Africa Fresh! New Voices from the First Continent - edited by Rod Amis

  • Publisher: self-published through Lulu (paperback, $15.00)
  • Source blog/site: G21: The World's Magazine - www.g21.net

Four and Twenty Blackbirds by Cherie Priest

Gus Openshaw's Whale-Killing Journal by Keith Thomson

hackoff.com: an historic murder mystery set in the Internet bubble and rubble by Tom Evslin

  • Publisher: dotHill Press (hardback, $24.95)
  • Source blog/site: hackoff.com - www.hackoff.com

Comics (5 finalists)

Ambidextrous: Collection 1 by Kevin Cornell

  • Publisher: self-published through Lulu (paperback, $11.99)
  • Source blog/site: Bearskinrug - www.bearskinrug.co.uk

Comic Strip Volume 1: Scarybear and Friends by Jason Pultz

  • Publisher: self-published (paperback, $15.00)
  • Source blog/site: Comic Strip - www.scarybear.org

Dinosaur Comics: Huge Eyes, Beaks, Intelligence, and Ambition by Ryan North

  • Publisher: self-published through CatPrint (paperback, $8.00)
  • Source blog/site: Dinosaur Comics - www.qwantz.com

The Dada Alphabet: An Absurdist's Illustrated Primer by Stephanie Freese, David Milloway, and Matthew Wood

  • Publisher: self-published through Lulu (paperback, $15.00)
  • Source blog/site: The Dada Detective - www.likelystories.com


Totally Boned: A Joe and Monkey Collection by Zach Miller

  • Publisher: self-published through Lulu (paperback, $14.95)
  • Source blog/site: Joe and Monkey - www.joeandmonkey.com

The Blooker is closed

Entry to the 2006 Lulu Blooker Prize is now closed.

There was a flood of last-minute entries, and we're still sorting though them all. Blooks that  were entered over a month ago and have still not arrived at our offices have been taken off the list. As we stated in this blog back in October, we have been listing the entries as they were submitted via the website, but physical submissions are still required to be considered for the prize. The list will certainly change again over the next few days.

Thanks to everyone who has submitted your blooks!

Deadline reminder!

As many have already noticed, the deadline for entering the Blooker Prize is fast approaching. Entries must be received by no later than Monday, January 30, 2006.

As stated in the contest rules, to be considered for the Blooker, you must send in the entry form and three copies of your blook to:

The Lulu Blooker Prize
8311 Brier Creek Pkwy
Suite 105-374
Raleigh, NC 27617
USA

If you've already filled out the entry form online, don't forget to mail your blooks! If you have a blook, but haven't entered it yet, what are you waiting for?

The BBC on Blooks

The BBC offers some thoughtful remarks on the creation of a prize for blooks: "Blooker rewards books from blogs."

Some of the blogs turned books keep their epistolary style and retain the episodic format seen online. Others turn the basic information gathered on the web as the starting point for a new work.

BusinessWeek blogger Heather Green, on the other hand, remains skeptical about the longevity of the prize.

Announcing "The Blooker Prize," the World's First Literary Prize for "Blooks," alias Books Based On Blogs or Web Sites

October 10, 2005 (London, UK and Raleigh, NC) – The world's first literary prize for books based on blogs or web sites - known for short as "" - is announced Monday by its sponsor, Lulu (www.lulu.com), a website that enables anyone to publish and sell their own books.

The Lulu Blooker Prize (www.LuluBlookerPrize.com) will be a global competition honoring the hybrid literary form of blooks, a new form of an old media and one of the hottest new publishing and online trends.

The prize will honor blooks in three categories: fiction, non-fiction, and web-comics. The overall winner will receive $2,000, and winners in the other two categories $1,000 each, in addition to a small piece of literary immortality and something approaching glory in the expanding realm known as the blogosphere.

The contest, which is open to books published by conventional publishing houses as well as independent (self) publishers, will be judged by a panel of figures prominent in both the online and offline publishing worlds, chaired by Cory Doctorow (www.craphound.com), the noted, London-based science-fiction author, blogger co-editor of BoingBoing (www.boingboing.net) the world’s most linked-to blog.

Doctorow, who develops his own books from notes and ideas posted on his weblog, believes that blooks are distinct from traditional books:
"Blogs encourage their authors to publish in small, partially formed chunks," says Doctorow. "Previously, they might have been kept in the author's notebook, but something amazing happens when you post them online: readers help you connect them, flesh them out and grow them into fully-fledged books or blooks."

Other judges include Robin "Roblimo" Miller (www.roblimo.com) of Slashdot (www.slashdot.org) and Paul Jones (www.ibiblio.org/pjones/wordpress/), founder of iBiblio.org. All judging will be independent of the contest sponsor and no favor will be shown to blooks published on Lulu.

The Lulu Blooker Prize, whose title is an affectionate nod to another important literary prize, will take place annually. Winners will be announced April 3, 2006. Details for submitting blooks for consideration appear at www.LuluBlookerPrize.com.

About Lulu (www.lulu.com): Lulu is the world's fastest growing source of print-on-demand book publishing. Founded by Bob Young, who previously co-founded Red Hat, the open source software company, Lulu provides independent publishers with free access to on-demand publishing tools for books, e-books, music, DVDs, images and calendars.

MORE INFORMATION: Stephen Fraser, pr@lulu.com