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November 13, 2007

Thanks for the add!

So last week Facebook announced new models of advertising, including allowing brands and products to create Facebook pages. In the past, one had to be a real person to create a facebook account, but now the spectre of monolithic corporate presence looms large over the booming social networking site.

Pengface_2 Penguin (never backward when coming forward) has today become, we believe*, the first publisher to take advantage of Facebook's largesse and we've created our own product page which you can find here. We're now busy adding pictures, videos and all sorts of other gubbins to the page to create what we hope will be an interesting, engaging and regularly updated destination for our new fans (brands and companies have fans, not friends, which makes sense really). Let us know what we could put on our page to make it more interesting, either by writing on our wall, or by getting in touch via the comments on this blog, though our myspace page, by IMing our second life avatar, on the podcast, through the website or, if you must, with terribly old fashioned phone, fax, email or snailmail. Phew.

When news of our facebook page rippled through the office reaction was mixed, ranging from total disinterest, (very) mild excitement to deep mistrust. The last response came from our most enthusiastic facebookers who feel that a company has no place muscling in on a social networking site. Facebook is a place where friends can hang with friends, tag each other in photos and catch up on news of bawdy nights out (rest assured, you will not see pictures of Penguin, passed out in a shopping trolley after one too many Moscow Mules). I was reminded from a passage from All Tomorrow's Parties where William Gibson disects the disappearance of geographic bohemias:

"Bohemias. Alternative subcultures. They were a crucial aspect of industrial civilization in the two previous centuries. They were where industrial civilization went to dream. A sort of unconscious R&D, exploring alternate societal strategies ... But they became extinct.”
“Extinct?”
“We started picking them before they could ripen. A certain crucial growing period was lost, as marketing evolved and the mechanisms of recommodification became quicker, more rapacious. Authentic subcultures required backwaters, and time, and there are no more backwaters. They went the way of geography in general..."

So, sorry if we are treading on your toes. We honestly won't get in your way and, after all, you don't have to be our friend, or our fan, or our follower or part of our gang. But, if you want to stay in touch, we hope to make it as easy as possible for you to find us, and connect with us, our authors and their books and other readers.

Jeremy Ettinghausen
Digital Publisher

*see comment below - not the first, or, we're sure the last

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Remember that by posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use. If you consider any content on this site to be inappropriate, please report it to Penguin Books by emailing reportabuse@penguin.co.uk

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Comments

nice one

Happy to see you're making this move! It looks sleek and clean. To clarify, though, House of Anansi did this a week ago. Great company to keep!

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