Book Exchange Library of Wellsville, Ks - Little Free Library

Book Exchange Library of Wellsville, Ks - Little Free Library Book Exchange Library is located near K-33 and K-68 in Wellsville, Ks. This Library will be available to anyone anytime. Take a book, leave a book.

A Little Free Library is a “take a book, return a book” free book exchange. In its most basic form, it’s a wooden box of books where anyone may pick up a book or two, or bring a book to share. If this were just about providing free books on a shelf, the whole idea might disappear after a few months. Little Free Library book exchanges have a unique, personal touch and there is an understanding that

real people are sharing their favorite books with their community. These aren’t just any old books, this is a carefully curated collection. The Library itself is a piece of neighborhood art that acts like a mini-town square.

https://bookriot.com/book-riots-deals-of-the-day-for-december-16-2021/ Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for December 16, 202...
12/16/2021

https://bookriot.com/book-riots-deals-of-the-day-for-december-16-2021/ Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for December 16, 2021

Today's edition of Daily Deals is sponsored by Amazon Publishing.

Today’s Featured Deals

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Happily Ever Afters by Eise Bryant

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A Better Man by Louise Penny

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Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters

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Palace of the Drowned by Christine Mangan

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The Burning God by R. F. Kuang

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The Poison Thread by Laura Purcell

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Check out all our bookish newsletters!

Previous Daily Deals

Grown by Tiffany D. Jackson for $1.99

How to Find Love in a Bookshop by Veronica Henry for $1.99

All Shouls Trilogy by Deborah Harkness for $1.99

Huntress by Malinda Lo for $2.99

The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra by Vaseem Khan for $2.99

Someone We Know by Shari Lapena for $2.99

Last Tang Standing by Lauren Ho for $1.99

Confessions of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell for $2.99

Bibliophile: An Illustrated Miscellany by Jane Mount for $1.99

No Gods, No Monsters by Caldwell Turnbull for $0.99

The Map of Salt and Stars by Zeyn Joukhadar for $1.99

Hunted by the Sky by Tanaz Bhathena for $2.99

The Darkest Part of the Forest by Holly Black for $3.99

Sawkill Girls by Claire Legrand for $1.99

Unconquerable Sun by Kate Elliott for $2.99

Trust Exercise by Susan Choi for $2.99

Gingerbread by Helen Oyeyemi for $4.99

Broken (in the best possible way) by Jenny Lawson for $2.99

The Beautiful by Renée Ahdieh for $2.99

Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi for $2.99

Luster by Raven Leilani for $2.99

The Wife Upstairs by Rachel Hawkins for $2.99

Of Women and Salt by Gabriela Garcia for $2.99

The Henna Artist by Alka Joshi for $4.99

Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire for $4.99

Fifteen Hundred Miles from the Sun by Johnny Garza Villa for $3.99

The best book deals of the day, curated by Book Riot.

https://bookriot.com/barack-obama-favorite-books-of-2021/ Barack Obama Releases His Favorite Books of 2021Each year, for...
12/16/2021

https://bookriot.com/barack-obama-favorite-books-of-2021/ Barack Obama Releases His Favorite Books of 2021

Each year, former President Barack Obama releases a list of his favorite books, which generally include a mix of fiction and nonfiction, new releases and backlist titles. This year, half of them (the second image) are books he’s already recommended earlier this year, while the other half are new recommendations.

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There are 23 books total on the list this year, an increase from 17 last year.

Barack Obama’s Favorite Books of 2021:

Matrix by Lauren Groff

How the Word is Passed by Clint Smith

The Final Revival of Opal & Nev by Dawnie Walton

The Lincoln Highway by Amor Towles

Invisible Child: Poverty, Survival, and Hope in an American City by Andrea Elliott

Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead

Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr

These Precious Days by Ann Patchett

Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner

Aftershocks by Nadia Owusu

Crossroads by Jonathan Franzen

The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois by Honorée Fanonne Jeffers

Beautiful Country by Qian Julie Wang

At Night All Blood is Black by David Diop

Land of Big Numbers by Te-Ping Chen

Empire of Pain by Patrick Radden Keefe

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

When We Cease to Understand the World by Benjamín Labatut

Under A White Sky: The Nature Of The Future by Elizabeth Kolbert

Things We Lost to the Water by Eric Nguyen

Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam

Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro

The Sweetness of Water by Nathan Harris

Intimacies by Katie Kitamura

In the next few days, Obama will also be sharing his favorite movies and music of the year.

Find more news and stories of interest from the book world in Breaking in Books.

Barack Obama has shared his list of 23 of his favorite books from the last year, including a mix of new releases and backlist titles.

https://bookriot.com/bts-7fates-teaser-trailer/ BTS Releases a Teaser Trailer for Their New Webcomic/WebnovelThe famous ...
12/16/2021

https://bookriot.com/bts-7fates-teaser-trailer/ BTS Releases a Teaser Trailer for Their New Webcomic/Webnovel

The famous K-pop band BTS, along with their label HYBE, is releasing a webcomic and webnovel called 7Fates: CHAKHO. It is a fantasy story following seven young men who are discovering their destiny in a world filled with mythological creatures, inspired by Korean Chakhogapsa (tiger hunters) mythology. The webcomic will be hosted on WEBTOON and the webnovel will be hosted on Wattpad. Both will go up in January 2022.

The teaser trailer is only 15 seconds long and shows BTS artists wielding sparkling, magical power. Despite giving very little information about the project, it’s already racked up more than 1.5 million views.

This is the first in a series of partnerships between Wattpad/WEBTOON and HYBE artists, with six total webcomic/webnovel projects planned.

Find more news and stories of interest from the book world in Breaking in Books.

The K-pop band BTS is creating a webcomic and webnovel called 7Fates: CHAKHO, and the teaser trailer has just been released.

https://bookriot.com/diverse-holiday-romance-books/ 12 Diverse Holiday Romance Books To Enjoy the Winter SeasonThe holid...
12/16/2021

https://bookriot.com/diverse-holiday-romance-books/ 12 Diverse Holiday Romance Books To Enjoy the Winter Season

The holiday season is upon us! Though let’s be real…we started to think about the jolly holidays when Halloween was over. Throw your skull and bat decorations back into that box you’ll be for sure bringing out the next year, search “All I Want For Christmas is You” by the queen Mariah Carey on your preferred music streaming service, put up some twinkle lights, and you’re ready for whatever this next season might bring you. And so, for this reason, these next diverse holiday romance books need to be on your lists!

For many in the Latine/x culture, the holidays are big! For me, December 24 is the day to eat dinner with your family. If you look at the table that day, you would find romeritos with mole, cod fish, apple salad, and turkey, among other things. We play games, like charades or any other board game that happens to be close by. It’s a fun time to spend with your loved ones and we sure love to always make everything a party. And then on December 25, the actual Christmas day, you open up your presents under the tree, eat reheated food from the night before, and that’s basically it. Some might watch football, but I know that many don’t follow that same tradition.

But Christmas is not universally observed during the holiday season. Let’s not forget that! There are more than 7 billion people in this world; some celebrate Christmas for religious reason, for others it’s a totally secular holiday, and still many others observe traditions like Kwanzaa, Diwali, or Hanukkah. This next list will feature holiday romance books with different winter holidays, but also racial diversity and LGBTQ+ representation on the page.

Gingerbread Kisses by Lucy Eden

Part Hallmark, part steamy romance book, Gingerbread Kisses is the sweetest, most delicious novella you will need for this holiday season.

Mark is set to buy this cute little bakery, but the owner has something to say about that. Unbeknownst to Liz, Mark falls for her at first sight! One day though, he hears that Liz needs a fake dad for her daughter’s gingerbread competition and he has decided to help. But Liz has to also do something for him: be his fake date to his grandma’s Christmas ball.

Love and Latkes by Stacey Agdern

Coming back to your hometown during the holiday season always tends to go sideways. And in this lovely Hanukkah romance novel you’ll see how it’s going to go for Batya.

A latke fry-off contest is going to reunite two souls. Both of them think that this contest is going to bring them one step closer to their dreams, but they never really thought it would also bring love and romance to their lives.

The Holiday Switch by Tif Marcelo

Switching phones with that one person you find annoying…changes things, am I right? This clearly happens to Lila Castro when she suddenly finds herself working with her boss’s frustratingly cute nephew, Teddy Veracruz.

This cute, adorable romance will quickly put you in the mood for the holiday season.

Sweet On You by Carla de Guzman

Now, if you love grumpy/sunshine trope where the heroine is the one who’s grumpy, check out this title immediately!

Café owner Sari thinks the Christmas season is the best time of the year. But this year, things are a bit different for her. Mainly her sister is moving out! Also the cute new neighbor just opened up a bakery next door and he’s stealing all her clients.

The Lights on Knockbridge Lane by Roan Parrish

Roan Parrish always blesses us with the warmest romances, and this one is no different! Perfect for the coldest season of the year.

All Adam wanted was to raise a family, but solo parenting is what he got. After a messy breakup, he is focusing on bringing a good life to his daughter and this means to make her Christmas wish come true. The one to help might be someone who he never thought possible: his new, reclusive neighbor Wes.

Christmas in Full Bloom by Denise N. Wheatley

Denise N. Wheatley also published another holiday romance last year, Love at the Icicle Café, so if you want more books, get that finger clicking.

A wedding on Christmas? A magical time to do it. Floral designer Lauren is back in Maple Valley, Michigan, for her sister’s wedding and she’s determined to be the best maid of honor. But the best man is the man she left behind when she went after her dreams…Sparks fly in this festive, romantic love story.

A Holly Jolly Diwali by Sonya Lalli

Niki Randhawa has always followed the rules. She went for the stable job instead of going after her dreams. She dates good-on-paper guys while the ones who actually create butterflies inside her are left in the dust. When she is laid off, Niki says enough is enough, and decides to travel to India for her friend Diya’s wedding.

It’s there that she meets free-spirited Sam, someone who makes her forget who she is for a moment. This book is a beautiful tale of getting to know yourself once again, but also finding that person that accepts all of you, with no hesitation.

A Trapped Holiday Heart by Wynta Tyme

Have you ever imagined what would it feel to be trapped inside a snow globe? Well, read this paranormal romance and meet Cherry and Lane to find out!

A Trapped Holiday Heart is going to be a rerelease this holiday season with some added new scenes. Take a ride in this fun story about Cherry, who gets trapped inside a snow globe. While encased, she meets a sexy Adonis inside! Find out how she’s going to get herself out, have her happily ever after, and discover the reason why she was sent there.

Collie Jolly by Leigh Landry

Anything to do with dogs, I’m in. Collie Jolly is that Christmas romance novel you need in your life. Doggies, the Christmas spirit, and a romance to tie everything up in a nice, little bow? Say no more.

A heartwarming story about one dog trainer and her client/boss…and lots of cute doggies. Desperate for a job, Ashley applies to be Madison’s dog trainer, even though she has never done it before. But dogs always bring people together, right? In this case, Madison and Ashley find themselves falling in love during this season.

The Kwanzaa Brunch by D.L. White

A funny Kwanzaa romance novella that will bring a smile to your face instantly! If you’re looking for a sexy, romantic story, you should definitely think about picking up this title.

Sienna is tired of the same old things in her life. When a new employee at her workplace happens to walk through the doors, things start changing. Booker is going to become your new favorite romance hero this holiday season!

Being Merry by Meka James

If you’ve been wanting a grumpy/sunshine F/F Christmas romance book, just one-click this right now. Meka James will bring you smuttiness, romance, and the joy of Christmas.

Noelle is all about Christmas while Lennox is basically a Grinch. Put the two of them together in an apartment, becoming temporary roommates, and things are bound to happen. High heat but also a sweet romance is what you will find inside the pages of this book.

One Winter’s Kiss by L.C. Son

For fantasy fans, this fairytale-inspired romance will be the right pick for you.

Winter’s life has been planned out since birth and she has conformed herself to that fate. But then she sees him — Lux — and nothing is ever the same. Because Lux, a hybrid wolf, also feels that pull and though their romance is very much forbidden, they’ll try their hardest for a shared happily ever after.

Diverse holiday romance books are on the rise and I’m happy to show you a small list of those books. I’m sure I’m missing so many, especially from Harlequin who we can always expect beautiful holiday stories from. If you’re looking for more books to add to your list, check out these holiday romance novels!

Pick up these 12 diverse holiday romance books for a sweet (sometimes steamy!) romance story that will keep you warm this winter season.

https://bookriot.com/books-for-fans-of-maintenance-phase/ Bananas Celebrity Diet and Wellness Books for Fans of Maintena...
12/16/2021

https://bookriot.com/books-for-fans-of-maintenance-phase/ Bananas Celebrity Diet and Wellness Books for Fans of Maintenance Phase

I’m so glad that we did not need to put Angela Lansbury into the bin of bad celebrities offering terrible diet and exercise advice. Sure, her Positive Moves was far from perfect, but she wasn’t shilling dangerous advice a la so many other celebrities and influencers. I’ll admit it wasn’t until Maintenance Phase told me Lansbury had a diet book that I even knew one existed, but the same could be said about any number of celebrity/influencer diet books mentioned on the outstanding podcast. As it turns out, there will never be too many such books for fans of Maintenance Phase.

Hosted by Michael Hobbes and Aubrey Gordon, author of the book What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat, Maintenance Phase is biweekly podcast tackles topics on health and wellness. This is a fat positive show, and it seeks to shed light on things that are or once were trendy in weight loss, health, and diet culture. Hobbes and Gordon have incredible chemistry and manage to talk through big, heavy topics without interrupting or undermining each other. In addition to the big topics they delve into — things such as the Presidential Fitness Test, protein as a cure-all, the BMI — one of the recurring features on the show is a deep dive into a celebrity wellness book. Of course, Goop has made an appearance, as has the above-mentioned Lansbury, but so has Ed McMahon and the deep dive into Marianne Williamson is a must-listen for anyone who found themself unable to stop watching the LuLaRich docuseries. I’m not usually one who loves book club–like episodes of podcasts, but it absolutely works for Maintenance Phase, as Hobbes and Gordon do such a fantastic job of going in with an eye toward quackery, toward debunked myths of health and wellness, and, maybe as importantly, with the desire to ridicule diet culture while also offering space for levity among the absurdity.

It’d be easy to pull together a roundup of books like Maintenance Phase. We’re finally in an era of fat positive and body positive books, including one by Gordon. But what’s more in the spirit of the podcast than instead a roundup of some of the ridiculous, out of touch, and weird celebrity diet books that exist? Some of these would make for outstanding show fodder, and they make for a great reminder to readers more broadly that just because someone has a platform or is a celebrity, that doesn’t make them knowledgable in any way, shape, or form about health, wellness, diet, or exercise. They are instead a reminder of how pervasive and destructive diet culture is, as well as the trends which inspired generations of poor advice (think: the ways fake sugar were held up as superior to real sugar, for example, or the ways that grapefruit or extremely limited caloric intake were heralded as the “solution” to weight loss).

Dieting and health are as individual as we all are, and no matter what “advice” is given, it’s never one-size-fits-all, nor should it be. Our bodies are our own, and we can choose to live in our bodies in whatever way we wish. Diet culture and exercise culture can be toxic, and they’re both deeply representative of the culture and milieu from which they’re developed. This will become apparent quickly with the below titles, but it’s worth emphasizing that if celebrities can make up anything they want related to “health” or “wellness,” so can anyone else, with or without any actual credentials to do so. Remember that even celebrities known for their athleticism or fitness don’t tell the whole truth — you may, as the saying goes, have the same number of hours in a day as Beyoncé, but you likely don’t have access to the same resources, money, and hired help she does.

It’ll come as little surprise that these books are primarily by white authors for all of the reasons you’d expect. But perhaps, in this particular case, that’s a sigh of relief.

Celebrity Diet Books For Fans of Maintenance Phase

Elizabeth Takes Off by Elizabeth Taylor

I’m having such a hard time grappling with the fact that in the ’80s, it was well-publicized how “fat” Elizabeth Taylor got during her marriage to John Warner in the ’70s. And indeed, “fat” Elizabeth Taylor was 180 pounds and ridiculed widely in the media — so in her 40s, she decided it was time to stop comfort eating (and drinking…) and dropped down to, as she claims, 122 pounds.

This book is about how she did it, including diet plans that include how to prepare one’s breakfast coffee, and indeed, it leaves plenty of room for the opportunity to “pig out” as necessary. As Maya Sinha describes in a humorous 2020 Saturday Evening Post article, much of the diet advice is a relic of ’80s food culture, and it sounds to me exactly like the kind of book that helped generations of people fall into destructive eating habits (not to mention, 180 pounds is only 10 pounds heavier than what the CDC notes as the average weight for American women).

The Karl Lagerfeld Diet by Karl Lagerfeld and Dr. Jean-Claude Houdret

Whom among us hasn’t woken up one morning and decided that we needed to wear designer clothing and in order to do so, we needed to drop 80 pounds? It should come as no surprise, then, after the acclaimed designer dropped those 80 pounds, he’d share his “secrets” in a book. This book came with a pull out poster that offered foods that were recommended, those which were off limits, which were to be approached with caution, with a bonus opportunity to “indulge” in some red wine (it’s fashion, baby).

Among the foods to be avoided? Cherries. Prunes. Lentils. Lagerfeld, who lost 90-some pounds in 13 months, was grateful certain soda companies produced diet products since those were a chance for him to “indulge” after giving up his beloved chocolate ice cream.

It likely comes as little surprise that Lagerfeld was a white supremacist who demeaned models and other industry folks for being “too fat” during his career. He hated women and immigrants, and it’s not really shocking to see the line between toxicity in diet culture and toxicity in thought more broadly.

S*x and the Single Girl by Helen Gurley Brown

If the author’s name doesn’t ring a bell, know she was a tremendous influencer on culture for decades as the Editor-in-Chief of Cosmopolitan from 1965 until 1997. Her book was a tremendous bestseller and offered advice to young women that was simultaneously feminist and about as far away from feminist as possible, and it was this tension that made it the kind of book so many picked up and talked about in the ’60s.

One chapter in the book details the ways a woman should maintain her physique. Advice included “sexercise,” but more controversially, the “eggs and wine” crash diet. Women were advised to try this for two days and see a quick weight loss: eat 1 egg in any style for breakfast without butter, alongside a glass of white wine; for lunch, two eggs of any style, with two glasses of white wine; and finally, for dinner, 1 steak and the rest of the bottle of white wine. Brown later expanded the diet to incorporate a glass of orange juice.

The book notes that there’s not an excuse for being fat and that not only is claiming glandular disorders a cop-out (“Doctors find that behind nearly every fat person lies a history of compulsive, secretive eating”) and that women fresh from childbirth have “proved they can be slim again quick.”

Cher: Forever Fit by Cher and Robert Haas

Look: I love Cher, and I think her video for “If I Could Turn Back Time” is nothing less than iconic — who else could pull off what is essentially black electric tape to keep from indecent exposure?

But alas, this book offers both diet and exercise advice that isn’t entirely transparent or informed about “Good” and “Bad” food. It was 1991 and the world was afraid of fats, so this particular diet eschewed fat in favor of complex carbs.

“Dairy products are not good for us. I weaned myself from whole milk to nonfat milk — if I’m having milk at all. I think cheese is one of the worst things for the body. It doesn’t digest well, and most cheeses are too high in fat and cholesterol,” she writes in the book, also noting that while filming Witches of Eastwick, she participated in binge eating, which she resolved by sustaining herself on microwaved sweet potatoes, baked potatoes, and Caesar salads…which is also not great?

Also worth noting here that the cowriter, who is a nutritionist, is a sports nutritionist whose work specializes in high-performing, professional athletes. The advice here isn’t even MEANT for the average person, despite being sold to them.

Martinis and Whipped Cream by Sidney Petrie

Carbs were the enemy when this book published in the mid-1960s, and the provocative title really isn’t as out there as it sounds when you realize the diet is about eating higher-fat and richer foods that don’t have a lot of carbs. So indeed, one of the sample lunches included had a martini as a drink option, alongside a cream of mushroom soup, chicken salad, mayonnaise, melon, and coffee with creamer (as opposed to a Coke, club sandwich, and apple pie).

But more than the push for swapping all carbs for as few carbs as possible — and what makes this book noteworthy, even if the author may not be memorable — is this is where the familiar conversions of food to exercise came from. Want to know how many calories it takes to digest certain foods? Indeed, you can find it here.

There is a lot of drinking in this book, which is, I guess, great if you like martinis as part of your diet all the time. You can cover the smell of the liquor with your allotted peppermints and chewing gum, though.

Reshaping It All by Candace Cameron Bure

DJ Tanner doesn’t eat a solid diet, encourages a breastfeeding woman to ditch cheese because surely she could stand to shed a few pounds, and believes that if you just pray, your weight problems might be resolved. Really. Jesus might solve your eating disorder — and that’s not to say faith can’t help you, but real psychological disorders, including eating disorders, also require professional help.

Bure’s general philosophies are questionable at best (she’s anti-vaccine) and pair that with showing how she herself eats what is a restrictive diet, the rhetoric that most people need to just “try a little harder,” and how she talks about how others should eat puts this squarely in the “nah” box.

She’s not a dietician, a doctor, or anywhere in the health world.

Women & Beauty by Sophia Loren

A lot of reviews talk about the timeless tips in this one, and most of what’s cited is pretty harmless, including using olive oil to remove makeup.

But one of the quotable lines in this particular title is “everything you see, I owe to spaghetti.” Yes, indeed, this beautiful woman enjoys spaghetti. What’s not mentioned is that comes into play in her monthly 3-day crash diet of 1000 calories. The three days have different meals, but they boil down to very little food in order to achieve that spaghetti excitement. And if you’re hungry, you’re permitted to enjoy snacks of peppers or tomatoes with garlic salt.

If you’re now unable to stop thinking about diet and wellness books packed with terrible advice, you’ll want to pop on over to a piece by Aubrey Gordon in Self about her own obsession with these books and what they’ve taught her about the culture surrounding diet and wellness.

Martinis are popular in some of these celebrity diet and wellness books for fans of Maintenance Phase.

https://bookriot.com/what-are-nfts/ What’s the Big Deal With NFTs?There’s been a lot of talk around NFTs recently, betwe...
12/16/2021

https://bookriot.com/what-are-nfts/ What’s the Big Deal With NFTs?

There’s been a lot of talk around NFTs recently, between that entire thing with a group of YA authors were going to create an anthology with NFTs, or NFT sales now getting taxed due to cryptocurrency FINALLY being regulated. But a lot of people are still scratching their heads over what NFTs actually are and are struggling to find out. I can’t blame them, the entire thing is pretty confusing, and the entire culture around them is headache inducing to say the least.

So apologies in advance for any headache I’m about to cause explaining all of this.

Oh God, What Have I Just Signed Myself Up To Read?

NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are essentially “tokens” (AKA anything electronic but are usually JPEGS) that people spend a lot of money to own. They’re traded via the blockchain and contain a little bit of information within their code, usually info that says you own it and how much you bought it for. They’re advertised as a way to help out artists, the next step in the fine art market! Because that’s what fungible means: it’s irreplaceable, one-of-a-kind, it cannot be traded with something else!

Let’s make this a bit easier to understand: remember those registries where you can “buy a star” and name it after a loved one and they’ll send you a certificate saying you own said star? And you can the company have an agreement that you “own” said star, even if no one else acknowledged your ownership? NFTs are a bit like that — the NFT itself would be a bit like the certificate saying you own it. Except you can’t forget to add in the fact that the entire process hastens climate change, all for an image you claim you own, even though it’s shared over the internet and the artist still has the raw file of whatever they sent you. And anyone who comes across your one-of-a-kind NFT can easily right click and save to their computer, upsetting those who have invested in said NFT. Which has lead to some pretty good memes around the subject, like this one.

Sure. Okay. So What Kind of Stuff is Being Traded as NFTs?

Despite what’s claimed, NFTs aren’t necessarily one-of-a-kind pieces of artwork. Logan Paul (yes, that Logan Paul) sold 15 second clips of a YouTube video he had already posted for up to $20k. Yes, you read that right. People bought clips of a video that was already up on YouTube where they could watch it for free, for more money than what my car is worth. The video was of him opening Pokémon card packs. It was advertised as “buying the moment” of the card reveal.

Yes, I have a headache too. And an eye twitch.

That’s not the worst of it though. Some of the images sold as NFTs look like bad ’90s paper doll style avatar makers, if you’re lucky. Others look like this:

This is Gucci Ghost. It currently costs about the same as four semesters of my bachelor’s degree.

Someone bought that GIF for $3,600. They are currently asking $16,300 for it. A 352.78% price increase. For a GIF that I — get this — right-clicked and selected “save-as.” For free. Because unlike the fine art market, where you can get the original of a Monet or Rembrandt while everyone else just has to have a print, that GIF there is functionally the same as the GIF that sold for $3,600. Folks like to claim that this is the next step in the fine art market, but really this is more like Beanie Babies, or trading cards. You can claim you own the IP all you like, but you’re also someone who spent over $46k on a PNG of a pet rock.

I’m not kidding. I really really wish I was.

ROCK THREAD: Why I spent $46,300/15 ETH for a PNG file of a grey pet rock and why I think it could end up being one of the best investments I make since getting into crypto. A thread (continued) pic.twitter.com/kkkUVGFKh7

— z () August 7, 2021

And you can’t forget that all this uses 10 times the electricity that normal cryptocurrency uses, where one transaction uses on average 35 kWh. Which is roughly enough electricity to power a fridge for a month. Selling two NFTs generates about the same amount of greenhouse gases as a U.S. family home generates in 21 years.

Look, we as individual citizens can only do so much to counteract the emissions companies essentially have free rein to pump into our atmosphere, but that doesn’t mean we should actively contribute to, and hasten, the destruction of our planet either.

The NFT market has grown,
As eight-figure auctions have shown.
The overall price is
A worse climate crisis
For art you pretend that you own.

— Limericking () March 15, 2021

Fortunately, some artists are backing out of their NFT releases. Joanie Lemercier, a French visual artist and environmental activist had planned a release of several works as NFTs before realizing the environmental toll and cancelling the entire project. In his defense, he was looking for more sustainable ways to exhibit his art, which usually involved flying all over to festivals and galleries. NFTs just aren’t it.

It turns out my release of 6 CryptoArt works consumed in 10 seconds more electricity than the entire studio over the past 2 years.

Joanie Lemercier, https://joanielemercier.com/the-problem-of-cryptoart/

How Does that Anthology You Mentioned Fit in?

In fact, that’s what happened with the anthology announced on October 20, 2021. Authors Marie Lu, Tahereha Mafi, Ransom Riggs, Adam Silvera , David Yoon, and Nicola Yoon announced a project called Realms of Ruin to be released on November 8, 2021. They described it as “fantasy epic filled with dark magic, intrigue, and unique characters launched online in a thrilling new way,” spearheaded with NFTs. It was an idea that you could tell they were still fleshing out and hadn’t thought it through completely. You could purchase character cards from the stories, even add stories of your own based in the world with the authors reading the stories and deciding which ones were, essentially, good enough to become canon. The stories readers wrote (essentially a type of fan fiction) could be minted into NFTs, the value of which would rise as the story’s readership does.

I’m sure anyone else who witnessed the Great StrikeThrough Event of 2007 and the fall of LiveJournal, and then the fall of FanFiction.net, and Anne Rice (and others) suing fan fiction writers and the disclaimers that used to be peppered all over fanfics that they do not own the characters they are writing about (please oh please don’t sue them) also has their skin crawling and mental alarms going off reading that. That’s not even touching on the ethical issues of encouraging those under-18 to enter the NFT market, a market that is rife with scams, or just a system in general where your value is dependent on the quantity of people that are willing to buy it, not the actual quality of the story. Our current brand of capitalism is bad enough, thanks.

It's one more area where quality is out the window, all that matters is how much other people are willing to spend on it. I don't think we need to introduce *another* channel for that into the publishing business model!

— Margaret McDeadlines Owen () October 20, 2021

To the authors’ merit, they were going to build the anthology on the Solana blockchain, which claims to be more environmentally friendly than the other blockchain. Even though there has yet to be any hard data on Solana’s energy usage, so you essentially just have to take Solana’s word for it. Even more to the authors’ merit, when people came forth with criticisms and legitimate concerns about the entire thing, the authors took a step back and said they would talk further about the project and later announced via Discord that they would be pulling the plug on the entire project. All the authors involved said they had good intentions with the project, but, well…the road to hell and all that.

But You Said NFTs and Crypto are Getting Regulated?

The good news is, now that cryptocurrency and the affiliated transactions are all getting regulated (much to the chagrin of crypto bros), it won’t be as easy to get scammed, but that was an issue for a while, like anything else on the internet that’s new and involves money. There have been cases where artists have promised to deliver NFT projects only to disappear into the ether after receiving payment, never to be heard from again, or just sending random emojis from their phone instead after receiving the equivalent of $138,000 in cryptocurrency.

Seeing some of the people that get seriously invested in NFTs, and seeing what they’re spending the money on, it’s kinda hard to get upset at artists for taking advantage of some of these guys. When you’re willing to drop honest-to-God house or car money for an image or video off the internet, it’s kinda hard to feel bad about people taking advantage of your poor decisions.

NFTs were being used regularly for money laundering as well: to clean their dirty money, an individual could create an anonymous NFT, list it for sale on the blockchain, buy it from themselves with their anonymous, illicit money, and then that money would become legitimate and usable. Since this would all be done via the blockchain (where anonymity is a feature, not a bug) using cryptocurrency, the transaction would be incredibly difficult to trace.

The dirty money, all in crypto, would keep transferring though anonymous wallets before being converted back into actual money. It’s essentially the equivalent of taking a counterfeit $20 bill into a gas station, using it to buy a pack of gum, and receiving your change in legitimate bills, over and over until all the counterfeit money you have has been exchanged. And instead of trying to find the culprit via watching the security tapes for the gas stations, you would have to try and dig through a seemingly never ending line of shell companies upon shell companies. Tedious, to say the least.

My Head is Starting To Hurt…

Last bit, I promise. I know this is a lot. My head hurts too.

With the new regulations, any individual who receives $10,000 in cryptocurrency must report it to the IRS, with digital assets essentially being treated the same way as cash assets. Not reporting is a felony, like anything else with taxes. So now anyone trading in crypto that doesn’t want to commit a felony now has to un-anonymize their wallet (which, as I mentioned, was a feature of the entire system), which makes it harder to launder money and your identity on the blockchain is now accessible to anyone else and they can see what kind of transactions you’ve done.

Basically, anyone that has been trading in cryptocurrency and using NFTs now have to follow the same requirements and regulations and taxes that the rest of us deal with. Or at least the rest of the people in their income bracket deal with. There’s more as well, dealing with loans and trading and all that, but honestly I’ve typed NFT so many times it’s starting to lose meaning for me. I’m sure it’s the same for you.

Like I said earlier, I’m sorry for any headache I caused. But maybe now you have a bit of a better understanding of NFTs and what the some of the big deal with them is, or maybe you don’t and you’re going to click on the next article under this one on Google to see if that one explains any better. It’s okay. I understand. I’ve spent a lot of time researching this stuff and I still don’t completely understand it. There’s probably very few people who do.

Here, I’ll help out with your possible further research: if you’re interested in how NFTs are affecting books beyond what I discussed here, we have a handy piece you can read on just that. And I’ll leave you with this joke that you, as a fellow literature people, will appreciate:

If you need a breakdown on NFTs, or curious over what the most recent kerfuffle over them has been about, this is the piece for you.

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