(no subject)
Aug. 27th, 2003 10:50 pmVia Creative Commons (
creativecommons): A list of 2002's best-selling classics (how did The Red Tent get on this list?), and when they'll enter the public domain. It almost makes me cry that The Great Gatsby won't be available for translation, adaptation, and reinterpretation for another 17 years.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-27 11:07 pm (UTC)Copyright extension makes me very sad. Dover has just about hit the wall of stuff they can reprint in music scores. Sigh.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-27 11:59 pm (UTC)I was thinking it's too bad there won't be any Project Gutenberg eTexts of Fitzgerald's stuff for another 20 years, but then I remembered that a bunch of his stories are already online (including "May Day", one of my favorites) as well as his first novel This Side of Paradise. I guess you just can't, uh, reinterpret it. Yet.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-28 12:30 am (UTC)Do people still read Moby Dick?
Yeah, Fitzgerald's early work predates the creeping copyright extensions. But I love Gatsby.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-28 01:26 am (UTC)Make that "never". In 17 years the copyright'll just be extended again.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-28 09:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-28 02:15 pm (UTC)Incidentally, while I was home last I caught part of the Gatsby A&E film made with Mira Sorvino. It was AWFUL. Paul Rudd played Nick Carraway and seemed to have been directed to be surly straight through. Have you ever seen it? It made the Redford film look brilliant.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-28 03:56 pm (UTC)Never seen the A&E film, and can barely remember the Redford one (but I think I liked it at the time. they wore hats!). I liked Mira Sorvino as Romy, though.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-28 07:15 pm (UTC)