You can donate hereAs many of you might be aware, I'm a total language nut. I own about 10 feet, end to end, of books on languages and linguistics- all sorts of things, from Aleut and Basque to Sanskrit and Welsh, are represented.
Now, on my bookshelf, in the middle, is a pair of rather imposing volumes entitled
A Dictionary of Upriver Halkomelem, vols. 1 and 2. You are unlikely to have ever heard of this language, and who can blame you? I acquired them when the Linguistic Society of America convention rolled through town a couple of years ago, I took the time to go bookshopping. Thing is, when you go to a professional conference, the publishers are so desperate to sell their merchandise that you can usually get it at a reasonable price, especially if you play up the I'm-an-impoverished-language-geek-in-high-school puppy-dog eyes. By such means was I able to get the dictionary for a measly $20. Why? One, it was stately and imposing, and two, Upriver Halkomelem is a Salish language, which is a really, really frickin' awesome family that it's hard to find material on. (One of UH's relatives, Bella Coola, is rather famous for having words that can be up to thirteen consonants long without any vowels.)
OK, so what I thought was: can I get the accompanying grammar for it? I wrote into UCPress, which deals with these things, and asked them. They said (I feel really guilty about what happened) that they wanted to get it out as print-on-demand, but there were some maps they weren't sure about; could I review it for them? We'll send you a review copy, you send it back, we'll send you a free replacement.
...well, sure, I said. I don't look gift horses in the map.
So anyway, I held onto it for a few months, gave them a very nice review, and then sent it back. Only problem was this: rather than sending it to Jack Young, who dealt with these things, I sent it to the Books Division, who, as I then learned, deal with thousands of books a day and promptly lost it. It was further noted that that was their only copy, so, basically, I screwed the pooch and it may never be published.
Woops.
So basically, to review, UC Press are wonderful, wonderful people who actually want to put their stuff as print-on-demand, and I fucked them over.
There is, I was delighted to learn, a way around this: there are copies on Amazon that are in great condition, and I could order one and send it to Jack Young. But they were overrun copies from the first print run-in perfectly good condition, but about $170. I don't have that kind of money.
Basically, my proposal is this: I'd like to use IndieGoGo or some similar site to do a 50-50 raffle. Every little bit helps, and then I'll draw a name weighted on the amount of money that was contributed to Paypal that person half the money. Does anyone know of a site that does raffles like this? With a $170 book, I'm really hoping that I could get people to contribute at least $300 total, every little bit helps, and who knows, you might win. And it
is for a good cause; these dinky little languages are dying, and documentation is really important.
Thoughts? Anyone know of a raffle site? Otherwise I'll just use IndieGoGo.