Posts Tagged ‘gutenberg revolution’

Reading More into the Future of Reading

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Riding the train into New York last evening to teach my NYU novel writing class, I was wishing for an e-reader, as I often do  (I was already carrying my little Acer netbook so I could check email later).  Then– as I even more often do, I drifted into a nap, so I don’t know if the desire for all the books in my library in my hand at every moment was just part of a pleasant dream or a real plan.

The irony of course is the hundreds of  people who want to write novels, and are they reading novels? The National Book Critics Circle blog Critical Mass has a nice meditation on the difference between reading blogs and really reading, and Shelley Ettinger pointed me toward an article in the blog on the state of publishing, Moby Lives, about who is actually using e-books at the present time (more men than women, higher income than lower).

She also gave me the link to an article in Poets and Writers magazine about the Espresso Book Machine .  This hundred thousand dollar plus machine will print a digitalized book instantly– they’ve been in development for a couple of years, and this article touches on several issues about the future of reading:  the instant hard copy books but also e-books  (and the fascinating fact that one of the developers of the Espresso is Jason Epstein who was also part of the development of paperback books in the early 1950′s!).  I like the possibility of small independent bricks-and-mortar stores around the world that have access to all the books–  I’m visualizing a little coffee shop place with only a few hard copy books, but free wifi and one of the Espresso Book Machines, and people reading and writing, and maybe even looking at shelved books.  Nice, don’t you think?  Or at any rate, not bad.

Universities have been picking up on the possibility of  instant books much  faster than the dinosaurs I mean the publishing industry, which is busy justifying their high prices as in an article in the March 1, 2010  New York Times. They don’t mention that part of the overhead for their books is not just underpaid editorial staff but also the corporate CEO’s Lear Jet.  See my article reviewing The Business of Books.

Do Monks Dream of Parchment?

Friday, February 5th, 2010

A friend told  me last night that she had tried reading  a blog of dense literary criticism, and finally gave up.  Then she ran across  the same material in book form, and loved it.  Of course it is possible that the writer cut and polished before the book was published.   But long blocks of dense prose– novels, criticism– may be just too much for the eye to deal with in the flickering ambiance of the screen.

We agreed that poetry works well on the web– for example, I know a poet who sends a poem “by someone else” once a week or so  to his email list.  Sometimes it’s a famous poet, sometimes not, but it’s always a single poem. Flash fiction works well on the screen.

And the word on the street is that reading e-paper (the Kindle, Sony e-readers, etc.) is just like reading tree-pulp paper.

After the Gutenberg Revolution, did monks and priests have nostalgic dreams about the flow of illuminating ink over the crisp surface of parchment?

Note:  Here’s the latest from the Authors’ Guild on the Google book scan issue.