Baby, it's cold outside! |
By Jodi Thomas |
By Cindy Sample |
This brings me to my Monday Musings topic. WILL E-BOOKS REPLACE BOOKS IN PRINT? In my opinion, it will not occur in our lifetime. Maybe. Probably. Certainly I hope not!
I love my new Kindle, but . . . |
Curl up with a good book |
Thing of the past? |
I limit my Kindle reading to those books I plan to read only once. Yes, I do reread many of my favorite books. Those authors whose books I plan to save, I buy in print. Makes sense to me, and I hope it does for other readers as well. Perhaps both print and e-books will continue to be companion media for the future.
Pick your form of reading material, but please keep reading! Authors need more than royalties. We need to know that readers are enjoying our books. While I would write if no one but my family read my books, my goal is to bring escapism, hope, and pleasure to many, many readers through my writing.
Please return on Wednesday for an interview with Sybil Baker.
5 comments:
Hi Caroline:
The print book will die in the not too distant future. Old technology tends to hang on for years and then it goes into extinction. Gas lights were their very best as electric lighting was being introduced. Typewriters lasted almost 20 years along side the PC. So print books will hold out for a few more years.
It’s not that people want the print book to die. It will die because of pure economics. Ebook Readers will come down in price to about $10. In many cases the reader and the book will be sold as one. This is like the box of film that because a camera.
What will the publishing world be like when eBook readers are just $10? (These will not be wireless. Books will have to be uploaded from a computer.) What will schools do for text books? Imagine: no update problems, no inventory, no warehousing, no shipping, no obsolete books to dispose of! No big book-bag sacks that can hide bad things!
I predict that most textbooks will be free. These will be commissioned by philanthropic organizations who will hire the best authors. No publishing costs! No shipping! No inventory! Available for free! I’d think about selling stock in textbook publishers.
And what about the tsunami of backlist books that will soon hit the markets in force. Old books that look the same as new books that are available at lower prices. If you like an author, after reading one of her books, you’ll be able to buy any of her other backlist books.
The real marketing battle in the future is going to be for the little time per day a reader has available to read books. More than ever, the future will be driven by developing your own market and then writing many books that pleases that market! It will be called ‘electronic farming’! Just wait and see. What force can stop this?
Vince
Actually, your immediate heirs will likely fight over your books because so many of them are really interesting. I wonder, though, about people who are used to "writing" 140 character messages and consider a whole paragraph too much to read.
Hi Stephanie:
Probably all books will be rendered digital before too long. I expect there will be anthropologists who will seek out books (that have not made it into the Library of Congress) to save them as if they were primitive languages with only one remaining native speaker left alive. The goal will be to save everything ever published because it might be important to some future academic (just as some meaningless plant or fish might provide a cure for cancer).
Also there will be a booming business for writers who can translate standard English into Twitter or text massage talk. Instead of ‘speed reading’ classes there will be ‘length reading’ classes which will teach how to understand thoughts that are expressed in full sentences.
This is a great time to be a writer who is into “World Building”!
Vince
P.S. Print books will all be banned and burned because they cannot be edited in real time to reflect the current PC truths. Print books by their very nature will be considered subversive.
I agree with you Caroline, that I read books I love over and over. That being said, I read faster and with less work on my Kindle. So, for most reading it is easier, and I don't have to worry about where I keep the book. I love both and doubt I'll give up the hard copies I have until someone pries them out of my cold lifeless hands.
Bobbye
Vince, I suspect you're correct, but hope you're wrong. Already reading levels are dropping. Another thing missing is parents reading to their children--an educational program on TV is not the same as cuddling a child and reading from a book. One on one contact is being replaced by cyber contacts. As in, I have Facebook friends but don't have time to have dinner with a real friend because I have to text--and if I do dine out wiht someone we don't talk because we're both checking our phones for texts or calling someone. Don't get me started. Ooops, you already did. LOL
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