Clem and Tom both seem worried about the future of the book. But
a blog is nothing without debate, and I'm not so sure. True, the
Kindle and the new generation of e-books are potentially a threat,
and one we should take seriously. And, also true, the music
industry was effectively killed by the web, and the newspaper
industry looks like being next, so we shouldn't be
complacent.
Still, there are some important differences.
In both music and newspapers, the technology dictated the form. The
40-minute LP happened to be the length because that's what you
could fit onto 12-inches of vinyl. The once a day mix of news,
business, sport, crosswords and features that we call a newspaper
came about because that was worked when printing presses and trains
were the only way of distributing information. In both cases, the
product itself was, to a large extent, created by the
technology.
And so, when the technology changed, there wasn't much point to the
product any more.
I don't that's true of the book. Okay, it's printed and bound, but
it's just a narrated story and there have never been any
technological rules about length (a novel, by the way, is a similar
length to a dream) or format.
My point is that while digital music and digital news are in many
ways superior products that isn't true of books.
A digital book might be cheaper, if the publishers choose to make
it so, or free if there is file-sharing, but it isn't
better.. And that's a crucial distinction.
To me the big challenge to writers and novelists isn't the e-book.
It's the compter game. This is a completely new narrative form, and
one that can be far more immmersive for the reader/player. But that
isn't a threat. It's an opportunity.