Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

E-books, the Kindle, and the future of the library

The modern lending library is a co-op of sorts. In my town, a group of literate people got together and decided that the town needed a library. They each contributed a few books, and these sparse tomes were housed in somebody's basement. New people joined, contributed their own books, and read others. The library grew. A hundred years hence, it is a collection of thousands of books in a sterile, white-walled, green-carpeted building with a staff of ten. What will it be in another century?

The printing press appears to be on its way out. Amazon's Kindle was introduced a few years ago, and quickly embraced by the literary elite. The Kindle, however, has massive flaws. Even after a price cut, the cheapest model is still $300. It uses E-ink technology which is expensive but, unlike an LED screen, is not backlit. The Kindle can only be stocked with ebooks from Amazon's Kindle store, which has about 300,000 titles--78,000 less than the amount of books published in the US and the UK in 2006. In other words, this is a tiny drop in the bucket of books that have been published even in the last decade, a tiny mote in the dust bunny the size of Hoover Dam that is the amount of books published since the invention of the printing press in approximately 1436.

Furthermore, a cursory glance of the "Kindle store" will reveal that, although most NYT bestsellers and many significant books are available, many of the bestselling books in history are not. The Harry Potter series, for example, which has sold half as many copies in 12 years as the Holy Qur'an has in its entire history, is absent.

The Kindle is undeniably groundbreaking, despite its flaws. Two competitors, Sony and Barnes & Noble (competing for the first time in their respective histories) have produced or shortly will produce e-readers, with larger libraries, lower prices, and less restrictions than Amazon's Kindle. The fact is, the printed book is no the way out, but I'm not willing to jump on board yet. I'm an admitted technophile, but every now and again staring at glowing rectangles gets old and I have to escape into what solace a printed book can offer. I do not look forward to the day when, to read the books I love, convenience will mandate that I leave my printed books behind.

I will miss going to Borders and browsing for hours. I will miss my job at the library, which will be made ineffably obsolete in the next half-century. I will miss the fresh, foresty, virginal smell of a new book, the crispness of its pages, and the salacious pleasure of reading it for the first time, and many times hereafter. I will miss the joy--yes, joy--of recommending a book to someone, lending them a ratty copy, and then basking in satisfaction when he or she loves it. With Card's Ender's Game, I did something very perilous. I recommended to someone a book I had not read myself. He read and loved it, I read and loved it. My brother read and loved it. By the end of it, I had read eight more books (the sequels) and no less than everyone in our school had read Ender's Game. With books made up of bytes instead of paper, this sort of sharing is not possible. No sensible publisher will relax DRM (Digital Rights Management) rules to allow customers to lend books to each other. Brick-and-mortar publishers can't dictate what customers do with their books after they buy them, but cyberspace-based ones can reach into your computer and delete anything and everything it wants to if you don't toe the line.

Don't take my word for it, though. Recently, Amazon remotely deleted copies of the Harry Potter series and Orwell's 1984 from customers' Kindles, and refunded them. The books had been placed on Amazon's Kindle store illegally, but even so: if they can do it for legitimate reasons, they can do it whenever they want. Barnes & Noble, however much it wants to, can't send ninjas to break into your house and take your copy of What to Expect When You're Expecting that you lent to a friend "in the family way."

There is a inherent difference between the version of the latest bestseller on Barnes & Noble's burgeoning shelves and the electronic one on Amazon's Kindle store. There are a finite number of copies of the paper version, and they cost a certain amount of money to make. There are an infinite number of copies of the Kindle version, as many as there is demand for and no more, and they cost an infitesimal amount to produce. This means that consumers pay less, that bookstores will never be overstocked, but it also undermines the entire thesis--and here I return, five paragraphs hence, to the subject of my first paragraph--of the modern lending library.

A public library is not a building or a collection of books, but a social contract between people saying, in effect: "We will each contribue x% of our income to fund this library, which will buy books and other materials, hire staff, and provide premises where we can all enjoy these items for free." That, at least, is how libraries started out. Now, they are publically funded and so taxpayers pay for their library whether they use it or not. A book that a library buys is put on the shelf, and patron after patron after patron can read it. Electronic books cannot be put on a shelf, and with DRM only one person can own them, not a consortium. A library could buy one e-book, someone could download and read it...and it would be "used up" and disappear into cyberspatial oblivion.

So, whither the library--or rather, will the library whither?

Not to act like an action film director, but to find out you'll have to wait till the sequel: "The Future of Libraries Redux," "The Future of Libraries is Back," "The Future of Libraries Reloaded," or "The Future of Libraries II." The title is still under consideration.

Till next time,

Sola Gratia

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Location, Location, Location

Vinegar and Baking Soda.

In reading, as in real estate, location is everything. Certainly a good book has power anywhere, but every book has a place where reading it is more intellectually or emotionally charged. These nodes hook your brain and your heart to the book in a more vital way. Reading ceases to be a merely intellectual pursuit--not that it should be in the normal way, but it too often is--and becomes an emotional one as well. Thus, it becomes a true experience, because it incorporates emotion and rational thought, the vinegar and baking soda that make our lives fizz.

It is all well and good to read, say, Tom Clancy's Hunt for the Red October (which currently languishes on my shelf, unread) on a bus or subway, or curled up in bed, but it is another thing entirely, I should imagine, to read it in the blue light of an actual submarine cabin. That's not an experience many people are likely to have, but do you see what I'm getting at? When you read a book somewhere that figures in the story itself somehow, is evocative of the book in some way, or was important to the author; or alternatively in non-fiction, reading a book about a certain battle on the battlefield; reading a book about American democracy while sitting on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial; it becomes, in a real or imaginary way, closer to you.

Anne Fadiman, writing in Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader, tells of how she read the journals of a western explorer in the Lewis and Clarke mold while sitting on the shore of the very river being described in the book. She also tells of an author who read a book about Hannibal and the Punic Wars while in a misty Italian battlefield. Reading A. A. Milne on a country bench somewhere in the forest that became, in his stories, the Hundred Acre Wood, reading Shakespeare while being punted down the Avon, reading Gilgamesh in Iraq, Exodus in Egypt and Israel, or Acts of the Apostles in Athens or Philippi or Corinth or Rome; you can imagine the significance of achieving that.

A problem comes, however, regarding two areas of my literary canon: religious books, and science-fiction/fantasy. These three categories in fact probably make up most of my reading itinerary. Christian books such as the Screwtape Letters, The Reason for God, and in fact the Bible itself are by their nature otherworldly. Christianity does not dwell on this world; it does not dwell in this world. God is not of the world, and Christians are called not to be either. But the world in the Bible is more often the enemies of God, or the sinful nature, which can be described as the necrotic crusty nacre of unspeakable, filthy evil and sin; the antithesis of everything God created the world to be. Since we, and the world, are totally but not utterly depraved--there is no sinless aspect of our lives and world, but nothing is completely sinful. So, there remains in this world a part; a 2-d image of a 3-d event, a black-and-white photograph; of the glory and majesty God created in Man and in this world. But that doesn't answer the question: are there places where the Bible, to take one example, can be read so that it has the power of location?

The Bible is, of course, a special case. The only perfect book in the world; the only one inspired by God. It is always equally powerful to read the Bible, and because it is such a diverse, world-spanning narrative, no place can really be defined by it. However, I think it would have great meaning to read the story of Jesus' birth in Bethlehem, of his crucifixion in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and etc. The question must arise, though: Where do you read a perfect book? There are two possible answers: everywhere and heaven.

The Screwtape Letters? The theme of anxiety about World War II is something frequently mentioned in the book. It's such a perfectly crafted work that, although it does not have an explicit plot, the tension still builds towards the end as the War looms. A bench at a WWII memorial perhaps? An Anglican confessional? I guess that's one we'll have to discover.

Science-fiction and fantasy may be the only exceptions to the rule. It's not possible to read Timothy Zahn's Heir to the Empire in Admiral Thrawn's low-lit art-filled command sanctum--although I swear it's out there somewhere. It's not possible to read William Shatner's Star Trek Academy Collision Course in 23rd Century San Francisco, and so on. Perhaps because so much of reading this kind of book is intertwined with pure imagination in that it makes use of far less real-life material--that rests, if you will, already in image files in our brains--than, say, a John Grisham book. Compare the following tidbits: "He was wide awake when the engine was throttled down and the boat moved close to the bank. There were voices, then a gentle bump as they docked at the trading post. Nate slowly removed himself from the hammock and returned to the bench, where he sat" This is form John Grisham's excellent book, The Testament. Engines, boats, banks, trading posts, hammocks, voices, bumps, and benches are all things we are at leasy vaguely familiar with. Nate is a familiar name. I would say this book's "node" would be drifting slowly down the Amazon in a river boat. Compare it to this: "Atuarre watched anxiously as she and a few chosen helpers in the big tier-level cargo lock almost threw milling prisoners into the tunnel tube, where they thrashes like swimmers, moving and helping one another move towards the junction station." That example may be too effective; it seems incomprehensible. To clarify, I should say that Atuarre is helping wrongly-held prisoners escape through a no-gravity tube, thus the throwing and thrashing like swimmers. But still, many of these words are no doubt unfamiliar to you. I, who have read a chunk of science fiction in my day, understand it better, but part of the charm of science fiction is that in many ways it leaves more to the reader and author both, rather than, say, the laws of physics or reality which usually set unflicnhing guidelines. In that sense, sci-fi is both harder and easier to write and read than a Nora Roberts or John Grisham book. But you can see my point: there aren't many science fiction books with "nodes"; most of them don't even happen in this universe.

The book and place don't even necessarily have to be related to get the electric connection Anne Fadiman writes about. One of my favorite reading memories took place on the shores of a glassy northern lake, sitting on a hugely gnarled tree root indian-style. Dusk was falling, and I had to bend close to the book to see what I was reading. The book? It was a P.G. Wodehouse book featuring Jeeves and Wooster. How seemingly alien to the quiet dusky stillness of that lake reflecting the last rays of the sun into the tree-lined campsite. And yet somehow, it was a great reading moment. It was a vinegar and baking soda moment.