Ebooks and the great equalizer

I was recently gifted a Kobo and now have read three books on the ereader. I like that it's not backlit. After working on my laptop, I don't want to stare at another screen. I like that I can purchase ebooks through my local bookstore for it and check out books from the library and hold many books in one small place. I don't like that it has to be recharged, turned off on airplanes, doesn't feel like a book or smell, I can't easily tell how far into the book I am, the formatting isn't beautiful but functional, etc. I can see the benefits of ebooks in certain circumstances, but I am far from converting entirely to electronic.


I'm not disgruntled about ebooks. I wish I liked them more--I'd love space for a dresser in my bedroom, but all the walls are taken up by book cases. I receive royalties for ebooks just as I do for paper books. But I do believe it's important to consider the consequences if ebooks take up too much market share.

Often ebook retailers who also sell e-readers sell ebooks at a loss in order to promote their e-readers. If ebooks are sold for significantly less than their hardcover and even paperback counterparts, it's less likely people will invest in the latter. Paper books will come to seem ridiculously overpriced. Which they are not. Publishing is not a fat cat industry. No one is getting rich (except a very few megaseller authors, which represent such a tiny percentage of the industry they're hardly worth mentioning). Look at anyone down the line: editor, agent, publisher, publicist, distributor, bookseller, author, and you see that everyone is trying to make a living and no one is wealthy. No one gets into any part of publishing with the intent of striking it rich (unless they're woefully ignorant). They do it because they love books and care about literacy.

So, what happens if ebook prices dip down lower and stay lower? Customers like that because they can buy books for less. HOWEVER, the smaller the print run of a paper book, the more expensive it is to publish, the less profit a publisher makes. If most editions sold of a book are electronic, publishers won't be able to afford printing hard copies. Many books would only be available electronically, and those in paper would be more expensive.

So what? Maybe everything goes digital in the future. Save the trees, right? But what about those who can't afford an e-reader? What about libraries, schools, kids? Right now, public libraries are "the great equalizer" as someone said. Anyone can have access to most any book for free in a library. But if some books are only available as an ebook, only those with readers will have access. Libraries are already underfunded. What will happen if fewer hard copies are printed and the prices go up?

I don't know how this will all play out, but I am concerned. Some say, keep the market open and don't be afraid of change. But the change I foresee isn't just a different industry, it's one that is actually smaller, more prone to monopolies, and less accessible by the poor and by children. I want quality literature. I want freedom of speech. I want all children and adults to have access to thousands of different books, any one of which might change their lives.

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Published on March 11, 2013 08:27
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message 1: by Jill (new)

Jill Here's an image I posted on my blog a while ago as a reason I'll never fully switch to e-books:

:(

Because the bookshelves will be TOO SAD.


message 2: by hpboy13 (new)

hpboy13 The reasons you mentioned are why I categorically refuse to get an e-reader. Even if it's the measly $30/month I spend on books or whatever, I want to do my tiny part for the industry in which I hope to be one day. That, and nothing replicates the experience of holding a book in your hands.


❀Aimee❀ Just one more page... I like both options -- I use both. I like that I can get access to books my library doesn't have on my reader. I finally got the kindle paperwhite because it has the non-backlit option, but for night reading, i can backlight it.


message 4: by Aisha (last edited Mar 11, 2013 10:34PM) (new)

Aisha Abbas This is so like me!
I too fail to achieve same satisfactions by reading on screen than that I usually get by reading the books physically. In fact I was never ever attached to e-readers and the way they are soaring speedily in their popularity and superiority (than the non-electronic books) is nothing but only increasing my disgust and making me envious and, more and more I am unliking them. I guess the reasons for my repulsion are the same that you have highlighted.
Come on, the enhancing technologies should at least spare the books!
I mean it's so fun and excitement collecting them and of course the delightment when you pick them in your hands to read, the aroma and feeling of happiness it generates to a bookworm.You can't get the same response in a book e-reader.
Truly did Robertson Davies once said-

"That lust for books which rages in the breast like a demon, and which cannot be stilled save by the frequent and plentiful acquisition of books. This passion is more common, and more powerful, than most people suppose. Book Lovers are thought by unbookish people to be gentle and unworldly, and perhaps a few of them are so. But there are others who will lie and scheme and steal to get books as wildly and unconscionably as the dope-taker in pursuit of his drug. They may not want the books to read immediately, or at all; they want them to possess, to range on their shelves, to have at command. They want books as a Turk is thought to want concubines-not to be hastily deflowered, but to be kept at their master's call, and enjoyed more often in thought than in reality."


message 5: by Julie (last edited Mar 12, 2013 06:30AM) (new)

Julie I resisted the ebook for ages, until my aunt (a librarian) extolled their virtues. If a book-worm like her approved, I had to try it. Like you, I prefer my Kindle because of the lack of back-light. It really feels like reading a page of print rather than staring at another screen. And I love that at bedtime with just one light-weight "book" I can read "Island of the Blue Dolphins" with my son and daughter in one room, cross the hall to read "Patchwork Girl of Oz" to my oldest (we're reading the entire Oz series; not a small number of pages!), and then curl up with a super-lightweight (i.e. it won't hurt as much when I drop it on my face) version of a 600 page book for myself. Of those, 2 are borrowed e-books from our library, one is an online purchase.

I also agree that it's a hassle to charge (about once a month if I keep the wi-fi off) and dislike having to turn it off on airplanes; but the airplane hassle is more than made up for by having 150 books with me on my travels without needing a steamer trunk!

Our local library has embraced ebooks and loans out e-readers; but the print copies can not be fully replaced. The printing industry is currently overly bloated with over-runs in production in order to achieve economies of scale and to stock for future demand given the highly uncertain demand patterns of books. They can have huge hits and fast falls, slow growth, slow starts and then sudden increases, very delayed recurrence of demands (think an older book suddenly getting a bump from Oprah or another source) etc. The printing industry needs to change to be more flexible with faster printing of smaller batches of book and we see that happening in some companies with "print-on-demand" style books. If done well, operationally this shouldn't increase costs dramatically; but it will require a heavy re-thinking of how those presses operate and do their cost analysis and pricing to publishers. (Sorry for geeking out here; I worked in a printing company for 2 years and now am a professor in operations and logistics so this is a favorite topic of mine).


message 6: by Veronika (new)

Veronika Turner This is interesting. I've barely ever used kindles, eBooks, etc. and I feel like I would prefer to have that feeling of a "book" to actually feel the cover and the pages. To have that there. It seems so much more satisfactory. But now that I really think about it...how much paper WOULD we save if we started using actual books, less? I mean, I know not everyone can afford one; I can't, at this point in time. But it's a thought.


message 7: by Katarina (new)

Katarina This issue always reminds me of an excerpt from an Asimov story that I had to read in school. In the excerpt, a couple kids in the future find a book in an attic. They're fascinated by it; you have to turn the pages, it never changes, etc. The book is, to these kids, a portal to the past. In the world Asimov imagined, these kids no longer went to school. They stayed home and had an electronic screen with lessons specifically designed for them. The excerpt ended with one of the children reflecting on how fun it must have been to learn in a group.

I'm not really against e-readers, but I do worry about what the cost of all our gadgets will be. I can only speak for myself, but I think I already see the effects every day.


message 8: by Emily (new)

Emily I just bought a Kindle paperwhite, for a couple of reasons. One is that I'm going to need ten books for a study-abroad trip, and there is no way I can bring all of them without checking luggage. The other is that I can get free copies of out-of-copyright books, some free copies of new books that the author is doing a promotion on, and library books for the Kindle. The library books are especially nice because it's not always convenient for me to get *back* to the library in time to return the book.

However, if I'm *buying* a book, I will almost always go for the hardcopy version. There is no used ebook market, for one, and for another even a nice ereader can't possibly compare with holding the book in my hands for me. I think both have a place in the modern reader's "toolkit," but I will always be fonder of print books.


message 9: by Britney (new)

Britney I read say fifty books a year. I love to read. However, I only own say twenty or so books that are my absolute favorite. Everything I read is from the library. I received a kindle for Christmas and because of how easily I can buy books ( one click) and the cheaper price I have already bought at least a dozen. Most of my friends are also big readers but never purchase a book. Isint it better that now I have bought many?


message 10: by Tati (new)

Tati I got my tiny 10- yr- old daughter a Kindle touch a year ago because she is an avid reader and her hands and arms got tired of holding those 300, 400, 500 and even 600 page books she reads! Now she can lay in bed and hold her Kindle with one hand easily without getting cramps!
She likes the highlighting option, dictionary and comments... She also likes "real" books, especially if they have illustrations. We don't have a big house and I really don't know where I would be putting all these books if we had purchased the physical copies instead the electronic ones...
She takes her Kindle everywhere and if she gets bored, she just keeps on reading whatever she was reading at the time or she opens up one of her books from her digital library. It is amazing that she can carry with her, wherever she goes, her whole library!
I hope these wonders of the electronic books do not create the problems you pointed out... I hope we can find some balance and enjoy the best of both worlds...


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