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The death of non-narrative books
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Non-narrative in this case means something very simple: a book that contains no sense of narrative - no story.
"10 greatest things about sharks" is not going to sell much these days. I've got wikipedia for that.
"The great shark story" might sell.

And searching for a decent, quickly dashed off recipe, is a real pain. At least the act of publishing into a "real book" (since according to an article I read just after this one won't exist much longer) gets looked at by copy editors many times over. I find SO MANY errors in e-format, the book (or recipe) is useless.
Wikipedia is awesome also, but it is a constant work in process, and also contains errors, which many younger than I still accept as infallible information.
Please continue the discussion. Am I misguided in my opinion?ive used the example of cookbooks because it's more immediate to my own experience.
And I've not even explored the Art Instruction genre. And, in defense of books, they still aren't reliant on a power source, once you buy one. Oh, and they aren't pulled back electronically after a time either. That has also happened. When I bought the ebook, I wasn't informed that it was a long term "rental". I thought I'd bought it, silly me.


This topic was suggested by a few members in my last discussion. I brought up what I see as the biggest change in publishing that no-one seems to be talking about.
In an age of information, non-narrative books are already pointless.
To start with, this is a really good article that I mostly agree with. It won the Bookseller essay competition back in 2014.
http://www.thebookseller.com/feature/...
I am considering collating various thoughts on the topic into a blog to appear on the Reedsy Blog blog.reedsy.com sometime soon.
Any thoughts on the above, keep them short, astute and to-the-point.
Thomas