Nostalgia City Mysteries

Mark S. Bacon

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About mbaconauthor

Mystery writer and journalist; former newspaper police reporter.

Three shortcomings of e-books

For dedicated readers, nothing compares to spending a quiet afternoon browsing in a bookstore.

Last week I found myself in the San Jose, Calif., airport with time on my hands.  I had my Kindle and planned to get a cup of tea and settle in to read.  Once inside security, however, I noticed a bookstore so I strolled over.  Immediately, I was enveloped in the quiet, the smell of bindings and paper, and the thousands of titles calling to me from the shelves.

This was the first time I’d been in a bookstore in a month or two.  A pilgrimage to Barnes and Noble for tea, coffee and hours of browsing used to be a weekly ritual for my wife and I.   She’d head for mysteries, I’d start with new releases.  We’d meet up somewhere in general fiction after I’d toured the history, social science and philosophy shelves–not to mention the marked downs.

In the two and a half years since I’ve had an e-reader, our visits to bookstores have become more infrequent–though nonetheless cherished.  So my visit to the airport bookstore was all the more welcome.  In fact, the visit was a time of reflection, one of those moments to recall things that are slowly fading from our lives.   The transition to e-books–advancing perforce–has been so swift, readers of all ages are likely going through some form of literary withdrawal or suffering premature pangs of nostalgia for the hours we’ve spent with books.  My time browsing in the airport bookstore got me thinking about some of the other simple pleasures of books, pleasures being lost to the digital serpent.  Two more examples:

Watching what others are reading After my relaxing time at the bookstore, it was time to board my plane.   In the days before e-books I loved to see what other people were reading and airports and airplanes were good places to do it.  I’ve struck up many conversations with strangers–at airports and elsewhere–by making a comment about the books they were reading.   Sometimes I would see a title then wonder why that person was reading that book.  Sound familiar?  Of course today the person across the aisle holding an e-reader could be reading Fifty Shades of Gray or Tom Sawyer and you’d never know.

Writing in the margins  Someone may have told you never to write in a book because it defaces the pages.  That may be true for library books, but writing in your own book can only make it more valuable to you, nonfiction books especially.  When you skim back at a book when you’re finished or even when you’re in the middle of it, your annotations, underlinings or highlighting will lead you to the things you wanted to remember.   Even the act of underlining helps you remember.

When you disagree with an author, the margin is the perfect place to scribble a rejoinder or set the record straight.  You can write questions that may help you understand what the author is driving at.  Yes, you can highlight and make notes in e-books, but the interface often makes it impossible for you to see your annotation and the passage it refers to at the same time.   And since annotations are recorded as footnotes, your comments don’t get equal billing with the text.   You can’t skim through an e-book on most readers and see your annotations in margins.

One of my grad school professors used to tell us that if you were not using at least three colors for highlighting or annotations yours was not a rigorous form of study.  Some e-reader software now permits you to highlight in colors, but it’s not the same thing.  And you can’t absently chew on the end of an e-book highlighter when you’re enraptured by a particular passage.

Next: More shortcomings- bookmarks and dog ears

Style notes

This blog conforms to the 2012 edition of the Associated Press Stylebook; however, in some previous entries I’ve incorrectly referred to electronic books and electronic readers as ebooks and ereaders, respectively.  I was in error.

The AP, not unlike some dictionary publishers, is not an early adopter of popular slang and jargon.  It takes a longer view.  For example, website only recently replaced Web site as the AP’s accepted way to refer to a location on the World Wide Web.

As this day’s post indicates, e-book and e-reader are the acceptable forms.

Winter-like weather continues to plague the upper Midwest and other portions of the country, but it’s technically spring and even Minneapolis will have good weather soon.  Thus, here’s a (non-crime) story from Cops, Crooks & Other Stories that introduces spring in Minnesota.

Visiting an Old Friend in Minneapolis

Duncan looked for a place to park his new Lexus SUV.  Snow covered everything.  He drove to what looked like the front of the cabin.

“Walter, good to see you.”

“Come on in.  Make yourself at home.”

“Damn it’s cold. Why in hell do you live in Minnesota?  When I left Houston it was 75 degrees.”

“It’s just early March and starting to warm up.  It’ll be beautiful.  The ice on the lake is already getting thin.”

“Where is this beautiful lake you told me about?”

“Right out there.”  Walter pointed out the front window.

Duncan stared.  “Where’s my car?”

Ebooks and book prices – changes        to come, but what and when?

In the weeks since the announcement of patents by Apple and Amazon for systems to sell “used” ebooks, online writers weighed in decrying the development or criticizing the predictors of gloom.

Writing in Magellan Media, Brian O’Leary takes exception to comments by authors who said writers’ incomes would plummet as ebook prices nosed down.  He asserts that ebooks would become more valuable–and higher priced–if buyers knew they could resell them and recoup some of the original sales price.   He also says that like their paper cousins, individual ebooks would not last forever.  As operating systems and ereader software change, various forms of ebooks could become obsolete and not a bargain on the used marketplace.

Suzie Welker, writing in the Orangeberry Book Tours website, says of a used ebook market: “expect it to happen sometime.”

According to Welker, lower priced ebooks–as a result of a used ebook market, I presume–could, for two reasons, have the effect of reducing sales of stolen ebooks on pirate sites.   First, many people would be willing to pay a reasonable price to avoid dealing with shady book sellers and second, she reminds us that if your Kindle or Nook dies or is stolen, your legal ebooks, unlike the pirated versions, are recoverable.

The topic of used ebooks aside, Leslie Kaufman, writing in the New York Times, discusses how some big literary agencies are offering their own “self-publishing” ebook options for writers.   According to the story, author and playwright David Mamet is using a self-publishing option from his literary agency, ICM Literary Partners as a way to gain more control over his book’s marketing.

Kaufman’s article, which describes book publishing today as “digital disruption,”  explains the rationale behind agents’ decision to get into self-publishing.   It also provides a summary of different forms of  self-publishing available to authors today and explains present royalty structures, of interest to readers (in addition to writers) in order to see where book publishing is going.

What do authors have to gain by paying an agent to “self-publish” for them?   Robert Gottlieb, chairman of the Trident Media Group, told the Times that authors benefit from his agency’s experience in marketing and jacket design and his firm can give clients access to plum placement on book sellers’ websites.

What does all this mean for readers, book buyers? Ultimately you will dictate the success of all forms of ebooks as you browse Amazon or Barnes and Noble deciding which title to download.  Prices may be lower, one influence on buying decisions.  Well-known author names also figure in.  But quality?  In this expanding, digitally disrupted business be sure to read samples first.

 

Notes / hyperlinks

Ebooks could become more valuable says O’Leary

Suzie Welker says a used marketplace will happen

A look at self-publishing today