The Book Conundrum
Jan. 16th, 2011 10:11 pmSo I'm in the final 18 hours or so of Arisia, and spent a little time this afternoon in the dealers room (after my duties at Registration were over). I noticed a couple paperbacks on sale that I was interested in. One is Glen Cook's A Passage at Arms, certianly one of the best books I've ever read, and one I had thought was out of print. My copy of the book has long since disintegrated, so finding it available again is a win.
Except.. I have no interest in purchasing paperbacks - or even hardbacks for that matter.
I used to collect books like crazy, and had quite a pile stored up. Since I've been reading more and more on my iPhone, my interest in picking up chunks of dead tree (and the hassle inherent therein) is diminishing.
But alas, publishers haven't figured out that selling a book digitally is a simple and effective way to make money with virtually no overhead. They already have the book printed and in digital form. Making it available for download is a minor step.
I firmly believe that digital books are the next step in written media. I just wish the publishers would catch up and let me buy books that I want to read, when i want to read them, and not simply offer the latest Stephen King novel at a stupidly inflated price.
I foresee a thriving black market for digital books until the publishers get their collective heads out of their asses and start putting their libraries out at reasonable prices.
Except.. I have no interest in purchasing paperbacks - or even hardbacks for that matter.
I used to collect books like crazy, and had quite a pile stored up. Since I've been reading more and more on my iPhone, my interest in picking up chunks of dead tree (and the hassle inherent therein) is diminishing.
But alas, publishers haven't figured out that selling a book digitally is a simple and effective way to make money with virtually no overhead. They already have the book printed and in digital form. Making it available for download is a minor step.
I firmly believe that digital books are the next step in written media. I just wish the publishers would catch up and let me buy books that I want to read, when i want to read them, and not simply offer the latest Stephen King novel at a stupidly inflated price.
I foresee a thriving black market for digital books until the publishers get their collective heads out of their asses and start putting their libraries out at reasonable prices.
no subject
Date: 2011-01-17 10:58 pm (UTC)But know how many I've actually gotten through? Four, I think. I detest trying to read unformatted text on a 2-inch-wide screen. PDFs might be more pleasant except that I cannot possibly read them when the page is shrunk to fit the screen, and when it isn't the scrolling and pinching back and forth drives me insane.
Maybe an iPad is a lot better for this -- dunno, I haven't been able to afford one yet. But using books-on-phones to replace a good book? NMK. :}