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Print Tax time, summer sports gearing up, end of the semester wrap-up, fiscal year ending at work, vacation planning, organizing the summer youth trip, and on and on the list goes on. With April drawing to a close and summer hot on its heels, it’s safe to say you probably still have lots of activities contending for your precious reading time. Given that and your overwhelming response to last month’s column (thank you!), this month’s column is largely an addendum to the “no time to read” crisis. In sharing your stories, you provided some really great ideas for maintaining a literate lifestyle that I think are worth sharing with everyone.
A Librarian’s Loan of
Advice Even with the shift to the Internet, I’m glad to know there are still young people getting “hooked” on books. Our librarian reported, “With my students at school I have been somewhat successful in establishing a reading program and hooked some kids on books for pleasure.” Even though our current reading habits may not reflect it, there is an intangible enjoyment to spending time with a book. I interviewed a journalist for a marketing class in 1999. One of my primary questions was if periodicals being available online would eliminate the need for hard copies. In my mind, how could a magazine keep selling copies if full text articles are available free online? This journalist assured me that readers would always want the feel of paper between their fingers. At the time I thought his prediction might be biased and optimistic, but I have thought about his answer many times since then and I believe more and more in the endurance of the traditional hard copy. Just check out the traffic in your local bookstore on a Friday night if you don’t believe me. Or try curling up in bed on a rainy night with your desktop. It’s just not the same. So I have optimism for the survival of traditional hard copy books.
No Shopping Like Book
Shopping
Other Options
Stepping on the
Scales I hope these recommendations and comments from readers help you think about reading and formulate your own ideas for making your life more literate.
Other Book News Interestingly, a recent LA Times article made me question whether the market can support “the little guy.” Sure there is a place for the Robin Cooks and Mary Higgins Clarks, and so on, but when is the last time you walked out of your local bookstore with a newly released work of fiction by someone you’d never heard of? LA Times Staff Writer Scott Martelle hypothesizes that readers / book buyers go with the safe bet—popular authors and blockbuster books, leaving the unknown authors with little chance: “Publishing in recent years has undergone something of a socioeconomic divide — the rich get richer while the poor languish, spurred in part by readers' reluctance to spend $30 or more for a book they know little or nothing about.” 1 I question if we’re creating a market where only a few exclusive authors can sell and thousands of good, undiscovered writers can’t break into the market and make their mark. Martelle announces in his article, however, that a weblog cooperative has formed to combat this exclusivist book market. Twenty literary blogs are making a concerted effort to promote current, serious fiction by contemporary authors who are as of yet unknown. It’s a shot in the arm for the little guy, plus it’s just one more way we can work reading into our busy lives these days.
Lagniappe
Classic Remembered
For Fun
ninetyandnine.com © 2005, Lee Ann Alexander ----- Lee Ann Alexander is ninetyandnine.com’s book columnist. If you have suggestions on topics to explore, email her at Books@ninetyandnine.com. Footnotes 1Martelle, Scott. “United by a Love for Literature.” Los Angeles Times. April 9, 2005. |
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