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- Date: 28 Dec 92 15:12:35 EST
- From: Gordon Meyer <72307.1502@COMPUSERVE.COM>
- Subject: File 4--Technology and Populist Publishing (GEnie Reprint)
-
- GE Mail
- From--P.SHAPIRO1 Phil Shapiro
- Sub--Something's Not Quite Right
-
- Something's Not Quite Right in the Publishing World Today
-
- Something's not quite right in the publishing world today. You'd
- think that in this Information Age more people would be writing more
- books than ever before, that small new publishing companies would be
- springing up to bring promising new authors to market, that a new
- Renaissance would be blooming in the world of books, the arts, and
- culture in general. Not so.
-
- It's as difficult as ever, today, to bring a new book to market. No
- established publishing company will consider a manuscript that is
- delivered "over the transom" (unsolicited). The only way to approach
- a publishing company is through a book agent, and finding the right
- book agent is enough to discourage all but the most intrepid new
- authors.
-
- Furthermore, even if the larger publishing houses did take time to
- consider a book by a previously unpublished author, and even if they
- found the ideas or story fresh and original, they'd decline to market
- it unless they could sell sufficiently large quantities of the book to
- make a substantial profit.
-
- The publishing of books has become big business. Books are no longer
- treated as precious vessels of ideas, but rather as any other common
- commodity. Wheat. Pork. Books. Shampoo. Deodorant.
-
- Book lovers cringe at the thought that the business of books has been
- reduced to the buying and selling of a crass commodity. Books are no
- mere commodity. They're one of the most precious things we own. A
- well-written book is the essence of human spirit, captured in tangible
- form for all the world to enjoy.
-
- The commercialization of the book, and the sorry state of today's
- publishing industry, is well-chronicled in a 1989 book titled, "Beyond
- the Bestseller: A Literary Agent Takes You Inside the Book Business,"
- by Richard Curtis. Written by a successful literary agent with over
- 25 years experience in the business, the book speaks with some candor
- about the flawed process which modern publishing houses use to publish
- books.
-
- In the final chapter, "Toward Reform," Curtis crystallizes his
- comments:
-
- "The publishing industry is critically ailing, and no one, from
- the creator of the written word to the consumer, is untouched.
- The signs are everywhere, some statistically demonstrable, others
- less tangible but manifest to anyone who has been in the business
- long enough to watch it evolve. Some of the more commonly voiced
- ones are:
- of publishers on big-name authors.
- selling of publishing companies.
- current best-sellers.
- royalties with authors.
- their influence on editorial policies.
- cheating them out of royalties.
-
- Obviously, there is no single comprehensive explanation of what
- has gone wrong, nor any all-embracing solution. Still, it is
- surprising that authors, agents, publishers, booksellers, and
- other book people, highly intelligent individuals all, should
- continue applying patches and poultices to the symptoms when it
- is clear that the dimensions of the problem call for a thorough
- reevaluation of the way things are done in the publishing
- industry."
-
-
- But while the publishing world looks more dismal than ever, there is
- hope on the horizon. It's entirely possible that new technologies
- will arise that will undermine the monopoly the big New York City
- publishing houses have on the distribution of books. Such
- technologies could take one of two forms: print and non-print.
-
- If you're talking non-print publishing, you're talking about the
- electronic book. A device the size and shape of a regular book, with
- a sharp monochrome screen. Reading material would be distributed on
- some sort of magnetic or optical medium. Cartridges, it would seem,
- would be the favored distribution form.
-
- You plug the cartridge into the device, choose the font size you'd
- like to read in (and perhaps the typeface as well). The device would
- then display the text at a user-controllable rate of display,
- automatically clearing the screen once the text reached the bottom of
- the display. The rate of display would be controlled by a rotatable
- dial that would serve as a sort of "gas pedal" for the device.
-
- Some devices might have hypertext capability built in. Other devices
- might have audio capability built in, where word pronunciation would
- be available at the touch of keystroke. Such extra features would be
- available at a premium cost, though. The basic electronic book would
- be manufactured at the lowest possible cost for the largest possible
- distribution.
-
- New print publishing technologies are likely to continue along the
- lines of the desktop publishing revolution. What's needed is a
- dedicated "bookmaker" device that would accept a high density 3.5 inch
- floppy, and churn out a bound book in the output tray. Using text
- compression routines, over two megabtyes of text can be squeezed onto
- a high density 3.5 inch floppy. Two megabytes worth of text is
- equivalent to about 250,000 words. (One page of typed text, 250
- words, is equivalent to about 2K of memory.)
-
- So most normal length books could quite comfortably fit onto one high
- density 3.5 inch floppy (using the text compression routines.) The
- dedicated bookmaker device could then churn out a book on demand.
-
- The advantages offered by a dedicated bookmaker are enormous.
- Out-of-print books could be easily retrieved and distributed to those
- interested in reading them. Books could be sent inexpensively across
- country by air mail. (Or, a book could be transferred via modem to
- anyone interested in reading it.) A large part of publishing costs is
- the printing and physical distribution of the book. With the
- bookmaker device, the cost of distributing the book would plummet
- ten-fold.
-
- The consumer could then decide whether to print the book out in hard
- copy, or to read the book on the electronic book device. Those
- without a personal bookmaker device in their homes would have access
- to such a device at a public library. (Such a device would be
- coin-operated, much like a photocopying machine.)
-
- But most exciting would be the rise of energetic new book publishers
- who could take advantage of the economies of the new technology to
- distribute works by promising new authors, non-mainstream thinkers,
- and others who are currently excluded from the publishing enterprise.
-
- Anyone with access to a disk drive could open up a publishing company.
- The resulting flood of new books would most certainly contain a lot of
- low quality material. But the advantages of the bookmaker and
- electronic book far outweigh the disadvantages of having to put up
- with reams of lower quality prose. The lower quality prose can simply
- be sifted through by book reviewers, who'd erect signposts pointing
- towards the truly worthy reading.
-
- In terms of the bookmaker device, it would be best to have the device
- be constructed from the lowest cost electronic components that could
- still yield high quality print. So a low-cost printer along the lines
- of the Apple StyleWriter, with 360 dots per inch output, and very slow
- printing, would serve the purpose of a bookmaker device very well.
- The actual bookmaker would be a dedicated device, about the size of a
- current 3.5 inch drive, that would plug into a printer like the Apple
- StyleWriter. For the printing of longer books, you would just leave
- the device on overnight.
-
- Eventually newspaper and magazines would offer "bookmaker
- subscriptions" at a reduced rate than their regular "hard copy"
- subscriptions. These monthly or daily publications would be delivered
- either on disk, or via modem. After all, it doesn't make sense to
- print a newspaper across town, and physically deliver it to your front
- doorstep, when for the same trouble they could deliver the information
- across town, and you could print it (or read it on screen) in your own
- home.
-
- In some sense, the sorry state of today's publishing industry is a
- welcome impetus for the rise of a new industry based on the
- magneto-optic distribution of text. The primary beneficiary of such a
- new industry will be the book consumer, who'll have a far greater
- selection of books to read, at a far lower cost. A populist
- revolution in publishing is just around the corner. And just as
- surely as in Gutenberg's day, a new Renaissance will flourish amid all
- the creative and expressive arts.
-
-
- Phil Shapiro
- [The author takes an interest in the social dimensions of communications
- technology. He can be reached by electronic mail on GEnie at: P.Shapiro1;
- America Online at: pshapiro; Internet: pshapiro@pro-novapple.cts.com]
- This text is in the public domain.
-
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