“Twenty years ago, if somebody had shown you an iPod, you would not have known what that sucker was,” Dorothy Allison told a crowd of writers gathered recently in San Francisco. The poet and memoirist went on: “You wouldn’t have known how it worked. You wouldn’t have known how vital it would be to your getting’ on that treadmill and runnin’ at the gym every day.”
Actually, the only things that keep me on a cardio machine are breaking news, baseball, or trash TV, but I love my iPod for long walks. (I’ve also been using it to escape from manuscript hell: I put on sweet slack-key guitar, play with colorful magic markers and easel-sized Post-Its, and draft my chapter outlines. Sort of like fingerpainting for grownups. Slapping a teal-colored outline up on the big white wall in my office is makes me forget how freaked out I am about my deadline.)
Allison continued her rhapsody, turning to the thrilling new life the iPad gives the written word. “Your world can be reshaped, redefined by what other people have accomplished, what they have fantasized, what they have dreamed about and made a reality,” she said. That was once the promise of traditional books; now it’s the promise of e-books.
I confess, I don’t yet have an iPad. (Nor an iPhone, although my husband and I share what we call the “WeTouch”—an iTouch for two.) I’m gonna buy an iPad with the second installment of my advance. (In addition to fingerpainting, promises like this keep me going.)
iPad or not, we all need to stay on top of the fast-and-furious changes in the book biz. Check out these three new essays in the Sin and Syntax Salon:
- In Heather Ross’s e-book update you’ll get answers to questions like “How big is the e-book market?” and “What should I expect in e-book royalties?”
- In another essay, literary agent Michael Larsen shares his thoughts on the Google Books Search court case.
- Finally, in a third salvo, Bill Petrocelli explains why he’s welcoming Google Books at his Bay Area bookstore.
BTW, the Google Books Search case (here’s a collection of New York Times updates) has nothing to do with Google e-books. Many authors like me “opted out” of the company’s $125 million class-action settlement with the Author’s Guild and a collection of publishers.” No way I wanted to cede my copyright to Google! In March 2011, a federal judge in New York agreed with us doubters, saying the deal went too far in granting Google rights to exploit books without permission from copyright owners. We’ll all have to stay tuned on developments in the Grand Google Scan. (Does that last word sound like scam?)
Of course, we all use Google Books to take a peek at pages. But there’s nothing like owning your own copy. Which do you prefer, bound books or digital? Kindle or Nook Cloud or iPad?
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Tags:digital books, Dorothy Allison, e-books, iPad



