Digital
technology has certainly had a profound effect on the traditional book
publishing and retailing industries, but has it also given the book a new lease
of life?
At
one point it looked as if the rise of e-books at knock-down prices and
e-readers like Amazon's Kindle and Barnes & Noble's Nook posed an
existential threat to book publishers and sellers.
"Literature
found itself at war with the internet," as Jim Hinks, digital editor of
Comma Press, succinctly puts it.
But
contrary to expectations, the printed book is still surviving alongside its
upstart e-book cousin, and technology is helping publishers and retailers reach
new audiences and find new ways to tell stories.
Print fights back?
While
there can be no denying that printed book sales have taken a massive hit with
the rise of digital, there is some evidence that the rate of decline is slowing
and that the excitement over e-readers is subsiding.
Kindle
sales - peaking at 13.44 million in 2011 - fell back to 9.7 million in 2012 and
have plateaued since. Barnes & Noble's Nook e-reader has been losing about
$70m (£45m) a year and the US bookseller has been trying - and failing - to
find a buyer for the division.
In
the UK, roughly £1.7bn was spent on print books last year, compared with £393m
on e-books, says Nielsen Book Research's Scott Morton. The digital newcomers'
share of the market seems to have settled at about 30%.
On
the high street, Waterstones saw physical book sales grow 5% over the Christmas
period compared with the year before, while Foyles saw sales rise 8.1%.
The
era of the printed book, it would seem, is far from over. But a lot depends on
the sector you're looking at.
Adult
fiction - particularly romantic and erotic - has migrated strongly to the
e-book, whereas cookery and religious books still do well in print, as do books
with illustrations. All for fairly obvious reasons.
Does format matter?
There
are plenty of services out there trying to bridge the gap between the physical
and the digital, extending the definition of what a book is.
In
2014, a personalised publishing experiment won the largest equity deal ever on
the BBC Dragons' Den TV programme.
The
Little Girl Who Lost Her Name - a printed book that could be digitally
individualised to include the name of the child reading it - went on to be the
top-selling children's picture book in Britain and Australia.
Spanish
company SeeBook offers e-books as physical cards that can be bought online or
in bookshops like other gift cards. Simply scan the QR code in the card with
your smartphone or tablet to download the book.
"Some
book stores still see digital as the big monster that's going to eat them, and
prefer to put their head into the sand," says SeeBook director Dr Rosa
Sala Rose.
London-based
tech start-up Bookindy is using technology to encourage people back to
struggling local bookshops.
It
does this with a Chrome browser plug-in - each time you search Amazon for a
book, a window pops up saying how much it would cost at your nearest independent
bookseller.
Founder
William Cookson, who describes himself as "just an average sort of book
reader", says his creation took just three days to code.
It
helped that he could tap in to an existing network of 350 independent British
bookshops called Hive, which enables retailers to check stock and fulfil
orders.
Serial revival
Digital
is also reviving some centuries-old publishing ideas, says Anna Rafferty, until
recently head of Penguin Books Digital.
Just
as Charles Dickens' The Pickwick Papers was published in instalments in 1836,
so Serial, a prizewinning US murder story, was podcast last year in 12
episodes, to great acclaim.
"Digital
technology and the rise in the digital reading culture has allowed authors and
publishers many more new creative opportunities to develop 'the book' further
and delight readers," she says.
"It
also allows authors to publish directly, to connect intimately with their
readers and, crucially, to create new ways of telling their stories."
The
Pigeonhole - launched in October by former Random House employee Anna Jean
Hughes and partner Jacob Cockcroft - serialises books and enables readers to
share comments and interact with the authors, all via an app. It's like a
digital book club.
In
a similar vein, Manchester-based MacGuffin from Comma Press acts like a Spotify
for books - you can hear authors reading their stories out loud. Its analytics
reveal what gets read where, and at what point people lose interest.
Readers
can append tags to a story - "sci fi", "dystopian", or
"feminist", for example - and use these to discover other new
fiction, much in the same way someone might browse through a physical bookshop.
Digital distraction
Competition
from mobile devices is one reason for Kindle sales levelling off.
"With
mobile phones, screens are so much bigger, and the experience not as garish as
it used to be," says Mr Hinks.
But
although smartphones are convenient - you can buy and download a book in
seconds - they can also be very distracting, posing an added challenge to
e-book sellers.
Books
on electronic devices "compete with games, news, and social media, and so
need to be slicker," says Laura Summers, co-founder of BookMachine, a
popular publishing networking website.
To
hook people into reading, another start-up, Rook, is offering access to free
e-books at wi-fi hotspots, such as London Underground stations, participating
coffee shops and retailers.
"By
the time they have to leave and go off about their life", says co-founder
Curtis Moran, "they'll be so hooked into the book they're going to have to
buy it."
He
compares his start-up to a traditional bookshop, where you can sit and read for
as long as you wish, but have to pay if you want to take the book with you.
So
the book isn't dead; technology is simply helping it evolve beyond its physical
confines.
Long
live the book.
Source | BBC - Homepage
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