Monday, November 21, 2011

The Boy Who Cried Book

I found this article a couple of months ago and happened upon it again today. As an avid book reader it's safe to say I went through the whole "held-in-your-hand, there-in-the-flesh, hard-bound-book" extinction 'freak out'. Before I bought my Nook, I was convinced they were evil. Then I bought the Nook and then I read this article. So this is for those of you out there, that went through or still are going through, the worried stage that good 'ole fashioned books are going away. I think this somewhat humorous (and genius) article will help with the anxiety.


Ding, Dong the Book Is Dead!
To anyone who is worried about the survival of the printed book I present this:

Yes, that is Captain Jean Luc Picard, enjoying a hardcover book in the 24th century.

Case closed. Books aren't going anywhere.
....
Okay. Fine. So maybe only sexy, refined men will continue to read hardcover books, and the rest of us will make use of paperback books, e-books, audio books...Ugh, I can't even get worked up about it. We still have movies even with the advent of tv. Some are still in black and white even with color film. Not every movie is in 3D yet. We still have stage plays, for pete's sake. Although cassettes and 8 tracks are gone, we still have Cd (for the moment) and records (enjoying a new resurgence). Radio is still around, and if you include podcasts its more popular than ever. And while digital books might be taking a larger share of the market, regular ol' paper books are still being sold, and after everyone figures out their preferred mode of reading, sale will probably even out between the two.

The thing is, I wouldn't worry about any of our storytelling mediums, because people will always want and need stories, and people will always have preferences for how they want to experience those stories. In Chicago, where I live, I've attended a couple of the Moth Storyslams, which is just live storytelling on a theme, and that event sells every single month. If live storytelling--the oldest form of storytelling there is--still has a home in this world, then the beloved book has absolutely nothing to worry about.


*Article published on www.officialbealibrarianbloger.blogspot.com on August 2, 2011.*

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