David Quammen: People Love the Physical Reality of the Book
VideoBarry Eisler on the Future of the Book
VideoBeyond the Book is Complete (and Continues to Evolve)
StandardThe Sprint Beyond the Book is complete! You can read the main text of our publication, Beyond the Book, on this website by using the links below. You can also download the Intel Labs PGE Reader to access the book with a fully-designed layout featuring video interviews, images and additional text crowdsourced from attendees at the Frankfurt Book Fair and participants around the world. We’ll be updating Beyond the Book with additional essays and other content soon, so check back frequently to experience the latest version of this living text.
The Sprint Beyond the Book was a great success: we wrote, edited and published a collaborative multimedia book exploring the future of reading, writing, editing and publishing in just 72 hours! We are extremely grateful to everyone who made this possible: our collaborators here on the ground and around the world. Thank you to our writers – Charlie Stross, Dan Gillmor, Jane Friedman, Brian David Johnson, Corey Pressman and Lee Konstantinou – to the many people who shared their thoughts in text and video contributions, to our colleagues from Intel and at ASU, and to the many supporters who stopped by to show their support at the Frankfurt Book Fair.
Beyond the Book isn’t a finished product – it will continue to evolve. You can join the conversation on Twitter at the hashtag #beyondthebook. You can also contribute your ideas for future editions of Beyond the Book and our other experiments with the future of publishing by responding to our 7 big questions.
Beyond the Book
Introduction
Lee Konstantinou, “Why I’m Here”
Charlie Stross, “Why I’m Here”
Brian David Johnson, “The Future of _______: A Cautionary Tale”
How will people read in the future?
Jane Friedman, “The Blurring Line Between Reader and Writer”
Dan Gillmor, “Readers and Anonymity”
Lee Konstantinou, “Reading and Our Addiction to Distraction”
Charlie Stross, “Reading Machines”
How will people find new books to read in the future?
Jane Friedman, “The Importance of Metadata in Book Discoverability”
Dan Gillmor, “What Are You Reading? Reading and Reputation”
Lee Konstantinou, “The Future of Bookstores”
Charlie Stross, “Feral Spambooks”
How will books be produced in the future, and who will produce them?
Jane Friedman, “The Atomization of Publishing”
Dan Gillmor, “An Author-Centric Ecosystem”
Lee Konstantinou, “Our Friend the Book DJ”
Charlie Stross, “Publishers: What Are They Good For?”
How will books be written and edited in the future?
Jane Friedman, “The Future of Editing: Beta Readers and Agile Publishing”
Dan Gillmor, “GitHub for Books?”
Lee Konstantinou, “What Is the Future of the Editor?”
Charlie Stross, “Why Microsoft Word Must Die”
How will the concept of the book evolve in the future?
Jane Friedman, “Book as Fluke: A Thought Experiment”
Dan Gillmor, “What Is a Book? Discuss”
Lee Konstantinou, “Building Worlds Out of Books”
Charlie Stross, “Do Zimboes Dream of Electric Sheep?”
Corey Pressman, “Ancient Marginalia: The Watershed Manifesto”
What will the economics of authorship be in the future? In what new ways will authors engage with their readers?
Jane Friedman, “The Idea of the Author Is Facing Extinction”
Dan Gillmor, “Authors Develop Communities, Not Just Audiences”
Lee Konstantinou, “Two Paths for the Future of the Author”
Charlie Stross, “Google Should Buy the Entire Publishing Industry”
Concept with G. Pascal Zachary
VideoEditing with G. Pascal Zachary
VideoA New Word for E-Book
StandardEd Finn and Joey Eschrich
This piece originally appeared in the Future Tense department on Slate. Future Tense is a partnership of Slate, the New America Foundation, and Arizona State University.
When’s the last time you sat down to read a book for several hours? Or even one hour? We are both card-carrying humanities scholars, but even we can barely scrape 15 minutes together for sustained engagement with a text. And yet humans are reading now more than ever when you think about the billions of hours we collectively spend on email, Facebook, Twitter, texting, sexting, and reading illicit things online. This is more than just information overload: When we change how we read, we are changing our brains. Researchers have proposed that we play out literary scenarios with mirror neurons and fire up complex, full-brain patterns of activity when asked to practice “close reading,” in contrast to the patterns associated with reading for pleasure (Keen 2006; Goldman 2012).
Neurological effects, different types of media, totally new reading habits – just a few reasons why e-reading is a fundamentally different experience than curling up with a dead-tree book. Print books are a highly refined technology that isn’t going anywhere soon, but there are ways in which the digital is superior to the old-fangled, and vice versa: They’re horses of different colors.
And yet publishers keep trying to recreate the print experience online, with the faux wood of the iOS bookstore and the fake page-turning animations on many e-readers. It’s time for that to end. We need to embrace digital reading as its own medium, not just a book under glass. That means imagining a new language for reading as an experience, starting with a new word to use instead of book.
It’s still no easy trick to figure out a name for this thing, though. Throughout the writing of this volume, we acted as ringmasters for a crack team of novelists, journalists, and publishers conducting a gonzo experiment in the future of publishing. Sprint Beyond the Book aimed to upend the publishing industry’s centuries-old model for book production. We wrote in public, on the crowded and noisy floor of the fair. We moved from concept to final product in just 72 hours. We crowdsourced the writing, featuring dozens of contributions collected through our website. We shot and embedded videos throughout. We’re even giving the thing away for free. But despite our pretensions to renegade chic, we couldn’t stop returning to the word book to talk about what we were building.
The fact is that every other name we came up with sounded boring or silly. Text was a strong early contender – after all, it’s used by humanities geeks like us to refer to everything from political speeches and Hungarian rap lyrics to recipes for gumbo. Sadly, it’s totally misleading: We’re hurtling toward a future in which reading means making decisions, watching videos, writing back, and getting lost in vast virtual spaces. Book system is too stodgy (as are reading system, platform, and service) and doesn’t even get rid of the word book. We gleefully entertained and discarded many bad ideas like graphies. Some of us liked plat, a shortening of platform that sounds like something out of a Golden Age science fiction story, but the more we said it, the more it sounded like a comic book sound effect for something gross.
Rather than grope forward, we decided to look back. With some trepidation, we would like to nominate codex, a word with a rich history that most of us don’t know anything about. Codex, derived from the Latin caudex (meaning “trunk of a tree”) even happens to contain the English word code, which will be central to the future of reading in a variety of ways. The things we’ll be reading in the future will not only involve a lot of programming; they’ll also require readers to decode complex, multilayered experiences and encode their own ideas as contributions in a variety of creative ways. Since standard printed books are technically codices, we propose (with significantly more trepidation) to distinguish our variant with one of those annoying midword capitals: codeX, to remind us that these new things involve experience, experimentation, expostulation…you know, all those X things.
This also works nicely because it reminds us of the X-Men and the X Games: We see the future of reading as an arena with the social dynamics of competition and play, scoring points and showing off, rather than a LeVar Burton rainbow of love and generosity. (Twitter works like this now, as a performance space where we’re all more or less openly vying for the award for “most clever person on the Internet this minute.”) Books have always been potent weapons in the cultural battlefield for prestige and distinction, and they won’t magically turn into utopian spaces anytime soon. At the risk of sounding too academic, we think the X highlights the jousting and (hopefully friendly) conflict inherent to digital reading.
From social reading platforms like Medium to digital pop-up books like 2012’s Between Page and Screen, we’re already building the future of reading, and there’s no going back. So let’s agree on a new term and stop pretending these utterly new ways of reading are anything like the singular and lovely experience of thumbing through a printed book.
Jonathan Franzen’s Worst Nightmare
StandardThis piece originally appeared in the Future Tense department on Slate. Future Tense is a partnership of Slate, the New America Foundation, and Arizona State University.
To many devoted readers, bookstores, and collectors, a book is good, but a signed book is best – and the absence of a title page to autograph is just another reason for purists to eschew those newfangled e-readers. A signed copy of a favorite book can be intensely meaningful to an avid fan. And in the world of rare-book collecting, something inscribed by the author can catapult a book’s price into the stratosphere.
But apparently Apple hopes that this charm of print publishing may have a digital equivalent after all.
The website Patently Apple recently posted the details of a proposed Apple e-book patent. (Purcher 2013; Dougherty 2013). The method would allow two e-readers to communicate, so that the publisher or the owner of the content could create a special autograph page in the reader’s device, ready to accept an image of the author’s autograph. The inscription could be transmitted when in the vicinity of an author at a book event or in a special online forum. Apple’s patent would also offer a certificate of authenticity and give readers the chance to add a photo or video of themselves with the author to the page.
There aren’t too many sacred cows left in publishing, and it’s unlikely that the industry will go to battle with Apple in defense of the real-world author autograph. Nevertheless, the commodification of this one tradition seems like it won’t offer Apple many rewards. Although the e-book market in the United States is showing signs of maturity, digital migration has leveled off (Owen 2013; Cader 2013), and it’s doubtful that e-book signing capabilities will be the carrot that attracts the last remaining print loyalists. That’s because an inky signature has a certain personal quality that won’t translate easily to digital.
And naturally, for Apple to roll out this new capability, they’d need to have authors on board.
David Rees, a comedian and the author of How to Sharpen Pencils (2012), says that he’d sign a reader’s e-book to be polite. But he thinks Apple’s patent sounded like a debasement of what an author’s signature is meant to be – the meeting of a reader and author in real space. “It sounds so sad,” he said “because they’re trying to figure out how to reproduce the physical authority that real books have. Next there will be a button for that musty old book smell.”
And how eager will bookstore proprietors – who usually host signings – be to accommodate the bells and whistles of a medium that has played a part in undermining their business?
According to Lacey Dunham, marketing director at Washington, D.C.’s Politics and Prose, it might depend on the retailer. If Amazon’s Kindle e-books were to take on this capability, the bookstore would have to have an internal conversation about whether they would allow Kindle e-books to be signed in their stores, she said. That’s because of the uniquely fraught relationship Amazon has with brick-and-mortar bookstores. But bookstores may be amenable to working with Apple, which has 20 percent of the U.S. e-book market (Reid 2013).
In the world of rare and antiquarian book-selling, the question goes beyond the author-fan relationship: A signed book can be immensely valuable. Yet according to Allan Stypek, rare-book appraiser and owner of Second Story Books in Washington, D.C, the idea of a signed e-book is artificial – nothing more than a facsimile. It just won’t have the historical or literary value that a physical signature has and would appeal only to those seeking to be completest about a particular author.
“I wouldn’t categorically refuse to handle an exclusive, signed e-book,” he said, “but it’s unlikely, unless I found it was a justifiable commodity in the market place.”
E-book retailers are exploring ways to let readers sell “used” e-books. But the truth is that you never really own a digital title – you’re more or less leasing it. These blurred lines have produced some horror stories, like Amazon disappearing an e-book copy of Orwell’s 1984 or when Apple was uncomfortable with the male nudity in a graphic novel of Ulysses (Stone 2009; Barrett 2010). And in its patent description, Apple doesn’t detail a means of transferring ownership of the autograph, ensuring that any attempt to resell an autographed e-book, in a market that barely exists anyway, will be doubly difficult.
But if you wait for hours to have Jhumpa Lahiri sign your copy of The Lowland (2013), wouldn’t you want your rights to her personal inscription to be a little more permanent? And what happens if you decide to dump your e-reader and change to a new device – does the autograph move with you? Or when Amazon “bricks” your Kindle for transgressing their terms and conditions, will you lose that meaningful signature, too?
By all means, e-retailers are free to experiment with additions to their still fledgling medium. As Dunham said, “A signed book is not a concept that [a bookstore] owns. There are lots of things that an e-retailer can do, but they cannot replicate everything that a bricks and mortar store does, it’s just not possible.”
And should e-retailers even want to?
Apple’s patent illustrates just how surprisingly unimaginative e-book and e-reader retailers have been over the past few years – attempting to replicate nearly every feature of a book’s physical incarnation, just a little more portably and with a little less permanence. There have been some strong examples of enhanced e-books, like Mark Z. Danielewski’s The Fifty Year Sword (2012), and there’s talk of creating what could be a new and unique form of storytelling. So far, though, e-retailers have displayed a strong inclination toward copying publishing’s more dusty traditions, but without the charm.
Most people that come in to have a book signed seek that brief relationship with the author, Dunham told me. “The decision readers will have to make in the end is what they will connect to the most – something signed, visible on their shelf or a signed copy they cannot see on their e-reader.”
Of course, Apple may never use its patent, but it might be better off if it left this one thing to the world of pen and paper. The future of digital publishing would be more exciting if they didn’t simply take all the traditions of print as their template, and tried something slightly more innovative. After all, if you really want his autograph, you can always just get Jonathan Franzen to sign the cold, hard plastic of your e-reader for posterity.
Twitter’s #LitChat Discusses the Future of Reading, Writing & Publishing
StandardPrior to the advent of the novel, storytelling was largely a social experience delivered through theater and other group settings. The emergence of the novel in the late eighteenth century put stories into the hands of individual readers and created a whole new avenue for vicarious thrills, learning, escape, romance and adventure. Fan fiction, choose your own adventure novels, interactive novels and other digital reading experiences are changing the future of reading, writing and publishing.
How will fiction change with interactive novels? Is digital publishing circling back to story as a social experience? Inspired by the enriching content emerging from Sprint Beyond the Book, and particularly the Jane Friedman essay, “The Blurring Line Between Reader and Writer,” we discussed questions such as these in the October 14, 2013 session of #litchat. #Litchat is a hashtag-led discussion featuring topics of interest to readers and writers held through Twitter each Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 4-5 p.m. E.T.
The one-hour #litchat session drew more than a dozen active participants from the U.S., Canada and the U.K., including Friedman, to discuss how the digital age is changing the way we experience stories. An archive of the #litchat session was created in Storify.
The following is the transcript from the one-hour #litchat session:
LitChat | Welcome to #litchat. We’re excited to participate today HOW WILL PEOPLE READ IN THE FUTURE discussion. Join us for the next hour. #LitChat |
LitChat | While #litchat is underway between 4-5pmET with moderated convo, please don’t use the hashtag unless contributing to the topic. |
LitChat | #litchat was founded in 2009 and is moderated by @CarolyBurnsBass. We chat M W F, 4-5pmET. http://t.co/6EsesNfJPi |
ChatSalad | RT @LitChat: Welcome to #litchat. We’re excited to participate today HOW WILL PEOPLE READ IN THE FUTURE discussion. Join us for the next ho… |
LitChat | Follow #litchat easily from http://t.co/5uq9fwj4Jg. Simply login/authorize and you’re in the convo. |
agnieszkasshoes | RT @LitChat: Welcome to #litchat. We’re excited to participate today HOW WILL PEOPLE READ IN THE FUTURE discussion. Join us for the next ho… |
LitChat | Who’s with us today in #litchat? Please introduce yourself and let the convo begin. |
MadelineDyerUK | RT @LitChat: #litchat was founded in 2009 and is moderated by @CarolyBurnsBass. We chat M W F, 4-5pmET. http://t.co/6EsesNfJPi |
Pendare | @GLHancock You’re safe I think! #LitChat |
NineTiger | Marianne, here. Still screaming about #governmentshutdown while pursuing other topics. #litchat |
GLHancock | retired publisher/editor/writer of a half century wondering why you think people didn’t read alone before novels were written? #litchat |
LitChat | Today’s convo was inspired by SPRINT BEYOND THE BOOK PROJECT and @JaneFriedman essay THE BLURRING LINES BETWEEN READER & WRITER. #LitChat |
Pendare | Patricia here — on Canada’s Thanksgiving day. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | marc nash here #litchat |
LitChat | Here is direct link to the SPRINT BEYOND THE BOOK PROJECT, a 72-hour book collaborative now underway: http://t.co/q6RHfyObn2 #LitChat |
GLHancock | @Pendare Happy happy – are you thankful still? #litchat |
agnieszkasshoes | @LitChat I’m here! I wrote a novel interactively on Facebook back in 2009 so fascinated by the subject #litchat |
Pendare | @GLHancock Pretty much! #LitChat |
21stCscribe | I’ve got an interactive digital novel in the works next year hopefully #litchat |
LitChat | Here is direct link to @JaneFriedman essay THE BLURRING LINE BETWEEN READER & WRITER: http://t.co/PaUxWKNF2H #LitChat |
palefacewriter | Hi readers and writers. #LitChat |
GLHancock | @Pendare Good! Good! #litchat |
LitChat | We’re hoping @JaneFriedman has a moment to stop in to share her knowledge and experience in this fascinating topic. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | Interactive in the sense the reader plots their own way through it. But not with treasure at the end #litchat |
novemberhill | Hi! Just read the article and have to say I’m not eager to go this direction as a writer or a reader. #LitChat |
GLHancock | My disappearing epubs on Amazon are all interactive – linking to others and my website. So? #litchat |
rcmogo | Does anyone here know how to define “hypermedia?” #LitChat |
LitChat | Let’s get right into today’s discussion. If you have a question you’d like to submit, please post it here and I’ll add to queue. #LitChat |
dellasm | RT @MartinBrownPubs: Tips for Writing a Novel: Know the Difference Between Plot and Story http://t.co/rRFrVnLhev #litchat #amwriting #write… |
GLHancock | @rcmogo Linked. #litchat |
21stCscribe | Nothing knew, BS Johnson did it in print with his book “The Unfortunates” #litchat a book-shaped box, loose chapters read in any order |
NineTiger | @LitChat The counter for the 72 hour book is all zeros. Has it been done already? #litchat |
GLHancock | @LitChat Why do you think no one read alone until novels were published? Stories, essays, poetry existed in print form. #litchat |
agnieszkasshoes | RT @21stCscribe: Nothing knew, BS Johnson did it in print with his book “The Unfortunates” #litchat a book-shaped box, loose chapters read … |
novemberhill | Trying to figure out if I have to put in #litchat or if it happens automatically if I’m logged in at nurph… #LitChat |
LitChat | I see you here! RT @novemberhill Trying to figure out if I have to put in #litchat or if it happens #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | New to this chat; going to try to follow along best I can on my Android. #litchat |
ChatSalad | @novemberhill It happens automatically 🙂 #LitChat |
LitChat | Q1 How will the digital age open new ways of learning, discovering, and experiencing story? #LitChat |
novemberhill | @LitChat Okay, great. I can relax and just type. #LitChat |
novemberhill | @ChatSalad Thank you. 🙂 #LitChat |
LitChat | Welcome. RT @Arzooman_Edit New to this chat; going to try to follow along best I can on my Android. #litchat #LitChat |
LitChat | Welcome, just dive right in. RT @palefacewriter Hi readers and writers. #LitChat |
palefacewriter | Well, I’ll never give up my interest in the experience of the traditional book. Power Law of Participation interesting. #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | Q1 new narratives that don’t have beginnings, middle ends if reader if choosing their progress trough them #litchat & thank god for that |
novemberhill | I am still blown away by my Kindle and being able to get a book in my hands within a matter of seconds. #LitChat |
rcmogo | Me too! #LitChat |
GLHancock | A1 Can you spell multimedia? It’s already here. People are constantly mishmashing them, experimenting in many way, especially vids. #litchat |
21stCscribe | apologies for my awful typing tonight #litchat 2 mistakes in last 2 tweets *sigh* |
novemberhill | Am also intrigued as a writer when I open my own books on the Kindle and see the reader highlights – that is true feedback. #LitChat |
NineTiger | A1 How could you ever build a saleable collection if all ebook. Collector issues. #litchat |
Arzooman_Edit | @LitChat thanks, have not mastered Twitter chats on Hootsuite. #litchat. |
palefacewriter | A1: There’s an expectation for immediacy. Interactive, digital books seem to work well with that need in newer readers. #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | collaboration with other artists too,I’ve collaborated with designer for kinetic typography short fiction #litchat Now that is new narrative |
GLHancock | @Arzooman_Edit Try the Internet-based sites: tweetchat, nurph, and twubs – all dot coms. #litchat |
palefacewriter | Yes, the ability to combine many creative aspects to enhance the written/printed word opens up cool possibilities. #litchat #LitChat |
rcmogo | Interactivity is changing the way stories are written, too. #LitChat |
GLHancock | @palefacewriter Of course, some people find all that annoying. #litchat |
LitChat | @Arzooman_Edit Here’s a link to our dedicated chat channel: http://t.co/5uq9fwj4Jg. #LitChat |
LitChat | Q2 What kind of books/stories might we expect with social and interactive digital media? #LitChat |
novemberhill | Can’t see myself enjoying a novel as interactive experience – I value the writer’s authority in telling the story his/her way. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | Q1 to me there’s a value 1st in being able to update nonfiction, but also to quickly correct mistakes, fiction or non. #litchat |
palefacewriter | RT @GLHancock @palefacewriter Of course, some people find all that annoying. Yes, all that “incoming” can be so! #litchat #LitChat |
GLHancock | A2 That depends on the publishers, but with SP (indies) I’d expect it more in genres. #litchat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill interaction doesn’t necessarily mean the reader writes the book, maybe just chooses their own path through it #litchat |
GLHancock | @Arzooman_Edit Absolutely. Obviating errata sheets, sites, pages. #litchat |
21stCscribe | @GLHancock I’d find that depressing if it comes to pass. #genre #litchat |
novemberhill | @21stCscribe How would that work? #LitChat |
palefacewriter | Readers have always participated in their/our own minds…interactivity is akin to a sci-fi plot entering real time. #litchat #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | Q1 but the expectation is already there that you should link to sources, or webpages of contributors, or even books like yours. #litchat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill author skilful enough to write a story that doesn’t rely on fixed order, but open to many diff paths through #litchat |
GLHancock | Right now it appears inevitable that future books will come with built-in social media connections. #litchat |
novemberhill | I do love the ability to make corrections and update facts in nonfiction. #LitChat |
rcmogo | A2 The experience of the characters and setting can be much richer with supplement of social and interactive digital media #LitChat |
palefacewriter | A2: Adventures for sure. Sci-fi. Almost anything, I suppose. Yike. Imaginations cut loose! #litchat #LitChat |
GLHancock | @rcmogo Interrupting the flow of the narrative? #litchat |
Arzooman_Edit | @GLHancock thanks. I will sign up as soon as I get home to my computer #litchat |
novemberhill | @21stCscribe Not sure how that would play out in actual reading experience. Readers could read in any order in print book form. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | i think it’s quite limiting just to think about storytelling in these new media. #litchat |
soniawrite | @GLHancock #litchat well, all the various ebooks devices already have twitter and fb and all that |
GLHancock | @Arzooman_Edit I use TweetChat usually on my Kindle Fire. #litchat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill and yet they don’t 🙂 #litchat |
LucidGlow | The most important tonight and ever is clearly WHSmith’s treatment of indie authors #litchat It’s just fucking unbelievable. |
novemberhill | How does writer offer a novel in a form that could be utilized best interactively? #LitChat |
rcmogo | @GLHancock More like “post story” experience. After finishing my favorite novels, I am always hungry for more information #LitChat |
j4k061n | RT @LucidGlow: The most important tonight and ever is clearly WHSmith’s treatment of indie authors #litchat It’s just fucking unbelievable. |
palefacewriter | A2: Of course, I think of it only as an additional option. Quiet books in printed form will always be welcome in my hands. #litchat #LitChat |
GLHancock | Block! #litchat |
novemberhill | @21stCscribe Well, I on occasion do – but usually on a second read, not generally the first. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @palefacewriter as a reader, mine too. As a writer, less so #litchat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill exactly. A book readable in any order is unique experience for each reader #litchat |
novemberhill | RT @palefacewriter A2: Quiet books in printed form will always be welcome in my hands. Mine too!! #LitChat |
GLHancock | I have to admit that a few times, I’ve sought out more info maybe about a setting like Pondicherry, IN or some other novel aspect #litchat |
LitChat | Q3 In her essay, @JaneFriedman asks: To what extent is the future of reading social? #LitChat |
GLHancock | And I appreciate authors’ notes on research in both nonfiction and novels, sometimes. #litchat |
novemberhill | So I am envisioning a novel where you put the chapters on shuffle and read it many different ways. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill can be yes #litchat |
novemberhill | I have been adding back matter to some of my novels that includes my playlists of songs I listened to while writing. #LitChat |
GLHancock | A3 I don’t see why it should be any less than it is now and ever has been, though originally storytelling, not reading per se. #litchat |
palefacewriter | A2: Some interesting possibilities for enhancing poetry. As a writer, though, I’d be wary of allowing open access. (selfishwriter!) #LitChat |
rcmogo | A3 Simply because you can reach so many millions more people. #LitChat |
JaneFriedman | Something I didn’t write about: new digital book format that Intel is developing, particularly interesting for NF & fan fic (1/2) #LitChat |
21stCscribe | A3 the writing of a novel can be crowd sourced social. The reading still solitary, unless live stream author reading #litchat |
soniawrite | @LitChat @JaneFriedman #LitChat A lot! It already is somewhat. Wittness this chat. If it werent, authors wouldn’t be encouaged to blog/tweet |
LitChat | @JaneFriedman Is the Intel project an interactive format for reading? #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @soniawrite @novemberhill well it has been done before and in print! #litchat |
JaneFriedman | Allows new chapters or materials to be added by user or publisher, visible to all readers (if reader opts to see them). (2/2) #LitChat |
soniawrite | @novemberhill #litchat lol and get a different end each time. Could be an interesting experiment. |
novemberhill | Also pondering now how one might mimic the actual act of storytelling – where you write the version you “tell” & listeners continue #LitChat |
palefacewriter | A3: I thought that was worthy of pause and consideration. I think of it in degrees I suppose. How much interaction varies. #litchat #LitChat |
agnieszkasshoes | RT @21stCscribe: i think it’s quite limiting just to think about storytelling in these new media. #litchat |
GLHancock | @JaneFriedman Hi Jane! Thanks for that info about the new Intel book platform. Got a link? #litchat |
21stCscribe | @soniawrite @novemberhill well hopefully mine will be out next year #litchat |
JaneFriedman | Intel project sees each book as a community, w/many different levels of authorship/contribution, assuming publisher allows it. #LitChat |
LitChat | @JaneFriedman Do you know if they will develop proprietary hardware for reading new format? #LitChat |
soniawrite | @21stCscribe @novemberhill #litchat which books? got a recommendation? |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill why do we have to mimic or even tell stories in conventional/ trad way? #litchat |
novemberhill | I have considered that my connected novels could be linked so reader could follow a character link to different book. #LitChat |
palefacewriter | A3: Gets complicated. Who’s the author? Who holds copyright? Does it matter? (Yes) Does anyone care… #litchat #LitChat |
JaneFriedman | Intel project will be completely open source, so any publisher/author could make use of it. Not proprietary. Huge win for everyone. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @soniawrite @novemberhill BS Johnson “The Unfortunates” #litchat |
novemberhill | We don’t have to – I may be stuck doing that myself but wld love to see what others do that is new and different! #LitChat |
LitChat | How much involvement will readers have in writing process and final product (to the extent there is a “final” book)? (Friedman) #LitChat |
21stCscribe | in my digital novel project, would like to crowdsource art works for it on the book’s theme #litchat |
novemberhill | Need to say that I am getting somewhat overwhelmed with this new chat program – not following it as easily as tweetchat… #LitChat |
LitChat | Q4 How much involvement will readers have in writing process & final product (to extent there is a “final” book)? (Friedman) #LitChat |
palefacewriter | A3: Possibly we will eventually find that a new definition of ‘reading’ emerges. Instead of merely reading, we immerse like gamers. #LitChat |
GLHancock | A4 None for me. I know how hard it is to write novels. I am a passive consumer, for entertainment only. You work – I read. #litchat |
novemberhill | I can see my teenagers immersing like gamers. I am dinosaur. Have never played computer game, ever. #LitChat |
LitChat | @novemberhill Give it time. It’s easy to follow when your eyes adjust to the different look. #LitChat |
JaneFriedman | Q4 Feels like reader involvement will be driven by genre at first. Already see good examples of this in NF, happening w/fan-fic. #litchat |
palefacewriter | A4: I’ve thought of the new age process as kind of an unending, perpetually changing, story unfolding. #litchat #LitChat |
LitChat | RT @novemberhill I can see my teenagers immersing like gamers. I am dinosaur. Have never played computer game, ever. #LitChat |
rcmogo | A4 – hopefully not much. There’s online software for collaborative story writing, probably shouldn’t apply to published fiction #LitChat |
novemberhill | @LitChat Will do. 🙂 Apologizing in advance for clunkiness today. #LitChat |
GLHancock | I’ve seen immersion books for children, and appreciated the appeal – to children. #litchat |
agnieszkasshoes | @LitChat A4 I imagine it will be very like ancient oral communities each creating their own versions of stories #litchat |
JaneFriedman | Q4 Right now, it takes great effort to promote reader-writer interaction in the development of a book. Need better tools/platform #litchat |
21stCscribe | I’m more interested in the look of a digital text, the way you can drill down to the level of typography for example #litchat |
GLHancock | @JaneFriedman Maybe many other readers are like me – don’t want to participate but to enjoy the end product only! #litchat |
novemberhill | @21stCscribe Love the idea of crowdsourcing art for a book. #LitChat |
ampersand_h | Kindle or print version? #litchat #books |
21stCscribe | think about if Jennifer Egan’s “…Goon squad” was online & really did have a Powerpoint presentation Chapter! #litchat |
Midnyghtskie | Just stumbled across #Litchat, I’m so excited.. though waaaay behind. 🙂 |
richmagahiz | @LitChat A4 Maybe more on the business side than on the actual writing side. Think Kickstarter-like process for greenlighting #LitChat |
palefacewriter | A4: Maybe a writer could audition potential contributors before granting access to project. Oh..is that elitist? =;-) #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill any maybe other aspects too, just not thought of them yet relevant to the book #litchat |
Pendare | YES! RT @GLHancock @JaneFriedman Maybe many other readers are like me-don’t want to participate but to enjoy the end product only! #LitChat |
robynmcintyre | A4: As much or as little as the author wants them to, I suppose. #LitChat |
SheanaOchoa | @LitChat @JaneFriedman Do you think interactivity heightens or diminishes critical thinking as a literary tradition? #litchat |
GLHancock | RT @ampersand_h Kindle or print version? / Of what? #litchat |
palefacewriter | Have any of you experimented with collaborations with other writers? #litchat #LitChat |
richmagahiz | @palefacewriter Only in poetry #LitChat |
GLHancock | @SheanaOchoa @LitChat @JaneFriedman Well, I, for one, do love footnotes, end notes, author notes, metameta. #litchat |
novemberhill | @palefacewriter I have collaborated with illustrator. Very cool to use apps to make collaborating easier. #LitChat |
LitChat | Author & former Disney artist @AurelioObrien created an interactive site for GENeration eXtraTERrestial: http://t.co/GouruyQtht #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @palefacewriter no, but other types of artists #litchat |
palefacewriter | I tried a short story once with five others. Then we did a public reading and humiliated ourselves. Humility is a virtue? #litchat #LitChat |
GLHancock | @palefacewriterI have enough trouble getting along with myself and clients. Collaboration brings shudders! #litchat |
novemberhill | @palefacewriter LOL! #LitChat |
LitChat | No apologies necessary. Yr insights are great. RT @novemberhill @LitChat Will do. 🙂 Apologizing in advance for clunkiness today. #LitChat |
JaneFriedman | @SheanaOchoa Interactivity typically involves collaborating, moderating, creating, questioning – which involve critical thinking? #litchat |
rcmogo | @SheanaOchoa Depends on the type of interactivity – but as a rule, I think interactivity makes anything less passive. #LitChat |
druchunas | @palefacewriter I am finishing up a book with a coauthor and have another series with a different coauthor/cocreator. #litchat |
LitChat | RT @rcmogo @SheanaOchoa Depends on the type of interactivity – but as a rule, I think interactivity makes anything less passive. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | @JaneFriedman I do like the idea of collaboration in fine-tuning a book. It’s amazing what others can see that a writer misses. #litchat |
novemberhill | Interesting thought – I never think of myself when reading a great novel as being “passive.” Nothing abt the experience is passive. #LitChat |
rcmogo | Less passive 🙂 #LitChat |
druchunas | @JaneFriedman I don’t want reader interaction in the creation of my books. They are my art / products. #litchat |
palefacewriter | RT @druchunas: @JaneFriedman I don’t want reader interaction in the creation of my books. They are my art / products. #litchat |
Arzooman_Edit | @novemberhill I pretty much agree, but I do love seeing reader feedback. #LitChat |
rcmogo | @druchunas What about in the pre-published stages of your books? #LitChat |
robynmcintyre | @novemberhill That’s what I think. #LitChat |
novemberhill | Yes. RT @druchunas I don’t want reader interaction in the creation of my books. They are my art / products. #LitChat |
Pendare | @Arzooman_Edit ABSOLUTELY. #LitChat |
GLHancock | Most authors can benefit from collaborating with professional editors and proofreaders. #litchat |
SheanaOchoa | @JaneFriedman Rephrasing: how might it affect the imagination lit up by the experience/leisure of reading in solitude? #litchat |
novemberhill | Getting feedback from readers before publishing is a given for me. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | @LitChat oh, thanks. Just logged in! (I’m back at my home computer) #litchat |
WheelhouseEdits | Retweet! Retweet! Retweet! RT @GLHancock: Most authors can benefit from collaborating with professional editors and proofreaders. #litchat |
gmcgarv | Retweet! Retweet! Retweet! RT @GLHancock: Most authors can benefit from collaborating with professional editors and proofreaders. #litchat |
druchunas | @palefacewriter yuck. I am completely immersed in reading. I don’t find additional media enhances the experience. It’s distracting. #litchat |
richmagahiz | @druchunas @JaneFriedman The only visual artists okay with people scribbling on their art are some graffiti radicals #LitChat |
LitChat | RT @GLHancock Most authors can benefit from collaborating with professional editors and proofreaders. #litchat #LitChat |
Pendare | @novemberhill I’m fiercely possessive of my stories. And nobody ain’t gonna mess with my writing! #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | @druchunas I only like graphics and the occasional SHORT video. Long videos, forget it. But sources–Definitely. #litchat #LitChat |
GLHancock | @druchunas Ditto! In fact, that’s what I said earlier. Thanks for your support! #litchat |
novemberhill | @Pendare I absolutely value the author’s distinctive voice. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Pendare @novemberhill interactive does not necessarily mean the reader is part writing your story #litchat |
novemberhill | Am now envisioning the digital book version of playing albums backwards. 🙂 #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | @Pendare I am possessive once i’m sure the story is done and I’m happy. Will take suggestions during creative process. #litchat #LitChat |
rcmogo | Regarding collaboration and story writing, I think most writers seek out opinions and ideas during story creation. #LitChat |
LitChat | Q5 How can authors and publishers expect remuneration from interactive book? Are subscriptions to books on the horizon? #LitChat |
palefacewriter | Well, what about music to enhance something like spoken word? I use regularly and find the process creatively motivating. #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit try this for size – 275 words, 3 mins video, different type of narrative #litchat http://t.co/StJTC5wStz |
richmagahiz | @21stCscribe @Pendare @novemberhill Think about how The French Lieutenant’s Woman was written with three endings #LitChat |
GLHancock | The only suggestions I’d want would be from fellow professionals, not feedback from potential purchasers. Feed me the ca$h! #litchat |
21stCscribe | @palefacewriter pproblem is copyright of music #litchat |
rcmogo | A5 Subscriptions seem to be lot more popular these days! #LitChat |
JaneFriedman | @SheanaOchoa Sounds like a Q for a researcher. But this isn’t an either/or debate, reading coexists with interaction. #litchat |
palefacewriter | I write the music. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | I think 3 minute video (if you’re reading) is too long. #litchat #LitChat |
novemberhill | @richmagahiz Oh, great example. I had forgotten that. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit there’s no reading as such #litchat try it! |
Pendare | @richmagahiz You’re right! #LitChat |
richmagahiz | @novemberhill Well Fowles wrote that quite a while ago #LitChat |
novemberhill | @richmagahiz Yes, long while ago. #LitChat |
GLHancock | A5 At least 4 experiments in subscription services are now going. #litchat |
Arzooman_Edit | @21stCscribe not during a #litchat, but thanks. #LitChat |
palefacewriter | @21stCscribe …I guess that’s collaborating with myself, lol! #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill I like that idea! #litchat |
21stCscribe | @palefacewriter yes if you have the added skills why not? #litchat |
GLHancock | A5 Remuneration can be as varied as it is today. Is there anything new on the horizon @LitChat ? #litchat |
richmagahiz | @LitChat A5 Maybe you get the basic book (possibly free) but have to pay for remixes and mashups. Or vice versa #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit I meant after the chat! 🙂 #litchat Just think much of current thinking is too limited, trying new media 4 old narratives |
palefacewriter | A5: Contracts 101? Know what you’re expectations are before you begin seems like a good idea/ #litchat #LitChat |
novemberhill | Subscription to book-in-progress – get rough draft, edits, etc. Interesting. I would pay to do that w/ much-admired writers. #LitChat |
palefacewriter | *your #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | @21stCscribe do you mean storytelling is limited? #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | My digital online novel will be subscription. only way to menthes it #litchat |
soniawrite | @21stCscribe @novemberhill #litchat thanks! |
Arzooman_Edit | @novemberhill I don’t know if I would. I would have to REALLY love them. #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit the way people are conceptualising it for new digital media right now is yes #litchat |
GLHancock | Is Amazon still doing that thing where you subscribe and they dribble out a story over weeks or months? Weird, I think! #litchat |
novemberhill | I’m thinking Michael Ondaatge and Barbara Kingsolver. Would love to see their process. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit we seem to be talking about interactive editing and beta reading. It can be waaay more than that #litchat |
novemberhill | @21stCscribe Yes, you’re right. I am just not thinking far enough outside the box. #LitChat |
palefacewriter | A5: I would not subscribe to books, but I suppose it’s possible that many readers would consider this option if available. #litchat #LitChat |
novemberhill | Creaky brain. 🙂 #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill well it’;s hard because there are no horizons, people falling off the edge of the world or getting vertigo! #litchat |
Arzooman_Edit | I’m for all kinds of art to convey a message, but I’m more into words for myself because that’s what I was trained in. #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | why would you merely translate a block print from page to screen? Make it non-linear, tell diff type of story on screen #litchat |
novemberhill | I am still wowed by Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet – 4 POVs on same story. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | I’m always looking at art that I love and thinking of ways to collaborate on a book with an artist. #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit but words remain the centre of the art #litchat |
JaneFriedman | @SheanaOchoa Of course- I think main thing that’s forgotten is reading as solitary activity is fairly new, came w/wide literacy #litchat |
LitChat | At Carnegie Mellon University, a project is underway: SIX-DEGREES OF FRANCIS BACON, REASSEMBLING THE EARLY MODERN SOCIAL NETWORK. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | If it’s created with words, yes … #LitChat |
GLHancock | @novemberhill One of my undergrad college days’ faves! #litchat |
richmagahiz | @LitChat Ernest Cline put together a music playlist to go with Ready Player One. Maybe this can become more popular #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit did you see Foer’s “Sea of Trees”? #litchat |
palefacewriter | A5: Marketing personnel are no doubt working variables out as we participate here. I’d be interested in the suggestions. #litchat #LitChat |
LitChat | Link to the CMU SIX DEGREES OF FRANCIS BACON: http://t.co/6bmlsFKWVS #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | @21stCscribe no, what is it? #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit personally words are all I have. But can still do different things with them as building blocks. #litchat |
novemberhill | @GLHancock Still one of my all-time faves. Love love love it. #LitChat |
LitChat | Twitter feed for SIX DEGREES OF FRANCIS BACON: @6bacon. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @richmagahiz @LitChat my previous novel has a DJ & all the songs he plays are on a spottily playlist the novel links to #litchat |
novemberhill | The reason I read is because of the way the words are put together by the writer. That will never change for me. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit it’s a novel that is highly visual in that sections of pages are cut out, giving into view future sentences etc #litchat |
Pendare | RT @novemberhill The reason I read is because of the way the words are put together by the writer. That will never change for me. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | @21stCscribe I am interested, but part of me keeps hearing, “A good novel isn’t enough anymore” #litchat. #LitChat |
LitChat | Q6 The @6bacon project seeks to assemble early social networks. What kind of early social networks might they study? #LitChat |
palefacewriter | @novemberhill Agreed. =;-) #LitChat |
GLHancock | Not sure I’d want someone else’s music preferences inserted into my mind while reading. Like what I like! #litchat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill but all we are saying is digital offers new & diverse ways of putting those words together on a screen #litchat |
novemberhill | I wouldn’t dare read any kind of interactive spin on a novel I have previously read and dearly loved. #LitChat |
LitChat | RT @novemberhill The reason I read is because of the way the words are put together by the writer. That will never change for me. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit well Foer has a reputation as a decent novelist… #litchat My disappointment was that he basically adapted pre-existing book |
GLHancock | If I want to listen to music while I read, I turn on what I like to hear. #litchat |
palefacewriter | A6: ICQ maybe? #litchat #LitChat |
Pendare | @GLHancock If the music on the playlist wasn’t to my liking, I wouldn’t read the book! #LitChat |
druchunas | @LitChat @rcmogo @SheanaOchoa reading is not at all passive. Page turning is interactivity. #litchat |
21stCscribe | @Pendare you won’t like my book then! #litchat |
Arzooman_Edit | I do have Jodi Picoult’s “Sing You Home,” which has a CD you’re supposed to play w the book. Haven’t had time yet… #litchat #LitChat |
LitChat | I think they mean earlier than that. 🙂 RT @palefacewriter A6: ICQ maybe? #litchat #LitChat |
novemberhill | @21stCscribe Yes, I know. I would love to see stellar examples. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @Arzooman_Edit I can’t actually read when music is playing #litchat |
Pendare | @21stCscribe Sowwy! #LitChat |
palefacewriter | A6: like the partyline? lol #LitChat |
GLHancock | Early networks? Like campfires, church choir pactice, camp meetings, seances? Or BBS, forums, mailists? #litchat |
21stCscribe | @Pendare no problem #litchat |
SheanaOchoa | Lol”@druchunas: @LitChat @rcmogo @SheanaOchoa reading is not at all passive. Page turning is interactivity. #litchat” |
richmagahiz | @21stCscribe @Arzooman_Edit It can be hard to write when there’s music with words going on #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill well a non-fiction example is Kafka’s Wound – just google it #litchat |
Arzooman_Edit | It’s supposed to enhance the story, one character is a songwriter. I’m not sure, you might have to pause your reading. #litchat #LitChat |
novemberhill | But of new work to me – at least initially. #LitChat |
richmagahiz | @GLHancock I was thinking of whether there were brothel-based Elizabethan social networks #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @richmagahiz @Arzooman_Edit see I can write to music, but not read or edit #litchat |
novemberhill | @21stCscribe Okay, I will check it out. #LitChat |
palefacewriter | Music… sometimes when I travel by air I play AC/DC or Bob Marley while reading. My preference to sniffing/chatter. =;-) #litchat #LitChat |
Pendare | @21stCscribe It’s classical all the way for me — which I also have on when writing. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | I can sometimes write with a lot of noise, but hardly with just a little bit of noise. #litchat. #LitChat |
GLHancock | @richmagahiz UK has long history of men’s clubs for all levels of society. #litchat |
21stCscribe | @richmagahiz 18th century writing in tea rooms & literary societies there #litchat |
palefacewriter | With headphones, of course. Wouldn’t want anyone else to be disturbed by my habits. #litchat #LitChat |
novemberhill | Usually I listen to my playlists as a way to get into the story. Not so much while I’m writing. #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | Seems it’s time to go. my LitCat keeps interrupting my #litchat. #LitChat |
richmagahiz | @Pendare @21stCscribe But if the book is about punk anarchists classical might not be the most appropriate accompaniment #LitChat |
GLHancock | I pretty much go deaf when I’m working. #litchat |
novemberhill | @Arzooman_Edit Ha!! Love it. #LitChat |
novemberhill | But the songs are picked specifically for the story I’m writing. #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @richmagahiz @Pendare yeah I choose a soundtrack selection for each book & stick to it rigidly #litchat |
palefacewriter | @Arzooman_Edit Meow Disturbance? #litchat #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @novemberhill me too #litchat |
Pendare | @GLHancock Me too. Comes from tuning out four small boys! #LitChat |
Arzooman_Edit | Nice chatting. Glad I was able to use Nurph; it was so much easier to tweet! I’ll try to make the next one. #litchat #LitChat |
GLHancock | Needing to hear certain music to write smacks of needing “emotional support” to be a writer. I’m just sayin’ #litchat |
palefacewriter | A bientot, @Arzooman_Edit! #LitChat |
LitChat | What a blazing session of #litchat thanks to all of your brilliant minds. We’re going to submit the archive to #beyondthebook. #LitChat |
GLHancock | @Pendare For me, tho, it means I don’t hear dryer ding, washer end, doorbell … #litchat |
Pendare | @21stCscribe Mind you, when writing the WWII memoir, I did listen to all the appropriate music of the war years. #LitChat |
novemberhill | Terrific chat today – thanks for introducing me to nurph. Got to run get daughter from driver’s ed! #LitChat |
21stCscribe | @GLHancock no, it’s about the rhythm or the setting #litchat |
palefacewriter | Thanks for sharing your thoughts, #litchat ers! Out… #LitChat |
soniawrite | Great chat! Wish I could have been here for all of it. #LitChat |
GLHancock | @21stCscribe “needing” anything not between your ears sounds like a deficit to me #litchat |
LitChat | Sending up a shout of THANKS to @JaneFriedman for stopping in today. She’s a beacon of light in this murky publishing climate. #LitChat |
Pendare | RT @LitChat Sending up a shout of THANKS to @JaneFriedman for stopping in She’s a beacon of light in this murky publishing climate #LitChat |
Adult_ADHD_Blog | @LitChat @JaneFriedman She sure is! ‘Was a huge help to @Jeff_Emmerson (me) 🙂 #LitChat |
LitChat | Come back for WritingWednesday when we discus KILLING THE CLICHES. #LitChat |
GLHancock | RT @LitChat Sending up a shout of THANKS to @JaneFriedman for stopping in today. .. #litchat |
richmagahiz | @GLHancock @21stCscribe Then needing coffee is a widespread deficit among writers #LitChat |
StoryStudio | RT @LitChat: Come back for WritingWednesday when we discus KILLING THE CLICHES. #LitChat |
Pendare | @LitChat That sounds like a great subject. Looking forward to it! #LitChat |
GLHancock | @richmagahiz Pretty sure coffee is addictive substance. #litchat |
GLHancock | RT @LitChat Come back for WritingWednesday when we discus KILLING THE CLICHES./Ooo that’s a great topic for #writing #litchat |
Pendare | Bye all. #LitChat |
LitChat | Let’s welcome new voices: @Arzooman_Edit @rcmogo @druchunas @palefacewriter. We’re here MWF, 4-5pmET. http://t.co/6EsesNfJPi #LitChat |
LitChat | See you on Friday when actress & author Kathryn Leigh Scott @Dark_Passages joins us to discuss DOWN & OUT IN BEVERLY HEELS. #LitChat |
LitChat | RT @chriswhitewrite: .#LitChat @6Bacon Hellfire Clubs (or just gentleman’s clubs in general.) The Mohoks, maybe… |
21stCscribe | if anyone from #litchat wants to see a possibility for the new digital fiction, here’s a 3 min video story http://t.co/vyRufkjFpk |
Ancient Marginalia: The Watershed Manifesto
StandardThe arithmetic magicians of old did not know what fire they handled, what heat they hefted, when they considered the humble ‘1’ and the mystical ‘0.’ Certainly, they knew of power there, but none could have guessed what this dynamic digital duo would be up to come the 21st century. Indeed, heroic ‘one’ and the Enkidu ‘zero’ are a pair on a journey – and we are all along, passenger and crew.
The recent achievements of this binary couplet are many – but one in particular concerns us here. Binary has (re)turned content into a fluid. By content, I mean the stuff we generate to fill pages and the grey between our ears. Story telling, information transmission, all outward expression has been touched and transformed by digitization.
Continue reading at Digital Book World…
The Minigraph: The Future of the Monograph?
StandardIt has taken digital a lot longer than many had thought to provide a serious challenge to print, but it seems to me that we are now in a new moment in which digital texts enable screen-reading (if it is not an anachronism to still call it that) as a sustained practice. Here, I am thinking particularly of the way in which screen technologies, including the high-resolution “retina” displays common on iPhones, Kindle E Ink, etc., combined with much more sensitive typesetting design practices in relation to text, are producing long-form texts that are pleasurable to read on a screen-based medium and as e-books. This has happened most noticeably in magazine articles and longer newspaper features, but is beginning to drift over into well-designed reading apps that we find on our mobile devices, such as Pocket and the Reader function in Safari.
With this change, serious questions are being asked about our writing practices—especially in terms of the assumptions and affordances that are coded into software word-processors like Microsoft Word, which assumes and sometimes enforces a print mentality. Word wants you to print the documents you write, and this prescriptive behavior by the software encourages us to “check” our documents on a “real” paper form before committing to it—even if the final form is a PDF. The reason is that even the PDF is designed for printing, as anyone who has tried to read a PDF document on a digital screen will attest. But when the reading practices of screen media are sufficient, then many of the assumptions of screen writing can be jettisoned, especially the practice of writing for paper.
There is little doubt that writing and reading the screen is different from print (Berry 2012; Gold 2012). These differences are not just technical; they also involve forms of social practice, such as reading in public, passing around documents, sharing ideas, and so forth. They also include the kinds of social signaling that digital documents have been very poor at incorporating into their structures, such as the cover, the publisher, the author’s name, and the book’s unique design. Nonetheless, at the present phase of digital texts, it is in the typesetting and typography, combined with the social reading practices that take place, such as social sharing, marking, copying/pasting, and commenting, that make digital a viable way of creating and consuming textual works. In some ways, the social signaling of the cover artwork, etc. has been subsumed into social media such as Facebook and Twitter, but I think that it is only a matter of time before this is incorporated into mobile devices, since advanced screen technologies, especially an E Ink back cover, can be built for pennies.
To return to the texts themselves, the question of writing, of putting pen to paper, is on the cusp of radical change. The long thirty-year period of stable writing software created by the virtual monopoly that Microsoft gained over desktop computers is drawing to a close. From its initial introduction in 1983 on the Xenix system as Multi-Tool Word and renamed that year to the familiar Microsoft Word that we all know (and often hate) today, print has been the lodestar of word processor design.
As the next stage of digital text emerges, many of the textual apparatuses of print are migrating to the digital platform. As they do so, the advantages of new search and discovery practices make books extremely visible and usable again, through tools like Google Books (Dunleavy 2012). There is still a lot of experimentation in this space, and some problems still remain: for example, there is currently not a viable alternative to the “chunking” process of reading that print has taught us through pages and page numbering, nor is there a means of book marking that is as intuitive as the changing weight of the book as it moves through our hands, or the visual clues afforded through the page volume changing from unread to read as we turn the pages. However, this has been mitigated by turning away from the very long-form book- or monograph-length texts of around 80,000 words, to the moderate long-form, represented by the 15-40,000 word text which I want to call the minigraph.
By minigraph I am seeking to distinguish a specific length of text that is able to move beyond the limitations of the 6-8,000 word article, but avoids the chunking problem of reading lengthy digital texts. In other words, in its current stage of implementation, I think that digital long-form texts are most comfortable to read when they stay within this golden ratio of 15-40,000 words, broken into five or six chapters. The lack of chunking is still a problem without helpful “page” numbers, and I don’t think that paragraph numbering has provided a usable solution to this. However, the shortness of the text means that it is readable within a reasonable period of time, creating a de facto chunking at the level of the minigraph chapter (2,000 – 5,000 words). Indeed, the introduction of an algorithmic paging system that is device-independent would also be helpful, for example through a notion of “planes” which are analogous to pages but calculated in real-time.1 This would help sidestep the problem of fatigue in digital reading, apparent even in our retina/e-ink screen practices, but also creates works that are long enough to be satisfying to read and offer interesting discussion, digression and scholarly apparatus. Other publishers have already been experimenting with the form, such as Palgrave with its Pivot series, a new e-book format: “at 30,000 to 50,000 words, it’s longer than a journal article but shorter than a traditional monograph. The Palgrave Pivot, said Hazel Newton, head of digital publishing, ‘fills the space in the middle’” (Cassuto 2013). Indeed, Stanford University Press has also started “to release new material in the form of midlength e-books. ‘Stanford Briefs’ will run 20,000 to 40,000 words in length.” Cassuto calls Stanford’s format the “mini-monograph.”
How should one write a minigraph? It’s likely that Microsoft Word will algorithmically prescribe paper norms, which in academia tend to either 7,000-word articles or 70,000-word monographs. Here, I think Dieter (2013) is right to make links with the writing practices of Book Sprints as a connecting thread to new forms of publishing (Hyde 2013). The Book Sprint is a “genre of the ‘flash’ book, written under a short timeframe, to emerge as a contributor to debates, ideas and practices in contemporary culture…interventions that go well beyond a well-written blog-post or tweet, and give some substantive weight to a discussion or issue…within a range of 20-40,000 words” (Berry and Dieter 2012). This rapid and collaborative means of writing tends toward the creation of texts of an “appropriate” size for the digital medium. Book Sprints usually involve 4-8 writers, facilitated by another non-writing member. The output of each writer throughout the sprint conveniently maps onto the structure of minigraph chapters discussed earlier. For Dieter, the Book Sprint is conducive to new writing practices, and by extension new reading practices for network cultures, and therefore “formations that break from subjugation or blockages in pre-existing media and organizational workflows” (Dieter 2013). In this I think he is broadly correct; however, Book Sprints also produce texts that are conducive to reading and writing in a digital medium, especially in terms of word count.
Nick Montfort (2013) has suggested a new predominantly digital form of writing that enables different forms of scholarly communication, the technical report, which he argues “is as fast as a speeding blog, as detailed and structured as a journal article, and able to be tweeted, discussed, assessed, and used as much as any official publication can be. It is issued entirely without peer review.” Montfort, however, connects the technical report to the “grey literature” that is not usually considered part of scholarly publishing as such. Experiments like the “pamphlets” issued by the Stanford Literary Lab, and which Montford argues are technical reports in all but name, are between 10-15,000 words in length: slightly longer than a journal article and a little shorter than a minigraph.
However, a key difference is that neither the Book Sprint nor the technical report are peer-reviewed, although they might be “peer-to-peer reviewed” (see Cebula 2010; Fitzpatrick 2011). Rather, they are rapid production, sharing, and collaborative forms geared toward social media and intervention or technical documentation. In contrast, the minigraph would share with the other main scholarly outputs—the journal article and the monograph—the need to be peer-reviewed and produced at a high level of textual quality. This is where the minigraph points to new emergent affordances of the digital that enable the kinds of scholarly activity, such as presenting finished work, carefully annotated and referenced, through these nascent digital textual technologies. If these intuitions are right about the current state of digital technologies and their affordances for the writing and reading of scholarly work, then the minigraph might be the right structure and form for digital scholarship to augment the current ecosystem of the article, review, monograph, and so forth.
In some ways the minigraph is a much less radical suggestion than the multi-modal, all-singing, all-dancing digital object that many have been calling for. However, the minigraph, as conceptualized here, is still potentially deeply computational in form. We might describe the minigraph as a code-object. In this sense, the minigraph is able to contain programmable objects itself, in addition to its textual load, opening up many possibilities for interactive dimensions, like those suggested by the Computable Document Format (CDF) created by Wolfram.
The minigraph as described here does not, of course, exist as such, although its form is detectable in the documents produced by the Quip app, the dexy format, as “literate documentation,” or the Booktype software. It is manifestly not meant to be in the form of Google Docs/Drive, which is essentially traditional word-processing software in the cloud, and which ironically still revolves around a print metaphor. The minigraph is a technical imaginary for what digital scholarly writing might be. It remains to be coded into concrete software and manifested in the practices of scholarly writers and readers. Nonetheless, as a form of long-form text amenable to the mobile practices of readers today, the 15-40,000 word minigraph text could provide a key expressive scholarly form for the digital age.
Notes
[1] Minigraph chunks would be at 250-350 word intervals, roughly pages, and chapters of 2-5,000 words. There is no reason why the term “page” could not be used for these chunks, but perhaps “plane” is more appropriate in terms of chunks representing vertical “cuts” in the text at an appropriate frequency. So “plane 5” would be analogous to page 5, but mathematically calculable to approximately (300 x plane number) to give start word, and ((300 x plane number+1)-1) to give the end word of a particular plane. This would make the page both algorithmically calculable and therefore device-independent, but also suitable for scholarly referencing and usable user-friendly numbering throughout the text. As the planes are represented on screen by a digital, the numbering system would be comprehensible to users of printed texts, and would offer a simple transition from paper page-based numbering to algorithmic numbering. If the document was printed, the planes could be automatically reformatted to the page size, and hence further make the link between page and plane straightforward for the reader (who might never even realize the algorithmic source of the numbering system for plane chunks in a minigraph). Indeed, one might place the “plane resolution” within the minigraph text itself, in this case “300”, enabling different plane chunks to be used within different texts, and hence changing the way in which a plane is calculated on a book-by-book basis—very similar to page numbering. One might even have different plane resolutions within chapters in a book, enabling different chunks in different chapters or regions.
Authors and agents becoming publishers together
StandardIt is my belief that almost all the innovations that Amazon has brought-to/forced-on the publishing and bookselling industries over the last couple of decades have eventually worked to the advantage of authors and readers. I am quite sure if I were a publisher or a bookseller I would feel very differently about the rise of Amazon to virtual world dominance, but I’m not. As both an author and a reader I love the many ways in which they have enriched my life.
There have been rumblings recently of “mysterious and secret” deals being done between Amazon and some of the biggest and brightest literary agents. They are calling it their “White Glove” service, and from the point of view of authors whose agents love their books but are unable to persuade traditional publishers to take them on, it’s a brilliant innovation, which I believe points to one of the ways forward for people working in publishing.
Last year I wrote a novella, Secrets of the Italian Gardener. I sent the manuscript to one of the biggest and best agents in London, who I have known for many years, and he came back brimming with enthusiasm. He wanted no re-writes and he was sure he could get a sale. He told me the book was a “contemporary re-casting of Ecclesiastes” and was about “the vanity associated with the desire for power and possessions and ultimately about the cycle of birth, growth, death and re-birth” – which was a surprise, but by no means an unpleasant one.
Six months later he had to admit that he had failed to convince any publishers to come into business with us on this one. In the old days that would have been the end of the story. Simple self-publishing was now one option, of course, but with Amazon’s “White Glove” service we had another, and to my mind far preferable, alternative.
Highly skilled staff at the agency proceeded to do a totally professional copy-edit and then did all the heavy lifting with getting the book up onto Amazon, ready for print-on-demand as well as electronic publication. It has become a team effort rather than a lone author’s voice in the crowd and should the book start to “gain traction” in the market place the agency is already fully engaged and ready to handle the business side of taking it to the next level.
It seems to me that this template offers future roles for all the souls who work as authors and agents and who are unable to persuade anyone else to come on board with a project. The resulting books stand as good a chance of success as anything published in the traditional way, avoiding the “ordeal by rejection” which has made life as a professional author such a nightmare for the last two hundred years.
Crossing the Finish Line
StandardOur final set of essays from our writers is now up! That means that we have achieved our goal of completing the book on time here at the Frankfurt Book Fair! It’s been an incredible ride and we are extremely grateful to everyone who made this possible: our collaborators here on the ground and around the world. Thank you to Charlie Stross, Jane Friedman, Dan Gillmor and Lee Konstantinou, to the many people who shared their thoughts in text and video contributions, to our colleagues from Intel and the many supporters who have been here with us at the fair.
Of course, this book isn’t really done–it’s a living text and will continue to evolve in the days and weeks to come. But for tonight, we have reached the finish line. Welcome to the future of publishing:
Introduction
Lee Konstantinou, “Why I’m Here”
Charlie Stross, “Why I’m Here”
Brian David Johnson, “The Future of _______: A Cautionary Tale”
How will people read in the future?
Jane Friedman, “The Blurring Line Between Reader and Writer”
Dan Gillmor, “Readers and Anonymity”
Lee Konstantinou, “Reading and Our Addiction to Distraction”
Charlie Stross, “Reading Machines”
How will people find new books to read in the future?
Jane Friedman, “The Importance of Metadata in Book Discoverability”
Dan Gillmor, “What Are You Reading? Reading and Reputation”
Lee Konstantinou, “The Future of Bookstores”
Charlie Stross, “Feral Spambooks”
How will books be produced in the future, and who will produce them?
Jane Friedman, “The Atomization of Publishing”
Dan Gillmor, “An Author-Centric Ecosystem”
Lee Konstantinou, “Our Friend the Book DJ”
Charlie Stross, “Publishers: What Are They Good For?”
How will books be written and edited in the future?
Jane Friedman, “The Future of Editing: Beta Readers and Agile Publishing”
Dan Gillmor, “GitHub for Books?”
Lee Konstantinou, “What Is the Future of the Editor?”
Charlie Stross, “Why Microsoft Word Must Die”
How will the concept of the book evolve in the future?
Jane Friedman, “Book as Fluke: A Thought Experiment”
Dan Gillmor, “What Is a Book? Discuss”
Lee Konstantinou, “Building Worlds Out of Books”
Charlie Stross, “Do Zimboes Dream of Electric Sheep?”
Corey Pressman, “Ancient Marginalia: The Watershed Manifesto”
What will the economics of authorship be in the future? In what new ways will authors engage with their readers?
Jane Friedman, “The Idea of the Author Is Facing Extinction”
Dan Gillmor, “Authors Develop Communities, Not Just Audiences”
Lee Konstantinou, “Two Paths for the Future of the Author”
Charlie Stross, “Google Should Buy the Entire Publishing Industry”
Two Paths for the Future of the Author
StandardLet’s pretend you’re an author. What do you most want from life? More likely than not, you want readers to read what you create, and you want enough money to keep writing what you’d like to write (in relative comfort). In the future, who is going to read your books? Who is going to give you money to keep paying your rent? The most common answer, the author’s fantasy, is that she will earn money from the people who read her work.
You dream of living comfortably because you’re able to attract readers. This is more or less a fantasy of market justice. I’m sorry to report that reality bears little relation to this fantasy. The people who read you and the people who pay your bills are probably not going to be the same. It is exceedingly rare for an author to be able to generate enough of an income to survive from book sales. In almost every case, non-readers subsidize your writing.
This is true today, and will continue to be the case. Let’s take a look at two possible futures for the author which have their foundations in already existing institutions.
Literary Investors
My novel Pop Apocalypse imagines a future world in which aspiring celebrities can float their names on a reputation stock market. After your IPO, you capitalize on your potential, build your human brand and pay dividends to shareholders. There are primitive examples of systems like this that exist today. For example, the novelist Tao Lin sold shares of the profits of his novel Richard Yates to readers. The minor-league pitcher Randy Newsom sold shares of his future earnings. Kickstarter and similar crowdfunding sites promise to generalize these phenomena.
You may think of these sites as a means of forging a direct relationship to readers. But this is a mistaken view. Such sites are only indirectly related to whether you connect to readers. On these services, enthusiastic investors may pony up cash because they like a particular project. They may indeed want to read your book. But they may also have purely financial motivations. If the author is offering to share a portion of the book’s profits, the book itself is secondary. Investors may, as Ian Bogost suggests, have an almost purely imaginative relationship to the project in question. Bogost writes:
We don’t really want the stuff. We’re paying for the sensation of a hypothetical idea, not the experience of a realized product. For the pleasure of desiring it. For the experience of watching it succeed beyond expectations or to fail dramatically. Kickstarter is just another form of entertainment. It’s QVC for the Net set. And just like QVC, the products are usually less appealing than the excitement of learning about them for the first time and getting in early on the sale.
Your investors may want to be seen as the sort of person who supports a particular kind of literary project. They may be fans of your literary brand, not your books. So literary investing would become a kind of entertainment media. Admittedly, part of the symbolic fulfillment of a particular entertainment-investment might involve the author-brand completing her proposed book. Investors might also feel happier if their favorite author is a bestseller. Who doesn’t love a winner?
But whatever the case may be, you shouldn’t nurse the fantasy that you’re earning your keep because readers love – or even read – your books. Whether or not a literary investment fulfills its promise, its success is only incidental to its material realization.
State Subsidies
Norway offers another model for your literary future. As Wendy Griswold documents in her book of literary sociology, Regionalism and the Reading Class, Norway invests in its authors in a serious way. I outlined the dramatic scope of this investment in a post on Stanford’s Arcade blog:
Norway buys 1000 copies of every book a Norwegian author publishes. It provides a $19,000 annual subsidy to every author who is a member of the Authors’ Union. The Association of Bookstores is allowed to have a monopoly on the sale of books – but is prohibited by law from engaging in price competition. It requires, by law, that bookstores keep books in stock for two years regardless of sales. And it exempts books from its very steep sales tax. Not surprisingly, Griswold finds, “Norwegians everywhere read, and they read a lot; Norway has one of the world’s highest reading rates.”
Under this system, authors receive generous support, literary culture thrives and readers presumably have a wide range of appealing books to buy on the market. Which is all for the good. As an author, I’d like to live in a country with a literary system that resembled Norway’s. Though you would be materially enriched if you lived under such a system, the relation between you and your readers is anything but pure or simple. You presumably receive your subsidy whether or not you are productive in a given year. You’re ultimately being paid by taxpayers, not readers. These taxpayers may or may not also be readers. At the top of the literary pyramid of success, you may earn substantially more than your allotted subsidy, or you may not.
The state presumably doesn’t subsidize authors because they love you as an individual author – sorry! – but rather because it reflects the priorities of the population. A people who choose to direct tax dollars toward authors presumably care about fostering a healthy and sustainable national literary culture. The goodness or badness of a particular author is beside the point. The health of the literary field as a whole is what is at stake. We may debate the desirability of such a system – the question of whether Norway’s system is optimal will require much more discussion – but the point is that your capacity to pay your rent and your readership is heavily mediated.
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What conclusions can we draw from juxtaposing these two models? First, the writer-reader relationship is never simple. You may think that you are fostering communities of loyal followers or readers, but you’re actually interacting through a much vaster set of mediating institutions. Someone educated your readers. Labor law shapes the amount of leisure time that your readers have to enjoy your books. The state may facilitate your bodily survival, either through the provision of social welfare benefits (like health care), through tax breaks and other subsidies or through other indirect means. When you put your wares on the market or make a promise to put your wares on the market, you may think you are forging a more direct connection to your readers. In fact, you are fostering the fantasies of readers, possible readers and others who may not read word you write.
Is this a depressing state of affairs? No, it’s just as it should be – and, moreover, just as it must be. The real question goes beyond the situation of the individual writer. The question is: What kind of literary system do you want to live in? What policies, institutions, and economic arrangements would foster the world you want to write in? If you believe you have some hand in determining the future of the book – if you believe that, working together, we can direct the Shape of Things to Come – then the real task ahead is to build this better, alternate world. You’ll have to become a writer of something like political science fiction.
Authors: Develop Communities, Not Just Audiences
StandardIn 2008 Kevin Kelly, author and former editor of Wired magazine, posted an incisive and influential essay, “1,000 True Fans.” He noted that the “long tail” in media is great for the aggregators (Google, Amazon, etc.) and the general public, but a problem for artists who weren’t stars. He wrote:
A creator, such as an artist, musician, photographer, craftsperson, performer, animator, designer, videomaker, or author – in other words, anyone producing works of art – needs to acquire only 1,000 True Fans to make a living.
A True Fan is defined as someone who will purchase anything and everything you produce. They will drive 200 miles to see you sing. They will buy the super deluxe re-issued hi-res box set of your stuff even though they have the low-res version. They have a Google Alert set for your name. They bookmark the eBay page where your out-of-print editions show up. They come to your openings. They have you sign their copies. They buy the t-shirt, and the mug, and the hat. They can’t wait till you issue your next work. They are true fans.
I’d experienced this several decades earlier, when I spent seven years playing music for a living. My band had the kinds of fans Kevin describes here. We played mostly around New England, and almost no matter where we appeared, at least a few of them would show up. They were, for us, much more than a friendly audience. They were friends and part of a community.
Later, as a journalist practicing my trade relatively early in in the digital age, I discovered something else: My readers knew more than I did. This was blindingly obvious in retrospect, if not at the time. Not only did they know things I didn’t, but they could easily let me know via online communications.
When a blog software pioneer, Dave Winer, launched one of the first blogging platforms in 1999, I jumped aboard. It became an essential part of my newspaper column at Silicon Valley’s San Jose Mercury News and the comments became a vital part of the conversations I was having with my readers.
As noted elsewhere in this e-book, I used the blog to post chapter drafts of my first book. The suggestions from readers were amazingly helpful, and the book was vastly better as a result.
Since then, our ability as authors to interact with our audiences has only grown — and I’m more convinced than ever that we need to move past the word “audience” and think about “users” and “community” in this context.
My more recent book, Mediactive, isn’t just a book. It’s also a toolkit for modern media literacy. I offer blog-based lesson plans for teachers and make everything available under a Creative Commons license to help spread my ideas on what I believe is an essential skill for the 21st Century. I also have great conversations in email, on Google+ and Twitter, and of course on my blogs, with people who want to talk about this.
Creating users and communities has meaning for an author’s bottom line as well. As crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter and self-publishing tools of various kinds give artists ways to go around the traditional publishing industry cartel, authors can leverage their communities into support. We can reach our 1,000 fans much more easily, with less and less conversational and financial friction, than we ever could before.
A caution: Community development and management skills don’t come naturally to everyone. I failed badly at this in a digital news startup some years back and I don’t claim to be an expert now. But having a conversation isn’t a chore for me, and what I gain from it is more than worth the effort.
Where can we take conversation and community? For one thing, we can recognize that a single price point – a book’s list or street price – is an absurdly limited view of the emerging book ecosystem. Some authors are experimenting with higher-priced special editions for what we might call their 250 Super Fans who not only buy everything but are happy to spend more for a special version. Or maybe there’s a premium-priced “dinner with the author” when he or she is visiting a new city.
One more caution: Conversations and communities take time. Authors have to ask themselves how much time they can afford to divert from their most essential job: writing and re-writing. If they neglect that, the rest won’t matter.