E-books will never be our friends

Ben Macintyre Says the printed book is the same object, in essence, that it always was. Music, film and television have all transferred rapidly to digital format; reading in short form - blogs, journalism, e-mail - has thrived on the web since its inception. But long-form literature has proved stubbornly resistant.

A reader who falls in love with a book, even if first read in electronic form, will still want to own it. Books do more than furnish a room: they are our intellectual companions.

Comments

Makes me remember McLuhan's "The Medium is the Message".

I believe Neil Postman liked to ask rhetorically something to the effect of if a bible printed on toilet paper commands the same reverence as a leather bound Gutenberg bible? That would be a "no". This is what I think of when I hear my fellow librarians say nonchalantly "oh, it's just information, the container DOESN'T MATTER".

Yes, yes it does, in fact.

And I'm also a curmudgeon who likes traditional Carnegie-style libraries with dark oak interiors and Church-like atmospheres...and Greek temple-style exterior architecture or even playful Art Nouveau and there's nothing about that kind of layout that prevents a place from utilizing high tech equipment effectively. It just doesn't "look" high tech or sleek. In architectural taste in general I found through the years that I've gone from being a naive Modernist to Postmodernist back to unabashed Classicist.

E-books will never be our friends

Never is a very long time.

The container matters!

But, different people love different containers.

I love physical books. They give me comfort and remind me of home. They are my "intellectual companions" as Macintyre says.

I also love my mp3 collection. It gives me comfort and reminds me of home -- and large swaths of it come with me when I leave home. I lovingly cataloged it and care for it with checks and back-ups.

You can own an album in physical or electronic form, and you can own a book in physical or electronic form. Love -- the desire to get and possess good things forever -- applies as much to the digital as the physical.