TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
June 15th, 2009

Autographed Kindles: An e-phenomenon ready to spread?

By David Rothman

imageLibrarian Tom Peters and I once mulled over the idea of virtual book signings at online book fairs.

Why not let writers offer individualized autographs for fans? An author’s signature and personal message could appear within a graphic. Maybe even embedded within the book file itself?

I wonder if someone is even doing this already. After I published the original version of this post, a Portuguese publisher named Eduardo Melo wrote TeleRead and said his writers were signing CDs. But I don’t read Portugese and can’t say whether the signatures were electronic or physical. Perhaps Eduardo or someone else can enlighten us.

Sedaris “on” Kindle: “This bespells doom”

Meanwhile, physically, the autograph phenomenon is happening elsewhere with e-books.

imageDavid Sedaris (above photo) signed the Kindle of a fan with the gall to make the request at a p-bookstore, the venerable Strand in New York City (right).

“This bespells doom,” Sedaris joked in his inscription, according to the New Times.

As reported in the Times, “Mr. Sedaris wrote in a recent e-mail message that he has actually signed ‘at least five’ Kindles, and ‘a fair number of iPods as well, these for audio book listeners.’”

imageThe novelist Jennifer Weiner signed a Kindle that housed a half-read e-book of Certain Girls for a fan named Holly West in 2008 at a Barnes & Noble in California. “I felt very embarrassed and like I was doing something wrong,” West reportedly confessed. “It’s a promotional opportunity for both the writer and the bookstore, and if you’re asking for your Kindle to be signed, you’re taking the bookstore out of the process.” Turns out Weiner herself owns a Kindle, by the way.

So what do you think, gang? Just how should e-book writers—or p-writers also appearing in E—handle autographs?

image Granted, e-books can offer other forms of customization, such as inserting the customer’s name in place of the existing hero’s. But the age-old desire for autographs will almost surely persist.

Here’s one idea—a mix of a graphics file and a central registry on the Web where the autographs would be on display or be individually hidden behind a password-protected walls, depending on the wishes of the customer.

The autographs of course could carry personal messages from the authors, as noted above, so it was clear that they were not just mass repros.

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8 Responses to “Autographed Kindles: An e-phenomenon ready to spread?”

  1. An author’s signature in a book is significant because it’s a physical link between the author and that copy of the book. I can’t see how any electronic signature can provide that.

  2. Thanks, Paul. I understand your concern, but that’s the purpose of the accompanying personal message–to link the autograph to a particular fan.

    David

  3. Hello.

    Past november/08, when we launched our first eletronic books, our authors signed CD’s (in which were the e-books). The text is in portuguese, but you can see the local press coverage and a picture of that. I’m the guy beside the lady in red (my wife, actually).

    Eduardo

  4. Sorry, my comment was posted without the link: http://editoraplus.org/plus/resumo-da-plus-na-midia/.

  5. Been there, done that, since 2003.

    Lee

  6. That’s really cool, Lee. If ebook readers can get touchscreen/stylus-entry technology a la a tablet computer, ebook signings can certainly go on!

  7. Michael Davidson Says:
    June 16th, 2009 at 7:45 am

    ‘”…if you’re asking for your Kindle to be signed, you’re taking the bookstore out of the process.”’

    True, though this is only symbolically different from bringing a physical book that was purchased at another store–or online.

    We can make principled stands for the small bookseller, but in the end, customers will make a choice. The decline of movie rental and music stores in the face of NetFlix, iTunes, and piracy (among other causes) forecasts what that choice will be. Authors should sign any legally purchased book, regardless of format.

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