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image I’ve repeatedly warned big publishers that they can’t roll back the future—that they’ve got to embrace e-books, help rid the industry of eBabel and back off from a dangerous fixation on traditional DRM.

And now here’s some information from Google Trends that even I, an e-book booster, would consider worrisome. By a ratio of 1.14 to 1, more people are searching on Google for "ebooks" (blue line) than for the word "novels" (red). Is this a triumph of the medium over the message? Perhaps. Perhaps not.

But what I can say for certain is that Google’s "ebook"-to-"novel" ratio is higher in the developing world, the very place where U.S. and European publishers might want to be cultivating new markets and partnerships with local people and companies. Click on the ratio link and you’ll see what I mean.

Powerful argument for TeleRead

image Here at home in the States and in many others countries, one of the best ways to grow the e-book market would be to establish a well-stocked national digital library system—blended in well with local schools and libraries and much more book-friendly than the current status quo.

Will book publishers just go on fighting the usual copyright wars with librarians and high tech companies? Or will they instead reach out to enlist them in the popularization of books, especially novels and other narrative works?

More vidgame focus in "developed" nations like the U.S.

Meanwhile I was curious about the phrase "video games" vs. "novels." Sure enough, "video" games walloped "novels" 2.08 to one, though I’m surprised the ratio isn’t even higher. Significantly "novels" outranked "video games" in the developing world. Could this be one reason for big publishing conglomerates to pull out all stops to develop e-book markets in countries such as India before it’s too late?

And what does this say about the effects of games vs. books on people’s thinking processes? And how does this fit in with the Obama administration’s stimulus package? As I’ve asked before, does the U.S. really want to expand its broadband infrastructure without worrying about the kinds of content Americans will consume. Will books lose out to games and other beneficiaries of broadband? I see roles for both games and books. But a little balance, please.

Detail: I used "ebooks" rather than "e-books," bowing to popular usage even though I prefer the hyphenation.

About the the lower line in the first graph shown: Isn’t it interesting how the mainstream news media show such little interest in "ebooks" compared to "novels"—the exact opposite of the trend on the Net? Talk about being out of touch with readers!

 
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