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image Christopher Buckley, the novelist, wrote a 15,000-word story about two young sailors. The Atlantic Magazine in the past would have couldn’t have run it because of the length; besides, the Atlantic no longer even publishes monthly fiction on paper. And yet the story was too short for a book.

Now, however, thanks to the Atlantic’s deal with Amazon, readers will be able to download short works by Buckley and other well-own writers. Price is $3.99 a story, and the downloads will be available starting Monday. The Atlantic will offer two stories a month this way.

Sounds good, except for my normal reservations about eBabel. What about, say, people with Sony Readers? If this is a K exclusive, they’re SOL.

In fact, yes, the New York Times uses the phrase “exclusively available on the Kindle.” Normally shorts are available in PDF, HTML and, via e-mail, TXT. But the NYT piece says: “Although the authors may at some point obtain the rights to republish the stories as part of a collection or in another magazine, the stories cannot appear in any other e-reader format.” Ugly stuff. I hope that the Atlantic reconsiders. Shame on both it and Amazon if the current arrangements arrange. Do we really want to balkanize the short story market? Or standardize on one company’s technology? If the Authors Guild really cares about its members, maybe it should worry less about text to speech and more about this.

 
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