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Nicholson Baker is one of my fave authors. The Mezzanine is one of my all time favorite works (along with U & I). He’s also written a lot of articles about the lore of libraries and card catalogs. He’s a professed Luddite – nothing wrong with that. image In the current New Yorker issue, he points out the alleged flaws of the Kindle and Sony.

But I get tired of the same old  irrelevant criticisms that have nothing to do with ebooks and ebook readers.  To wit:

  • “No Amazon Kindle version of …. (name fave work). Who cares!
  • Inferior presentation of tables/charts/graphics…..Agreed, but that’s a technical problem. It’s because publishers were too lazy  and cheap to rethink print books for their ebook editions.
  • Screen has a grayish tint. So what!?

Here are the obvious points about ebooks which are totally missed by Nicholson Baker:

  • I (and most owners of ebook readers ) still read  a majority of  books in printed form  (especially because  many used books cost trivial amounts of money).  The reason why “Flaubert’s Parrot” is not available for Kindle is that a print version is still available for 75 cents + shipping.  5-10 years from now when used copies are more scarce (and more expensive),  I’m  100%  sure that an ebook version of Flaubert’s Parrot  will be for sale (priced slightly – or significantly –  lower  than the used print version).
  • Kindle (or Sony, etc) provides a method for you to download public domain titles which were unavailable or extremely hard to locate. I’ve become acquainted with more new authors from the 18th or 19th century because of my ebook reader than as a result of a  4 year college education.  All kinds of minor works by well-known authors are  ebooks as a result of PG’s scanning.
  • Indie authors can publish as ebooks and bypass the middleman. It doesn’t matter if their ebook isn’t listed on Amazon.com as long  as it’s listed on smashwords or available through paypal/payloadz. Many new works are never being published as print books at all.
  • Free utilities and websites let you convert publicly available journals to a format readable on the ebook. Calibre in particular does lots of magical things; it lets you fetch articles from many well-known journals to read as ebooks).

To summarize: an ebook reader is necessary not to read titles you would have read anyway, but to read titles unavailable by any other means.

A more interesting question is how the e-ink reading experience compares to reading a laptop screen.  That’s a debatable question, but in my opinion, the ebook reader still wins.

See also: David Rothman’s piece responding to Baker’s readability criticisms.

 
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