Given the dust-ups in the publishing world in recent weeks, and the general malaise of the economy, may I suggest buying books for the holiday? No, this is not only a commercial pitch for my stuff (though if you're interested, you can buy my books here, or here, or here ) but for books in general.

Give someone a copy of that book that meant so much to you, or changed your way of thinking. Give someone a copy of the book that kept you up all night, or that still sings in your head after all these years. A book, taken care of, will last a lifetime...

I was thinking of that last trait today as I was backing up my own writing... and thinking of how the USB memory stick is now THE way to archive stuff, and yet how impermanent it's likely to be. If I'd archived my stuff "for the ages" back 20 years ago, I'd've put it on a floppy diskette, in MS Word format (maybe Mac v. 3 or so). Now, two decades forward, I don't have a disk drive on my machine (or in my house, for that matter), and none of the current versions of Word could read that format even if I could get a drive that would recognize the diskette.

Yet all the books of mine from back then are on the shelf, perfectly readable. Heck, there are books out there that are hundreds of years old and still readable. I have a few on my shelf that are over a century old...

So go buy a book for someone. Do your part for the economy. A book's not likely to become obsolete, or be 'this year's fad' or to fail to work six months later...

From: [identity profile] greenmtnboy18.livejournal.com


>>No, this is only a commercial pitch for my stuff<<

I think you meant "NOT only". :-D

From: [identity profile] sleigh.livejournal.com


Umm, yep. You're right. [Steve blushes] Must go change it!

From: [identity profile] andpuff.livejournal.com


Heck, there are books out there that are hundreds of years old and still readable. I have a few on my shelf that are over a century old...

One of my intermittent rants involves speculation on electronic publishing, the shared information that I have my first book on disc but no way to read it, and the fact that you can still read the Gutenberg Bible!

The woman who runs the Children's Aid Society Angel Tree likes to give us kids who read so we always get to buy books as part of their presents.


From: [identity profile] sleigh.livejournal.com


I can understand the allure of having my entire library in one portable device, but as you say, what happens when the file format is no longer supported, or some New! Better! way to read electronically comes along and obsoletes (to create a new verb) everything.

Books are never obsolete -- at least not until the language itself changes!

From: [identity profile] ontology101.livejournal.com


Books are always a part of my giving. Always. You remind me of the fast approaching moment when I will be unable to access my archived email. I have a whole beer case of written correspondence from my college days. Some of it on onion thin "air postal" stationary. I think it is rather rich with social references. So, the correspondence queen that I am, I have kept every email I have received or written in the last 12 years. Will I always have access to it...I think not.

Sigh.

Anne
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