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John Updike on Kevin Kelly's digital book article

From Shelf Awareness:

Notes from BEA: Updike Not Down with Digitization

At Saturday's Book & Author Breakfast, John Updike barely talked about his upcoming book, Terrorist, and more about the culture and the place of the book and booksellers in it.

"You are in the front while writers cower in their studies," he told the audience. "I see bookstores as citadels of life. They civilize neighborhoods." His favorite local store "brightens my life and the whole street it's on."

Speaking of the May 14 New York Times Magazine article called "Scan This Book!" about the universal library of the future--where all texts would be available digitally and snippets of them mixed together the way listeners mix favorite music--Updike mocked some of the writer's predictions, including that authors will be involved in more performances and that readers will have "access to the creator." He called the article's vision a "pretty grisly scenario," a kind of "throwback to a preliterate society where only a live person adds, shall we say, value." He wondered if the culture of celebrity had made "signed books seen only as a ticket to the lecture platform." The written word, he continued, is "supposed to speak for itself and sell itself even if the author's picture is not on the back cover." Sadly, he said, the author has grown "in importance as the walking, talking advertisement for a book."

Authors will "soon be like surrogate birth mothers," he predicted, with seeds "planted by high-powered consultants" and their works then "dropped into the marketplace."

He noted, too, that "yes, there is a ton of information on the Web but much of it is unedited and inaccurate." By contrast, the book, he continued, "is still more exacting and demanding of writers and consumers."

He concluded, "Booksellers, defend your lonely forts. Keep your edges dry. Your edges are our edges. For some of us, books are intrinsic to our human identity."

Comments

Good point, Mr. Updike. However, wouldn't it be easier for the Book People of Farenheit 451 to just carry around little flash drives instead of having to keep whole books in memory?

Sorry, but I can't buy anything Updike says for two reasons.

First because of his review of The Spell in 1999 in which he said:
"Novels about heterosexual partnering, however frivolous and reducible to increments of selfishness, social accident, foolish estimations, and inflamed physical detail, do involve the perpetuation of the species and the ancient sacralized structures of the family."

And second, because as Douglas Adams, a much more important writer than Updike, IMO, said:

"Anything that is in the world when you're born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works. Anything that's invented between when you're fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it. Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things."

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