The book is dead? Long live the book!
TIMES
http://www.timeslive.co.za/lifestyle/books/article872278.ece/The-book-is-dead-Long-live-the-book-
Jan 25, 2011 1:42 PM | By Reuters

Rubbishing those who hail the digital age as the end for books, publishing
industry players and best-selling authors hailed a new dawn for publishing,
with India's voracious readers at its forefront.


Book sales have been squeezed in recent years by e-books and the huge
success of Amazon.Com's Kindle reader, but India's booming publishing
market is proof of the physical book's staying power, said participants at
Asia's largest literary event, the DSC Jaipur Literary Festival.

"You read something on Twitter and you know it is ephemeral," said Patrick
French, a best-selling historian and biographer who has written extensively
on Asia. "Yet the book is a solid thing. The book endures."

Regional language novelists and poets rubbed shoulders with Nobel laureates
and Booker Prize winners at the seventh festival to be held in the
historical pink-tinged city of Jaipur, the capital of India's north-western
Rajasthan state.

Hundreds of book lovers attended a debate on the fate of printed books in
the sun-drenched grounds of a former palace as part of the free five-day
event.

"The idea of the book dying comes up all the time. It's wrong. I think this
is a wonderful time for books, to enlarge the audience of the book and draw
in more readers," said John Makinson, Chairman and CEO of the Penguin Group
of publishers.

"Books matter more in India than anywhere else we publish them," added
Makinson, whose Penguin Group is one of the world's largest
English-language publishers.

While book sales slip in most western countries, the non-academic book
market in India is currently growing at a rate of 15 to 18 percent
annually, as rapid economic growth swells literacy rates and adds millions
to the middle class every year.

At the festival, schoolchildren from around the country chased their
authorly heroes through the lunch queues to get autographs on
newly-purchased books.

Makinson noted that the pressure on physical bookshops in countries like
the United States -- where bookseller Borders Group Inc is in talks to
secure a $500 million credit line -- doesn't exist in India, adding that
books have a key role to play in Indian society.

"In India books define and create the social conversation. In China, the
books that sell well are self-improvement titles. Popular books in India
are of explanations, explaining the world. The inquisitive nature of India
is unique."

Indian critic Sunil Sethi, who presents India's most popular television
program on books, said the digital age presented an opportunity, rather
than a threat, for printed matter. "Even before I finish my show, the
authors are on Twitter to say they are on TV talking about their book.
Technology is merging things, but the book is still at the centre," Sethi
said.

French agreed that technology, if well-managed, could actually help win
books new friends and wider sales.

"Digital e-books have created a space for discussion. Books now have
websites and forums, and so reading books on electronic devices has created
communities and interaction," he said.

Nearly 50,000 writers, critics, publishers and fans are expected to attend
the festival.

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