...the question of what to do with books that
outlive their owners has only been a common problem since the mid-19th
century, when the steam-powered press and the advent of cheap paper
caused a vast expansion of the book market. Before that, few families
would have had the problem of a surfeit of books. Now, though, we may be
reaching the end of the 150-year-old print boom, and with it a
transformation in the way we have shared books, reader after reader and
life after life.
In the age of the e-book,
the paper book faces two possible and antithetical fates. It may become
something to be discarded, as with the books that libraries scan and
cannibalize. (In the introduction to another book, Unpacking My Library: Writers and Their Books,
Price mentions the severed book spines that hang on the wall at Google,
"like taxidermists' trophies.") Alternatively, it may become a special
object to be preserved and traded. My grandfather's copy of War of the Worlds
obviously falls into the second category — but very few of the millions
of books published since the mid-19th century are ones you'd want to
own. If Amazon has a "long tail" of obscure but occasionally purchased
titles, the tail that goes back 150 years is near endless and thin as
thread.
Great read here....http://wtr.mn/M9JEzU
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