A Kindle Sceptic Converted: Linda Newbery
"I work all day on a screen; I don't want to look at a screen for relaxation, too."
"I like the feel and smell of books."
"How can a piece of technology replace such a perfect design?"
A friend made all these remarks last week, and it was an echo of the objections I was making this time last year. I live with Gadget Man, and it's made me a bit resistant to devices of various kinds (to venture into his study is to be plunged into an archive of redundant technology - items no one wants, needs or can find ways to recycle). He, of course, bought a Kindle fairly soon after they became available. I was sceptical, but two things happened to make me change my mind and have a go.
The spur came at a talk given by Sue Price and Katherine Roberts at the summer gathering of the Scattered Authors' Society. They were messianic about the advantages of Kindle self-publishing, speaking of the control and independence, the ease of publishing, and the attractions of group blogging. I went into the room with only mild interest, but emerged an hour later already planning to reissue THE DAMAGE DONE, one of my favourite of my young adult novels. I went home from the retreat, enlisted Gadget Man as technical advisor, and got to work. Within a surprisingly short time, my book was available, with a new cover.
The second thing was that I'd noticed a change in Gadget Man's reading habits. Over the summer, he could be found for hours on end on a garden bench, engrossed in THE CRIMSON PETAL AND THE WHITE, via his Kindle. Now, I knew that GM would never have picked up the brick-like wodge of the book, had he seen it - the length would have put him off. But on the Kindle, he could ignore that; the device had allowed him to enjoy a book he wouldn't otherwise have started. On a practical level, holding a large book open can be tiring for the hands, whereas with a Kindle you can read one-handed, holding a mug of coffee with the other. (I'm about to embark on BLEAK HOUSE, and have downloaded the e-version for reasons of ease and comfort.)
Well, it seemed a pity to self-publish an e-book without owning a device myself, so I bought one as soon as the new cheaper Kindles became available.
Other posts within the last week have enumerated the benefits of e-books, but here's one I didn't expect.
I now use my Kindle for reading through work in progress. It's become a habit, each evening, to send my draft to the Kindle. (For anyone who doesn't know how to do this: your e-reader has its own email address, like a person. You just send an email with a Word attachment, and lo and behold, there it is.) Like many writers, I find that reading my work on a computer screen is useful only up to a point - for the final read-through before submitting, I've always printed a paper copy. I travel a lot, so this has often meant carrying a thick folder of printed pages for annotation. Now, instead, I shall be reading on the Kindle, where the text looks like that of any other book, providing the necessary distance needed at that stage. It's more portable than a typescript or a laptop, easier to read in bed, more discreet for public transport.
Like most e-readers, I'm planning to carry on reading a lot in book form, too - we're not faced with an "either/or" choice. But already my Kindle is a constant companion, for writing as well as for reading.
Comments
Oh, and I loved The Crimson Petal and the White too - and would probably also have been daunted by the paper version!
I have resisted my usual gadget purchasing impulse by not paying £89 for the little handset, instead confining my exploration to the free Windows and mobile phone readers.
Kobo is American and is in colour, which is both visually attractive and more inclined to create eye fatigue, unlike the electronic ink of the Kindle. The range and number of free and buyable books is smaller than Amazon's. I can't comment on Kobo's file reading and self-publishing capabilities as the freebies offer none. Worth a look, however.
It's great to be able to work on final edits outside in the sunshine with Kindle's e-ink screen.
Editing/reading WIP on kindle is awesome - because it reformats, everything reads differently and the typos jump out at me!
Thanks too to Tja (aka Gadget Man) for the comparison with Kobo. My Canadian poet friend Robert Colman is currently trying to access the Kindle version of my novel 'Flesh & Bronze' for his Kobo, and I hope that WHSmith's ventures will help the exchange.