Why Beatrix Potter Would Love a Digital Reader
destinyland writes "In 1906, children's book author Beatrix Potter tried creating her own new, non-book format for delivering her famous fairy tales. 'Intended for babies and tots, the story was originally published on a strip of paper that was folded into a wallet, closed with a flap, and tied with a ribbon.' This article includes a link to actual images from one of Potter's strange wallet-sized stories — 'The Story of A Fierce, Bad Rabbit' — plus an image showing you exactly what Beatrix Potter thought 'a fierce, bad rabbit' would look like!"
err okay. Who cares?
Maybe I'm missing something, but what is the link between publishing a book in a pamphlet style and a love for digital readers?
In related news experts say Frank Zappa would have used Linux.
Oh Amazon! I may be a luddite but at least my books will still function after the collapse of civilization.
I know with my books I can bump them, drop them, get them wet (protip: freeze wet books so they dry out and don't puff up) and even SHARE them with other people. Sadly they're not fireproof.
With a kindle I have a single electronic gadget full of books that Amazon and publishers can recall at any time for any reason.
Beatrix Potter's book 'alternative', and calling it an alternative is quite a stretch but anything's possible if you pay off the right blogs, has all of the flexibility of the dead tree format and none of the drawbacks of some proprietary e-format laden with DRM.
She was being creative and nowhere near trying to introduce a new format which would supercede a content delivery system which has been proven over the course of centuries not a mere handful of years.
TFA talks about how Beatrix Potter would love the *Kindle*, not just any old reader. I think the author missed the fact that her watercolour illustrations include colour, something the Kindle can't do yet.
Maybe I'm missing something, but what is the link between publishing a book in a pamphlet style and a love for digital readers?
It's a leap, but it's not as big as you think. It's not so much that Beatrix Potter was pining away for the day when you could have a book that changed what its only page looked like rather than having to flip pages. It's that she conceived of another way of presenting the story other than the conventional book form, and that shows she was more likely to embrace other non-conventional forms.
To belabor the point a bit, it might be worth noting that the form she chose is at least marginally more portable and multifunctional to boot.
Tweet, tweet.
These people obviously dont have young children.
Young children dont *read* books, that is about the 5th to 6th use of them.
#1 is they eat books (chew on them whenever possible)
#2 is they use books as hammers (apparently hitting things with large flat objects is fun!)
#3 is they throw them the moment they are more than 5 inches above the ground
Can someone lend me a kindle (/ipad/whatever) and a stopwatch? I have an experiment in mind...
I suspect Ms.Potters idea was more about making books MORE disposable, not less (the foldups could be printed more cheaply, as no binding).