Way back in the late sixties and early seventies, a bunch of people in Northern California put out The Whole Earth Catalog. Several of them, actually. There were one or two lying around the house when I was growing up, and I would often browse through them. I can't say I remember any particular content, but I do remember the vibrantly busy layout and, of course, the iconic photos of the Earth on the cover, including William Anders' famous shot of the Earth from the surface of the moon on this edition.
Print catalogs have a long and influential history. The Sears Catalog, for example, had a huge influence on the rural United States in the early 20th century, offering as it did everything from pins and nails to tools to toys and games, clothing, fishing and hunting equipment, bicycles, automobiles and even a house to put it all in. As I understand it, the arrival of the latest Sears Catalog in the mail was a noteworthy event in many communities.
In these days of the web, of course, there's little need for a mail order catalog. A good commercial web site is more up to date, a good deal easier to search and not so bad to idly browse. Some will not only show you detailed pictures of the goods, but let you customize and see the results. Why kill trees to send something static that will be obsolete by the time it arrives?
And yet ...
Kevin Kelly, one of the original editors of The Whole Earth Catalog, has been running or co-editing the site Cool Tools since its origins as a mailing list in 2000. It's now settled into a blogish form, but last year Kelly decided to collect the best bits from the site and publish them, as a book. In print. In 472 pages of print, to be exact.
There's at least one webby twist, though: Each item has a QR code which you can scan with your smartphone to get a link to the seller's site. That makes perfect sense, really. While the contents of the sites may change, the sites themselves will be much more stable (particularly if the book does a good job of driving business to them).
It's an interesting hybrid. A physical book that you can leaf through will provide a nice overview -- nicer than scrolling through screen after screen, unless your screen is pretty big -- and you still have the links. Granted, the links are a bit more cumbersome to chase, but if you're mostly browsing and only occasionally visiting the linked sites, that's probably not too bad.
Even if it just ends up being an interesting conversation piece, Cool Tools is only the latest in a line of blogs and other web sites spinning off books. Randall Munroe of xkcd fame, for example, is publishing his What If series in book form. Just to emphasize how not-real-time an enterprise book publishing is, even with today's technology, the book won't actually be available until September.
It's one thing if publishers are still putting out genre fiction paperbacks or coffee table photo books. The paperback as a tradition will probably be around for a while yet, and you don't have to buy a fancy reader to enjoy it. The coffee table book is the canonical example of something that print can still deliver better.
But a catalog and a web comic would seem to be two of the least print-friendly formats that could feasibly be printed. And yet they are. I have no idea why this should be, but I don't mind.
What good is half a language?
4 years ago
2 comments:
You don't say why the paperback tradition will probably be around for a while (though I think I know).
I deal with an industrial supply house whose catalog is available both on paper and on line, all 3K+ pages of it. I've tried using it on line, and always find the paper version more browsable. And when I find what I want, I call them on the phone, ask questions to which I receive courteous, informed answers, order my merch, and have it in less than 24 hours. The only advantages of the on line version are that the search function is a tiny bit faster than the index, and I don't have to feel guilty about the dead trees.
I think the hybrid is here to stay. I also expect that, as the eyes of technonerds age, the experience of reading an actual book propped up in bed will lose its edge to improved technology. Someday it may even become gemuetlich to work the crossword on a screen. Who knows?
I'm mostly going by sheer inertia. People who have been buying paperbacks know what to expect from a paperback, where to get them, and so forth.
More than that, paperbacks are relatively cheap. Why buy an ebook reader, and then have to buy reading material for it, when you can just buy the reading material? I'm not even sure which format is cheaper, but if I recall correctly, it's close enough that even if ebooks are cheaper than paperbacks, it's going to take quite a while to make up the difference -- by which time your ebook reader will be "obsolete" in the sense that tech becomes obsolete, or possibly just stop working (what most of us mean by "obsolete").
By now, some significant portion of people who actually prefer ebooks, for whatever reason or reasons, already have them. I haven't done any numbers at all on this, so I may be completely wrong, but it seems quite possible that paperbacks have already taken most of the short-term hit that they're going to, and that the rest will be a matter of attrition as younger readers bypass them and older readers eventually ... um ... stop reading.
At that point, paperbacks will have gone the way of vinyl ... oh, wait ...
Post a Comment