![]() |
||||||||
|
Book/Calendar Publisher is looking for a Administrative Assistant to Photo Director. See the next featured job.
Cambridge University Press is looking for a Chief Financial Officer. See other great jobs at our Job Board.
Teachout to Gutenberg: Here's Your HatAccording to (our good friend) Terry Teachout's latest WSJ "Sightings" column last Saturday, the e-book's moment has arrived: "Yes, I miss the bookstores of my youth, and I'm sure I'll miss the handsomely bound volumes that fill the shelves in my apartment as well... The printed book is a beautiful object, "elegant" in both the aesthetic and mathematical senses of the word, and its invention was a pivotal moment in the history of Western culture. But it is also a technology—a means, not an end. Like all technologies, it has a finite life span, and its time is almost up." Is the soon-to-arrive Sony Reader really the greatest thing for content since sliced bread or, barring that, even just the much-awaited "iPod for text"? Well, Mac users might not think so now, but it sure does look spiffy. For now, Wired is exhibiting more guarded optimism: "Books have been written on sheets of dried, mashed plants for about five millennia. Paper is a cheap, relatively durable and versatile technology. Sony's new Reader will not spell the end of that long history, but it could be the opening of an interesting new chapter." Email This Post |
The First Word On the Book Publishing Industry
|
|||||||
|
Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
|