Just when we were thinking that Anne Rice, author of the Vampire Chronicles and other bestselling novels,
Back on December 13, Rice went on an Amazon customer forum and asked:
What do you think? If regular publishing is having a very hard time marketing and distributing books effectively, should major authors think about making Kindle (if possible) their primary publisher? Kindle would then be the one to introduce and advertise the book, and Kindle could license limited hard cover editions for those addicted to the "real book." Would this be good for authors? Would it be good for readers? Would Kindle do it?She may still be exploring the Kindle idea, of course.
But Vook has been producing video books for Simon & Schuster and the HarperCollins imprint HarperStudio and also making works out of public domain texts. At least for the short term, it's more likely that we'll see Vook productions on the iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad than on a Kindle. But for further down the road -- perhaps in 2010 -- it appears that Amazon is also working on a more expensive Kindle "Multi" model that would be available side-by-side with the popular, current-generation 6-inch Kindle "Uno." ("Uno" and "Multi" are my placeholder names for the two products, aimed at expressing more simply what they would be all about, but more on that in a later post.)
The Kindle "Multi," with a color touch screen and faster screen refresh, could accomodate Vook offerings by Anne Rice and other authors, and like th iPad it is bound to generate serious buzz and love.
But it all raises serious questions for me:
- It's one thing to change the way we read from words on paper to words on an electronic e-Ink display that emulates paper, but is it really likely that the activity, processes, pleasures and utility of reading are going to transformed from words to words and video and audio for a critical mass of readers?
- Does the bundling of multimedia with the text of a story or a book add so much value that readers or audience are likely to want to spend significantly more either for the bundled content or for devices on which to play the bundled content?
- Are authors in any significant numbers likely to transform their own creative processes so that they begin and proceed with the intention to create vooks rather than books?
But I am also skeptical that this will be a mass market any time soon. Of course, that's basically what Steve Jobs said about the Kindle and ereaders back in January 2008, right?

2 comments:
I doubt I would be that interested in a multi-media "book." How could I read it in public without disturbing people? Wouldn't I find the pictures/video/fillinhere would get in the way of the story line? I suspect that most true readers will feel as I do, but that the idea may entice some non-readers. Like you, I might be interested in the occasional vook on a particular topic, e.g. a fashion advice book or a cookbook, but I doubt I would want my fiction served up as a vook.
One fact that has not been discussed in any of the news releases or blogs I've read, is not everyone has access to AT&T wireless. Even if we bought an iPad, we wouldn't be able to download the books because the service they use is AT&T - unless they have a work-around as did Kindle initially (you downloaded it to the computer and then move it to the Kindle). If you want to use the iPad for its other features, you won't be able to access them because of AT&T.
I live in Wyoming which, apparently, is not considered a part of the US by AT&T. I realize the entire populations of WY, SD, MT, ND probably do not equal the population of NYC, but we are a part of the Union. It gets really frustrating to be ignored. Thank goodness Amazon saw the problem and took care of when they added Verizon service for their Whispernet. We can download directly to K2.
As for Rice, I tend to not support authors or people in general who say they're going to do one thing and then do another.
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