The BookExpo America is an annual four-day convention for the publishing industry. This year around 35,000 publishers, booksellers, authors, agents and librarians perused vendors and attended parties and luncheons at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York City. Among the topics of discussion were literary blogs and the digitization of books for online proliferation.
Many in the businesses of writing and publishing are reconciling their views on the stalwart Gutenberg tradition of printing and selling books as technology moves with ever-increasing speed and begins to dominate as the source for news and information.
The availability of books on the internet stirs up many questions: Will digitization enhance or replace the book retail business (think of the giant Amazon.com)? Will book sales increase because of its availability or decrease due to pirating (a la Napster and the music sharing fiasco)? Will online reading eventually replace printed material altogether?
The big publishing houses interviewed in the article expressed a mixture of wariness and slight indignation at the threat of technological advancement on the internet. It is the view of Mill City Press that authors are afforded an advantage in this technology, a free, far-reaching means of selling and offering their books online at little cost or not cost while maximizing personal profit in book sales. To learn more about smart online book marketing, please visit http://www.millcitypress.net or click on the title of this entry to be taken directly to the Mill City Press website.
Taken from the article "Waxing Philosophical, Booksellers Face the Digital" published in the New York Times June, 4 2007 by Motoko Rich.
To view the article go to http://www.nytimes.com.
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