I hang with writers, editors, and even a few publishers, and I hear it over and over. The market for traditional books is dwindling, and the market for alternatively published books is growing.
For writers, this sometimes means seeking publishing sources like self-publishing, if they are dead set on holding that book in their hands. And we readers don’t care that much who published a book or how, as long as we can curl up with it at the end of a long day or sneak in a few pages over our lunch break.
Kids are no different from adults that way. I know a lot of kids who like to read, boys and girls, and I think the flap about kids not reading is no more true now than it ever was–in all times and places, some people are readers and some aren’t. The difference in kids now and kids in any other cultural era is that kids now are much more electronically savvy. They do not require a CD in order to have music, and they might not require a book in order to have text.
In addition, kids just have so many devices in their hands already. If they already have a cell phone in which they can read a book, it’s not that big a leap to an iphone or even a Kindle. There are dozens of ebook libraries out there for kids to borrow books from, and many places from which you can buy them, or even get them free.
We’re only partically wired at my house, and we all love to hold a book in our hand. But it was recently brought home to us that having a familiarity with ebooks might not be such a bad thing. My daughter went on a week-long mission trip with a group of teens, and brought a bag stuffed with a dozen books she couldn’t bear to leave home. She got through them all, too. But how much easier would it have been in terms of space and the things she had to haul around if she’d just had a phone or a PS2 with her favorite books downloaded right in? It certainly would have been one less heavy bag to carry!
I don’t think traditional books will ever go away, but I think that like with so many things, we have to keep our eyes and minds open to new things. And as parents, we have a responsibility to do that, so that we still have some oversight over what goes into our kids’ minds.
