Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Compact Awesomeness!

I finally got my hands on a Sony Reader PRS-505, and it's everything I'd hoped it would be. Just having this little baby around makes me want to read all the time.


For those who don't know, the PRS-505 is a small, lightweight, portable e-reader that uses technologies called e-ink and e-paper (developed by MIT) to remarkable effect. The display is superb, with very sharp, crisp black lettering than can be scaled up or down in size (3 settings).

Reading from the device doesn't tire the eyes in the same way as an LCD or backlit screen does, either. In fact, I've even found that I can read a little faster from the PRS-505's screen than I can from a paperback book.

Sure, e-books are still getting off the ground. They've had a bit of a false start, perhaps because people automatically assumed it meant reading from a computer monitor, and we all do enough of that already, right? (You're doing it now!) But I think the new generation of readers (Sony has recently brought out the 700, and Amazon has the Kindle 2) are really pointing the way forward. They can store hundreds, even thousands, of books depending on format and the capacity of your SD card, and, despite it being an older model, I'm finding the PRS-505 an absolute joy to use.

That said, there's still some way to go before these e-readers go mainstream. What really needs to happen now is for publishers and distributors to embrace the new publication model. To be honest, I think they're terrified. Technology empowers authors, and I can imagine a time in the future when writers will sell e-books to fans directly from their websites without any need for profit-hungry middlemen. Of course, there's a down-side to that, too. Quality could well start to slip without professional editors and proof-readers on hand to look things over before a book goes to market.

And then there's price. As things stand now, e-books are priced way too high. There's no way publishers can justify charging similar prices to a standard hardback or even a paperback, whether the book is a bestseller or not.

Availability has to improve, too. There's no reason why every book shouldn't be released on both Sony and Amazon formats at the same time as it's released in traditional hardcopy. The cost of creating e-books is negligible and (best of all) involves no need whatsoever to kill trees.

I mentioned e-books in an interview a few years back (you can read it here), and was a bit shocked by some of the subsequent comments/forum posts. It seemed at the time (and it may still be true), that there was a tremendous amount of resistance to moving away from the printed page. Perhaps things have improved by now. Current sales of both the Sony and Amazon e-readers in the USA seem to indicate that they have.

I hope the technology will continue to proliferate. Who knows? In a few years, you might be reading a Steve Parker novel on your own little e-ink device. :)

Labels:

Friday, March 6, 2009

First Reviews Are In

Well, Gunheads has been out barely two weeks (officially even less) and already the reviews and e-mails are starting to come in from readers. So far, the response has been fantastic. You guys (and girls) have blown me away! To all of you who contacted me through this website, posted reviews online, left positive comments on various forums and message boards, I offer my heartfelt thanks. It makes all the panic attacks and sleepless nights worthwhile. :)


Living in Japan, I sometimes feel like I exist in a kind of vacuum. I don't have much contact with people here (partly by choice and partly because of language difficulties). If not for my daily gym sessions and a little English teaching here and there, I would probably qualify as a hermit or recluse. And I can't just waltz into Barnes and Noble or Waterstone's to see my books on the shop shelves (thereby reaffirming that this is not all a dream from which I'm about to wake up screaming in abject fear over impending deadlines and the like). I don't have much opportunity to meet readers at signings, either, which is yet another downside to living in the Far East. In fact, I sometimes envy my fellow BL scribes, like Dan and Graham and Nathan and Nick, for living where they do. But hearing from fans via the Internet makes up for that, and I hope you'll all continue to share your thoughts and opinions with me and with your fellow readers.

In the meantime, to those of you who called for a sequel to Gunheads and/or Rebel Winter, I'll say this: you can bet that, when the time is right, I'll be pitching those books to my publisher. I have a lot of other exciting projects to complete first (and damn they're exciting), but Wulfe and Sebastev are still on their respective service rosters, waiting to be called back into action.

In a galaxy where there is only war, peaceful retirement is not an option.

Labels: