Authors Guild Attacks Reading Out Loud

In what amounts to a shocking display of callous disregard for handicapped readers, The Authors Guild threatened to sue Amazon.com over its text-to-audio feature built into the Kindle 2.0 ebook reader.  It then negotiated with Amazon to allow authors to disable the feature for their books.

Apparently, the Guild and its member authors (who really need to have their names listed in public) have decided that the Kindle feature violates some mysterious copyright related to audio book rights.  So the logic they use seems to suggest that if I worked in my garage to invent an optical reader that would read my own books aloud to me as I passed it over the pages, I would be somehow violating an author’s copyright.  This is absurd.

The Reading Rights Coalition organized a protest in New York City a couple days ago to urge authors to allow everyone access to ebooks.

Read this amazing double-talk response to the protests from the Guild in which it pretends to have concern for handicapped readers.  They keep insisting that a device that reads a book out loud is an audio book.  No, dear Authors Guild, it is not.  It is a device that reads books out loud.  Like I do when I read to my wife.  What if a very life-like robot walked around reading a book to itself out loud.  Would that be an ‘audio book?’  Publishing companies are free to produce their own audio books and sell them and make contracts for them.  But they cannot tell people not to build machines that read.  Forget it.

The Authors Guild is mounting an attack on handicapped readers all over the world and should be made to look like the dinosaur it really is.  Which authors are a part of this assault on the blind?  Candlelight Stories wants the list.  We’ll happily publish it.  We’ll call the list, ‘Authors Who Don’t Want Blind People to Read.’

Ebooks are a Gradual Change for Publishing

At the Conversational Reading blog, Scott Esposito writes a post called ‘Why EBooks will Change How the Industry Functions.’  He’s writing about his reaction to another blogger who wrote a post about ‘Why Ebooks Must Fail.’  I like Esposito’s common sense approach to the subject of ebooks and his confidence that the publishing industry will gradually adapt to them and incorporate them in its business model:

…as I’ve come to understand the ebook format better and better, I’ve come to believe that it represents more than just a different way of reading. I’m beginning to see that it represents new modes of relations between authors, publishers, and readers, new concepts of books as a commodity, and new concepts of copyright.

I agree.  After all, it’s just words.  It really doesn’t matter how you get them into your head.  I enjoy reading some books off my iPod.  Other books I prefer to read in hardback.  Detective novels I always prefer as paperbacks.  Deciding that the book publishing industry is doomed because of ebooks is just ridiculous. 

Book Publishing: Stuttering Stan Takes a Stand

by Artie Knapp (USA)
Illustrations by Barbara Leonard Gibson

Popular children’s book author Artie Knapp hits the book stores with his latest offering, ‘Stuttering Stan Takes a Stand.’

Stanley is like most squirrels: he loves nuts, climbing trees and playing with friends. But Stanley feels different from the other animals in his neighborhood, because he has a problem with words. Teased and bullied about his stuttering, Stanley refuses to let on that his feelings are being hurt, until one day he learns an important lesson from a new friend.

Reading level: Ages 6-10
Softcover: 32 pages; Spot Illustrations
Publisher: Cincinnati Children’s Hospital (December 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-13: 978-0-9821677-0-0

Read the review in the St. Petersburg Times

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