From Sunday’s Observer: “Oh no, it’s the death of the book … again”. Robert McCrum pokes fun at Nigel Newton, CEO and co-founder of Bloomsbury, British publisher of the Harry Potter books, for remarks on what he calls the “Napsterisation” of publishing – i.e. digitization – and the threat it poses to “the cultural and intellectual tradition of the past 600 years.”
McCrum rejoins: “Before we allow Mr Newton and the merchants of doom to seize control of our cultural imaginations, it’s worth recalling that Gutenberg was a vital part of the Renaissance. Gutenberg and our own Caxton were eventually followed by Shakespeare, Marlowe and Milton.
“Delivery systems evolve. Instead of whingeing about Google, we could celebrate the extraordinary technology that will bring a cornucopia of hitherto inaccessible material before a bigger international audience than ever before.”