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Jeremy Anderberg's avatar

Congrats on the feature!

I also saw the WIRED piece about AI/books, and my first thought was not that AI was going to disrupt books, but that social media already *has* in fracturing our attention. Obviously BookTok has helped publishing, to a degree, but by far the greater threat to books is that we're swamped with other internet content but can't seem to find time for reading books (something I hear from a lot of my own newsletter readers). The pull of doomscrolling and the pull-to-refresh action on Threads/IG/X is too great — I've had to work hard to cull those habits and I'm still plenty guilty of them.

Re: short books — funny timing, I just wrote a piece on embracing the doorstopper (not published yet). I enjoy the occasional short book, but in putting on my cranky old man hat, I have to think our shrinking attention spans have something to do with this too. There are soooo many readers who bristle at the very idea of a 500+ page book, let alone actually reading it. But I love the immersion that kind of story offers! Though not always, I certainly tend to remember those books a lot better, if for nothing else than the amount of time spent with them.

Thanks for a great newsletter, as always!

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Alex Scott's avatar

I've often wondered if there could stand to be more experimentation with physical books as a format. Part of what helped manga take off in the 00's was when publishers switched to a format closer to their Japanese editions--right-to-left, back-to-front, smaller sizes, lower prices. Could other books do something similar? Ever held a Japanese paperback novel? Compact, flexible, with nice slipcovers and even sometimes a bookmark ribbon. If I could publish that way through Kindle, I would.

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