Book Tech: The Best of 2007

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By Aaron Hierholzer

925909_96225187.jpg2007 was fun, wasn’t it? Between Judith Regan, O.J. Simpson, Amazon’s Kindle, the AMS bankruptcy, and James Frey vs. Oprah redux, there was plenty of shock, titillation, and Schadenfreude to go around. (We’re pointedly excluding a certain boy wizard. Months later, we’re still fatigued.) But bigger than any one of these stories was the industry’s continued march into the brave new world of technology.

And yeah, yeah, years in review are so rampant come January, but 2007 wasn’t just any year. It saw the digital world and the book world become slightly less uncomfortable bedfellows. Shelfari, LibraryThing, and GoodReads brought social networking to book lovers, e-books continued their long and arduous journey to popular consumption, and publishing in general proved itself more savvy online. That’s not to say the more disturbing trends didn’t continue—independent bookstores dropped like flies (although MySpace came to the rescue in a few instances) and the battle to keep book review sections in newspapers raged on as literary bloggers multiplied. Before moving into exciting, uncharted 2008 (ready for 979 ISBN prefixes?), the Big Bad Book Blog presents a brief overview of some of the more interesting developments of 2007.

Winter

  • Wowio.com, an ad-supported site that offers free e-books, officially launches when it strikes a deal for one hundred of Oxford University Press’s titles.
  • The Last Messages, an epistolary novel for the 21st century, is published in Helsinki. It consists entirely of text messages.
  • Amazon invests in Shelfari, giving the online bookshelf social site a huge boost.
  • HarperCollins and Random House launch competing widgets, allowing readers to browse inside their titles from blogs and other sites. Random House now has over 600,000 widgets on 2,000 sites, according to Publishing Trends.
  • Microsoft differentiates Live Book Search, its online book search program, from Google Book Search. What’s the difference? We respect copyrights, Microsoft says.

Spring

Summer

  • Roberto Bernocco releases Compagni di Viaggo, a 384-page novel the Italian author wrote on his cell phone.
  • First annual O’Reilly Tools of Change conference is held in San Jose, California.
  • Simon & Schuster launch bookvideos.tv, which features interviews of over 40 authors.
  • Richard Charkin, head of Macmillan in the UK, steals laptops from Google’s BEA booth, saying he’s just playing the same “trick” on them they play on authors with copyrighted work.
  • Microsoft adds copyrighted material to its Live Book Search; Google offers co-branded book search to member publishers of Google Book Search.
  • Penguin joins the e4book initiative, announcing plans to ask all business partners transact business completely electronically in 2008.

Fall

  • Pioneering a new university publishing model, Rice University releases Images of Memorable Cases, one of the first titles in its return to publishing after a ten-year hiatus. The book is formatted digitally by Connexions, and available in a hard copy from print-on-demand company QOOP.
  • Amazon finally releases the much buzzed-about Kindle, hoping to jump start the e-book market. EV-DO capable and reportedly quite functional, the device sells out in a matter of hours, although it received mixed reviews from some sources—primarily for its hefty $399 price tag. Many find it “ugly.”
  • Conrad Black’s myriad fans are delighted when he begins using the Margaret Atwood’s LongPen, a device that allows him to sign books remotely by way of a touchpad connected to an “autopen” in the store. Black was unable to promote his Nixon biography as he was confined to his Chicago home before being sentenced to six and a half years in prison for fraud and obstruction of justice.


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