I love books. My mother was a librarian, my father a teacher, and I was fortunate to grow up in a house of books. But the book is threatened – or so some say. Only a decade ago, the end of the book was predicted to be imminent, threatened by the arrival of the Kindle and other e-readers. Yet here we are, in the third decade of the twenty-first century, still mostly consuming books very much like those that Johannes Gutenberg first printed more than five centuries ago.
The future of books
The future of books
The future of books
I love books. My mother was a librarian, my father a teacher, and I was fortunate to grow up in a house of books. But the book is threatened – or so some say. Only a decade ago, the end of the book was predicted to be imminent, threatened by the arrival of the Kindle and other e-readers. Yet here we are, in the third decade of the twenty-first century, still mostly consuming books very much like those that Johannes Gutenberg first printed more than five centuries ago.