The load for literary-prize judges has never been light, and they have never hesitated to remind the public of the fact. There have been confessions of retiring to the bath with a pile of books for the night and stoic stories of lugging suitcases filled with long-listed novels through airport lounges, while one judge spoke of simultaneously rapid-reading and breast-feeding her newborn.
So when Susan Hill, the author and Man Booker prize judge, Tweeted the news that she and her fellow judges would begin receiving this year's 130-140 submissions on an e-reader, you might have said it was about time that the Booker finally plugged into the electronic age.
After all, its judges are nearly always high-profile academics, broadcasters or authors, all of whom are invariably reading on-the-go. This year's Kindle offer by the prize administrators allows them to cut through their immense reading load by whipping out their machines in spare moments wherever they go.
And yet, might something be lost in the Booker's endorsement of e-reading? Will the prize's chairwoman, Stella Rimington, for example, feel the same wanton pleasure while lying back in her bath with an e-reader bobbing above the bubbles instead of a slightly soggy physical copy? Will she read the book she has downloaded in the same way she would a book with a dust jacket, pages and spine?
Ion Trewin, literary director of the Booker prizes, who had the idea to send out Kindles along with a physical copy of the submitted books, does not dispute that the e-read will be different from a paper one.
"I want to help the judges who have an awful lot to read. If it helps that they want to read the entries electronically, we should make that possible for them. I will be very interested [in] whether they like them or don't like them," says Trewin.
Perhaps it is not a matter of like or dislike in the case of Booker judges. While the option to read in both forms is a useful one, a judge on an e-reader might not be able to do the job as effectively - the pulling out of quotes, the under-linings, crosses or ticks along the margins, the folding over of a particular page that may be useful practice for judges.
Trewin insists that, on a more general level beyond Booker judging, it is not a case of the new replacing the old: "Reading on a Kindle is a different sort of reading. If you have a book printed on paper, there's a texture aspect as well. I have always said that the Kindle is not going to replace the book."
His point about the look and feel of the book impacting on the reading experience is an important one. There is a romance in books that an e-read will never acquire. Some feel that breaking the spines of new books, alphabetising them on shelves and enjoying the aesthetics of the cover are central to their love of reading.
One former Booker judge reflects how he gave many of his booklist away, but also kept a favourite few on his shelf. That physical memory of a much-loved book is negated when a download is deleted to make way for another on an e-reader. The judges will receive their books in both forms this year, but there is a fear that the Booker's hailing of electronic reading might set the ground, in years to come, for an eventual replacement.
Book-prize administrators are not leading the way in reading habits. They are responding to the sea-change which has seen Amazon sell more books for its Kindle device in America than paperbacks in the last three months of 2010. E-readers are being spawned every day and only a Luddite would suggest that Kindles are detrimental to literary culture: it is a great thing to have people reading books - in whatever form. Yet a convenient read does not necessarily equate to a better, more thoughtful one, as this year's judges may discover.
- INDEPENDENT
E-readers to help lighten load for Booker judges
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