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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, May 3, 2009

E-book universe slowly expanding

By HILLEL ITALIE
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

J.K. Rowling

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NEW YORK — The latest J.R.R. Tolkien project lasted six years, more than half as long as the author needed to complete his "Lord of the Rings" trilogy.

Getting permission to release a book in electronic form can be as hard, or harder, than writing it.

"The Tolkien estate wanted to be absolutely confident that e-books were not something ephemeral," says David Brawn, publishing operations director at HarperCollins UK, which announced last week that the late British author's work — among the world's most popular — would be available for downloads.

"We were finally able to convince the Tolkien estate that the e-book is a legitimate, widespread format."

Tolkien's addition to the e-club fills a major gap, and, with e-books the fastest (and virtually only) growing sector of publishing, other authors and their estates have softened. Former holdouts Tom Clancy and Danielle Steel have allowed their books to be digitized. Grove/Atlantic Inc., which has published William Burroughs and Malcolm X, expects many of its older works to become available.

"We're getting less resistance every day," says Grove associate publisher Eric Price.

But you could still build a brilliant collection with the books that remain off-line. They include, most notably, the "Harry Potter" series, and countless other favorites: "Catcher in the Rye" and "Catch-22"; "Lolita" and "To Kill a Mockingbird"; "Atlas Shrugged" and "Things Fall Apart"; "The Outsiders" and "Fahrenheit 451."

There are several reasons many books aren't available in electronic format:

  • The author or author's estate simply refuses, like J.K. Rowling, who has expressed a preference for books on paper and a wariness of technology.

  • The book doesn't fit the e-book format. Because e-technology has had limited capacity to handle illustrations, paper — recycled — was needed to read Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth," the companion to the Oscar-winning environmental documentary.

  • The author, or the author's representative, is holding out for more money. Agents complain that e-book royalty rates, commonly 25 percent of net receipts, are far too low, saying digital texts cost virtually nothing to produce and distribute.

  • The author, or author's estate, is open to e-book rights, but still not convinced that the market is big enough to justify the expense and risk of digitizing a text.

    Sometimes, just finding out whether a book has e-rights can be complicated. A handful of Jack Kerouac books can be downloaded, including "Dharma Bums" and the original manuscript (the "Scroll" edition) of "On the Road," but not the edited version of "On the Road" known to millions.

    Historian Douglas Brinkley considers himself an ink-and-paper man and said he hoped his work, which includes the best sellers "The Great Deluge" and "Tour of Duty," wasn't for sale electronically.

    But it was.

    "That's why I don't think about it," he said. "Personally, I'm smart enough to recognize the e-book trend and stubborn enough to resist it."