Monday, October 20, 2008

Splash du Jour: Monday

Q. The Crimson Petal and the White was recently serialized in the British newspaper The Guardian, which posted each episode on the web. Did it feel odd to send your work out into cyberspace in this way?
Michel Faber: I haven't traveled into cyberspace to see it. I wrote it for myself, on paper. And I'm sure that if my work is destined to survive, it will survive on thin slices of tree, not as digital impulses flitting around in computers. Giving people a taste of my novel on the Internet is fun, but Bill Gates' dream of a future where books no longer exist is the sort of folly that only someone who doesn't appreciate literature could conceive. Books are meant to be held and taken to bed.

Have a great Monday!
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1 comment:

JoanneMarie Faust said...

I think I'm in love! Faber knows just how to talk for this girl. I love all the digital information I am privvy to, but nothing will ever replace an actual book. Hussy that I am, I go to bed with one, every night, and have no intention of changing that.