Showing posts with label The Year of the Electronic Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Year of the Electronic Book. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

THE KINDLE & A WW2 KNAPSACK


I thought I'd pick up on a couple of points made by Lisa Jardine in a Point of View last week: that books are meant for sharing; not something envisaged by those marketing the Kindle in this Year of the Electronic Book.


 'Passing a book from hand to hand' was what was expected to happen to this Penguin re-printed in 1941- the blurry type reads:

 FOR THE FORCES
Leave this book at a Post Office when you have read it, so that men and women in the Services may enjoy it too.

- something one wouldn't want to do to a Kindle.  However, a Kindle with all its downloads would have been ideal in a soldier's haversack - better in many ways than this WW2 equivalent -The Knapsack published in 1939 for 'the soldier on active service' - a pocket book of Prose and Verse compiled by Herbert Read.

It has Pages for Notes and Additions. A Kindle could easily supply Additions but not Notes - for as Lisa Jardine observed there is no way of annotating a Kindle or filling the margins with private jottings.
 

Kindles are purely functional with no human story attached whereas this worn copy of The Knapsack does have a story. It survived Dunkirk along with the soldier who read it and scribbled in it. They were recued by a paddle steamer, the Medway Queen.
The soldier was my father and the book will always be cherished.