I'll start with the clinical: according to the dictionary (and Wikipedia), poverty is "the state of one who lacks a usual or socially acceptable amount of money or material possessions." So if you don't have as much as everyone around you, you're poor.
I'll move on to the personal. Poverty is the state of waking up freezing in the middle of the night because it's a waste of money to run the heat when everyone is sleeping anyway, and you need that money to buy lunch meat from the "eat it tomorrow or it will kill you" clearance bin. Poverty is the state of making that lunch meat last a week and a half, even after the edges have started turning green. Poverty is sending your little sisters to beg staples off the people in the crap-ass apartments surrounding yours, because everyone is poor, and everyone is hungry, and cute little girls stand a better chance of success than anybody else. That's poverty.
The U.S. Census Bureau said that 43.6 million (14.3%) Americans were living in absolute poverty in 2009. According to the report they released this past Tuesday, the national poverty rate rose to 15.1% in 2010...and we still don't know what 2011 is going to look like.
This is the "official" poverty level, by the way; there are a lot of sociologists who think that the actual poverty level is much higher, since we calculate using a "socially acceptable miniumum standard of living" that was last updated in 1955. To quote Wikipedia again: "The current poverty line only takes goods into account that were common more than 50 years ago, updating their cost using the Consumer Price Index. Mollie Orshansky, who devised the original goods basket and methodology to measure poverty, used by the U.S. government, in 1963-65, updated the goods basket in 2000, finding that the actual poverty threshold, i.e. the point where a person is excluded from the nation's prevailing consumption patterns, is at roughly 170% of the official poverty threshold."
Things that did not exist in 1955: home computers. The internet. Ebook readers.
It is sometimes difficult for me to truly articulate my reaction to people saying that print is dead. I don't want to be labeled a luddite, or anti-ebook; I love my computer, I love my smartphone, and I love the fact that I have the internet in my pocket. The existence of ebooks means that people who can't store physical books can have more to read. It means that hard-to-find and out of print material is becoming accessible again. I means that people who have arthritis, or weak wrists, or other physical disabilities that make reading physical books difficult, can read again, without worrying about physical pain. I love that ebooks exist.
This doesn't change the part where, every time a discussion of ebooks turns, seemingly inevitably, to "Print is dead, traditional publishing is dead, all smart authors should be bailing to the brave new electronic frontier," what I hear, however unintentionally, is "Poor people don't deserve to read."
I don't think this is malicious, and I don't think it's something we're doing on purpose. I just think it's difficult for us, on this side of the digital divide, to remember that there are people standing on the other side of what can seem like an impassable gorge, wondering if they're going to be left behind. Right now, more than 20% of Americans do not have access to the internet. In case that seems like a low number, consider this: That's one person in five. One person in five doesn't have access to the internet. Of those who do have access, many have it via shared computers, or via public places like libraries, which allow public use of their machines. Not all of these people are living below the poverty line; some have voluntarily simplified their lives, and don't see the need to add internet into the mix. But those people are not likely to be the majority.
Now. How many of these people do you think have access to an ebook reader?
I grew up so far below the poverty line that you couldn't see it from my window, no matter how clear the day was. My bedroom was an ocean of books. Almost all of them were acquired second-hand, through used bookstores, garage sales, flea markets, and library booksales, which I viewed as being just this side of Heaven itself. There are still used book dealers in the Bay Area who remember me patiently paying off a tattered paperback a nickel at a time, because that was what I could afford. If books had required having access to a piece of technology—even a "cheap" piece of technology—I would never have been able to get them. That up-front cost would have put them out of my reach forever.
Some people have proposed a free reader program aimed at low-income families, to try to get the technology out there. Unfortunately, this doesn't account for the secondary costs. Can you guarantee reliable internet? Can you find a way to let people afford what will always be, essentially, brand new books, rather that second- or even third-hand books, reduced in price after being worn to the point of nearly falling apart? And can you find a way to completely destroy—I mean, destroy—the resale market for those devices?
Do I sound pessimistic? That's because I am. When I was a kid with nothing, any nice thing I had the audacity to have would be quickly stolen, either by people just as poor as I was, or by richer kids who wanted me to know that I wasn't allowed to put on airs like that. If my books had been virtual, then those people would have been stealing my entire world. They would have been stealing my exit. And I don't think I would have survived.
We need paper books to endure. Every one of us, if we can log onto this site and look at this entry, is a "have" from the perspective of a kid living in an apartment with cockroaches in the walls and junkies in the unit beneath them. A lot of the time, the arguments about the coming ebook revolution forget that the "have nots" also exist, and that we need to take care of them, even if it means we can't force our technological advancement as fast as we might want to. I need to take care of them, because I was a little girl who only grew up to be me through the narrowest of circumstances...and most of those circumstances were words on paper.
Libraries are losing funding by the day. Schools are having their budgets slashed. Poor kids are getting poorer, and if we don't make those books available to them now, they won't know to want them tomorrow.
We cannot forget the digital divide. And we can't—we just can't—be so excited over something new and shiny that we walk away and knowingly leave people on the other side.
We can't.
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September 17 2011, 04:02:15 UTC 5 years ago
I want to be a youth librarian because I want my library to be the kind of wonderful place it was for me. Thank you once again for saying so well what needs to be said.
September 17 2011, 04:02:44 UTC 5 years ago
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September 17 2011, 04:04:18 UTC 5 years ago
And for remembering how ereaders grant access to us gimps who can't hold a regular book for as long as we want to read without paying for that in pain. I escape a lot of the pain by reading, which I couldn't do if I didn't have my ebook reader.
But there's more than one kind of pain, and I used to escape non-physical pain the same way with print books. Thank you for the reminder that they're still vastly important.
September 17 2011, 04:07:26 UTC 5 years ago
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September 17 2011, 04:07:37 UTC 5 years ago
I was never at that point that we didn't have enough to eat or heat, but my mum always turned every penny three times before she spent it and she usually spent it on my brother and me. Going to the book store was always an adventure and the library was a second home.
I will do what I can to share your words with as many people as possible and raise awareness!
Thank you!
September 17 2011, 04:11:14 UTC 5 years ago
September 17 2011, 04:09:39 UTC 5 years ago
I don't think paper is dead. I think paper will endure a long time. I am afraid of paper not being looked on an environmentally friendly anymore and becoming rare, like vinyl records, which still exist and are still able to be played, but are aging with each day.
Acidic paper and bad bindings are only the beginning of the problem. Libraries don't want the source of dust that books create and regularly 'release' the older books. If not all books come out in paper editions anymore, some books will be forever on the other side of the poverty chasm you describe here.
I'm heartened though to see that you're not alone in fighting back, this is somewhat older news, but there have been updates and this song is perhaps a burgeoning anthem for this movement. Thank you to
September 17 2011, 04:11:33 UTC 5 years ago
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September 17 2011, 04:11:53 UTC 5 years ago
You're absolutely right. Books were SUCH an important part of my young life. If I'd had to pay $150 up-front for a device to read them, though, I wouldn't have had them. My family did not live in poverty, mostly because my mother is a determined and hard-working woman, and was very good at stretching what we had.
I can't think of a lot of steps backwards that would be worse than pricing the less privileged out of being able to read.
September 17 2011, 04:21:11 UTC 5 years ago
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September 17 2011, 04:19:35 UTC 5 years ago Edited: September 17 2011, 04:20:23 UTC
Secondly, Yes, when you're poor sometimes it's all you can do to scrape up money for a used ppbk or two. I remember my college years all on my own and skimping on my food budget so I could by books to read for fun because I sure couldn't afford to do much of anything else.
So, yeah, I doubt I'll ever give up print books. In fact, I don't own an ereader yet because I think ebooks are still too expensive and they don't offer many of my choice of non fic research books in eformat yet either. I am better off financially now than I was as a kid or as an older college student but I'll NEVER forget being that kind of poor.
September 17 2011, 04:21:23 UTC 5 years ago
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September 17 2011, 04:34:17 UTC 5 years ago
I've taken the liberty of reposting.
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I hope this post helps at least a few people see the bigger picture.
September 17 2011, 06:04:46 UTC 5 years ago
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September 17 2011, 05:07:06 UTC 5 years ago
Thank you. ♥
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September 17 2011, 05:24:02 UTC 5 years ago
And as often as I've said, "Look, not everyone can afford this," I end up running into a brick wall of confusion--don't I know that E-readers are cheap? They don't understand when I say that an e-reader costs a fifth of my monthly income and that I can't afford this.
So I thank you, Seanan-Mira, for loving e-books and computers and tech...and still understanding that poverty makes a lot of things impossible, even if it shouldn't.
September 17 2011, 06:05:32 UTC 5 years ago
Maybe someday, it won't be.
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September 17 2011, 05:28:51 UTC 5 years ago
Of course, arguing about it doesn't change anything. If the market isn't there for paper books, they won't get made. I'd rather subsidize readers/internet access devices than prop up a physical printing industry, if it comes to that.
September 17 2011, 05:56:46 UTC 5 years ago
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Reason 7842 I love Powell's Books in Portland, Oregon!
September 17 2011, 05:56:24 UTC 5 years ago Edited: September 17 2011, 05:59:20 UTC
I could not agree more...oh, and I was in Portland this week and had dinner with my daughter downtown, so of course stopped into Powell's. Went to get One Salt Sea and couldn't find it (they had a couple of copies of each of your other Toby books, just not the new one). Went to the computer--computer says "Yes, we have 7 copies on aisle 305." Went back--there was no "don't look here" spell cast. Nada on the shelf. Asked the very friendly, helpful Powell's staff member and she said, "Oh that's been SUCH a popular request! I think the 7 copies are in overstock" so she took me back to aisle 305 and pulled down several copies, handed me one, removed the NEXT AUTHOR'S "extra" books and put yours on the shelf where they belonged! Hooray!
Re: Reason 7842 I love Powell's Books in Portland, Oregon!
September 17 2011, 06:08:01 UTC 5 years ago
September 17 2011, 06:25:54 UTC 5 years ago
One of the things I do see is a lot of kids in the library after school, using the computers.
But the local libraries are having trouble staying open, with the stupid line "We can't be the local babysitter". Why Not? How else are kids going to get to the books and computers if they aren't available at home? The only answer IS the library.
Our library is on the border between the Rich Area and a poor area. So yes, there are a lot of people who use the library who would have no other access to books. Moose just uses the library because his room can't physically hold any more books, so I keep telling him to go borrow them instead. Please. Pretty Please.
I've heard nasty rumors that in Republican States they want to Privatize the Public Libraries, so that corporations can charge a Fee for Renting the Books. I see Ben Franklin spinning wildly in his grave. That is exactly why he started Public Libraries in the first place 200 years ago. *sigh*
Keep our Public Libraries Open. Please.
September 17 2011, 14:58:42 UTC 5 years ago
I should point out that I very much agree with you; public libraries should be open and as free as possible, because that's exactly why they're there. It's just that the historical basis for your argument isn't entirely possible. Andrew Carnegie would probably be a better person to use. Not perfect, but better.
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September 17 2011, 06:43:04 UTC 5 years ago
From my own childhood, poverty is living in a horrible orange house with cockroaches the size of small cats and not being able to afford bug spray. Poverty is living in a crappy house out in the country on what used to be a poorly run sheep farm and occasionally running over sheep bones with the lawnmower, living in an upstairs bedroom that was impossible to heat in the winter and became a haven for thousands of flies in the summer; with a landlord dumber than a sack of hammers who was almost never around. Poverty is there still being a sheep farm close enough to that house to have to constantly put up with the smell and noise of them. Poverty is being unable to drink the well water because of nitrates from the sheep farm, and having to drive to grandma's house to fill dozens of five gallon jugs with drinkable water because we couldn't afford to refill them anywhere else. Earlier, poverty is being almost 8 years old before your parents could get you a bicycle, and having to live through the shame of learning so late to ride it, with training wheels.
This doesn't change the part where, every time a discussion of ebooks turns, seemingly inevitably, to "Print is dead, traditional publishing is dead, all smart authors should be bailing to the brave new electronic frontier," what I hear, however unintentionally, is "Poor people don't deserve to read."
I didn't know why I was against e-readers until you made this comment. Now I know.
For the kids like I used to be, I always donate art supplies and/or books to Toys For Tots. This year, I have a box of crayons and a copy of one of the Harry Potter books to donate.
September 17 2011, 15:56:20 UTC 5 years ago
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September 17 2011, 08:07:17 UTC 5 years ago
I'm not sure how much you read the blogs of other authors, or whether it's the zeitgeist because of the stories in the news, but this seems to be almost a meme at the moment. Even the authors who put out a lot of work in e-books seem to "get it", the people who don't seem to be mostly privileged younger people who have grown up with everything on computer and can afford iPhones and e-readers and all the infrastructure round them (internet connections and reliably power and replacing hardware every few years).
I can't see that anyone has posted links to Piers Cawley's "A Child of the Library" yet, so here are a couple. It's rather relevant. (And as he says, please spread the song as far and wide as you can -- singing is still free...)
This version, with an introduction, was done at OSCON (the Open Source conference) in Portland, Oregon, and is 6 minutes long.
This one is just the song (3 minutes), recorded at Walthamstow folk club -- many of the people there knew it and by the end pretty much everyone was joing in the chorus.
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