Archive | January 2020

Guest Post: author S. Evan Townsend @SEvanTownsend writes about why he loves books

In today’s guest post, the first for 2020, I warmly welcome author S. Evan Townsend to Marcia’s Book Talk. The author of ten fantasy and science fiction novels, S. Evan will be elaborating upon why he not only loves reading books but also, owning them, and many other pertinent points. With no further ado, let us allow S. Evan to tell us why he enjoys books so much…

S. Evan Townsend, author photograph

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Why I Love Books

by S. Evan Townsend

I love books.

TREASURE OF THE ROGUE MOON by S. Evan Townsend

Not just reading them and owning them, but I love books like I love liberty and justice. The invention of the book was one of the mankind’s greatest achievements and I think there can be a direct connection between the Gutenberg press and the freedoms we all enjoy today. Books did two things: they made memory permanent and information democratic. You could find a book and learn. You didn’t have to find an old person whose memory might be faulty. And it made knowledge democratic, not the sole domain of the cabal of the lucky few (call them the knowledge 1%) who could afford hand-written manuscripts. Books became cheap and plentiful thanks to Gutenberg. And people became knowledgeable. It broke the back of feudalism and the Catholic Church’s monopoly on God, both of which ended the dark ages and led to the Renaissance. This led to the Enlightenment and finally to the liberties those of us in the West enjoy. It is telling that one of the first thing tyrants want to control is books. So, I love books. You could say I’m intoxicated by them.

TREASURE OF THE BLACK HOLE by S. Evan Townsend

(An aside: I also love books as in holding, reading, smelling, and devouring their contents. And I love seeing my name on them. This is partially why I’ve resisted going to eBooks. That and most of the books I read aren’t available as eBooks, so far.)

HAMMER OF THOR by S. Evan Townsend

Now we have the Internet, which has taken the democratization of information a step further. Open your laptop or your smart phone and you can find information on just about anything.  The wonderful thing about the internet is that almost anyone can put almost anything on it without the government’s, the editors’ of the New York Times and the Washington Post, or Jeffrey Zucker’s approval. The horrible thing about the internet is that almost anyone can put almost anything on it regardless of taste, common sense, or anyone’s community standards.  And accuracy.

FORCES by S. Evan Townsend

Now books are going electronic. This is great. I only have one problem with this: permanence. Bits on a hard drive or flash memory are remarkably vulnerable to data loss and require all sorts of infrastructure to power them (to charge your iPhone battery there is a multi-billion-dollar power plant and transmission system that we all take for granted). If a civilization-killing comet hits our planet, the survivors will be looking for paper books, not electronics they can’t run. The other problem with digital media (which is being solved, it seems), is that I have lots of 5 ¼ inch “mini” floppy discs that have who-knows-what on them because I have nothing to read them. Will current technology be readable in the future when your computer interface is a contact lens you wear?

TREASURE OF THE PIRATE PLANET by S. Evan Townsend

So, we still need paper books to keep memory permanent. And we can use the Internet and electronic devices to spread the data around as quickly and efficiently as possible.

AGENT OF ARTIFICE by S. Evan Townsend

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S. Evan Townsend links

S. Evan’s website

S. Evan on Twitter

S. Evan on Goodreads

S. Evan on Facebook

S. Evan’s Amazon US page