Carbon Dating for Books

Pile of Computer Trash
Pile of Computer Trash as seen on eCyclingSolutions.com

You could always date a movie by the women’s hair and make-up. You can date a book by the technology.

Recently I’ve been teaching with a fifth edition textbook. That’s about ninety-five in book years. It shows, too, in the technology that infuses the writing samples. Someone complains that gas attendants don’t pump your gas anymore; you have to go inside to pay the attendant in the glass booth. (I barely remember that era, it was so quickly replaced by swiping debit cards at the pump.)

These authors suggest that you retype your draft whenever the proofreading marks get too thick. (Remember those computer-in-every-classroom fundraisers of the mid 1990s?)

I don’t mean to single them out. Reading a children’s novel published only a couple of years ago, my son and I were struck by a character using a cell phone–to talk instead of text.

At a writing conference, I told friends we were all writing historical fiction, and they laughed. I was classifying my novel (set in 1970) as historical fiction. I only lived part of it; I researched the rest. They could see that. But we’re still experiencing Moore’s Law, as we double the speed every few months. By the time you can finish writing a book (fiction or non), chances are good that your communications methods are outdated. What about where and how you watch a movie? How you communicate with colleagues? How involved you are in social media? It affects the plot and even affects the characters of many people I know.

This reminds me of dollhouse fanatics who create period miniatures with furnishings and inventions accurate to the given year, only now our writing anachronisms might be only a month off. To accurately portray our communications, you have to know when the technology first appeared, when it was adopted by people with that person’s economic status and personality traits, and when it became universal for that culture.

By the way, when I was involved in the Women & Books 2007 study, we learned that fewer than 2% of book purchases were eBooks, but that those buyers bought plenty of them. Less than four years later, Amazon and Barnes & Noble have announced that eBooks account for over half of their sales–their online sales anyway. (See, for example, this Fast Company article.) So add one more thing to watch for: how are characters reading their books in your book?

Text © Gwyn Nichols 2011

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