Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

Introduced about two years ago,e-books are fast capturing the imagination of bibliophiles in India
When Sanjana Sudhakar was a child,she loved going out with her parents to buy large,colourful books at a bookshop in Delhi. Today,25 years later,she still insists on inhaling the smell of new books and has a fondness for dog-eared novels something that her five-year-old daughter Sania cannot understand. Sania prefers to read e-books instead on her fathers iPad,where stories come packaged with music and animation.
E-books were introduced in India around two years ago,and many readers are wondering if the era of physical books is drawing to a close. E-books,a popular concept in the West,has found supporters among young,tech-savvy bibliophiles in India. Vikram Khosla of Hookedonbook.com,an online library,says that he recently attended a seminar where he found out that in the US,more than one-fifth of the population read e-books last year. I think,we will soon see a similar trend here, he adds. The recent Delhi Book Fair had e-books as its main theme,with online publishers and publications,programmes and applications participating from all over the world.
Most major publishing houses in India are releasing or planning to release e-book versions of their titles. Kapil Kapoor,Director,Sales and Marketing,Roli Books,says,The e-book market is nascent in India,but we have started publishing every new title as an e-book from last year. There is a niche market for them. Caroline Newbury,VP,marketing and publicity,Random House India,adds that though the e-books sales are small,the publishing house has found that they are complementing,rather than detracting,from printed book sales. Another publisher,Ananth Padmanabhan,VP,Sales,Penguin India,hopes that in the next three years,e-book sales will grow to 15 per cent of physical book sales.
The business of e-books is not as simple as downloading free reading material off the Net. The first job for any e-book publisher is to make sure that the copy is secure. Though piracy is rampant,both in physical books as well as soft copies,e-books are more vulnerable to copying,sharing and uploading on the world wide web, says Padmanabhan.
The rising popularity of e-books inevitably raises sighs of nostalgia can anything replace the joys of curling up with a paperback or a hardcover volume and sarcasm doesnt the concept of coffee and an e-book sound absolutely romantic? But,Tanya Menon,20,a student of Delhi University,has a point when she says,I need scores of new books every semester,and it is impossible for me to carry them around.
Thomas Abraham,MD,Hachette India,agrees. If you get past the tactile-olfactory experience of paper,an e-book has benefits for older generation as well. You can carry multiple books in a slim lightweight device,you can magnify the text to a larger print and,with linked-in browsers devices,you can look up the references right there, he says. Padmanabhan says that out-of-print books,works by little-known authors and commercial fiction are the most popular categories in e-book sales.
Young readers often comment on the steep prices of e-readers and iPads,but the sales of these,too,are rising. Newbury says,The increasing availability of e-book readers with the arrival of Kindle in Croma stores recently means that e-books are entering the public consciousness more than ever.
Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram