When
I was a kid, I loved science fiction and spent hours speculating about
the future, imagining how the miracles of science would change my life.
Cities on the moon! Jet packs! Flying cars! I could hardly wait.
Of
course none of those wonders ever came to pass. My utter failure to
predict the real engines of change that would define my life in the
exotic twenty-first century can be excused, though: no one else figured
them out, either. Even the pioneers who developed the world-wide web
never saw its potential, or guessed at the dominant force in modern life
that it has ultimately become.
The
internet was intended for secure military communications, for sharing
of academic research. Dismantling the music business, revolutionizing
the book business, supporting insurgencies, inciting uprisings revealing
government secrets and hooking people up with the old girlfriends from
high school?
Not so much.
Not
to mention putting people’s favorite movies, their business and
personal correspondence even their banking and their taxes onto their
computers.
The
world-wide web changed everything for everyone and I realized recently
that I’m the perfect case in point. Everything essential in my life is
caught in that web. I communicate with my friends through e-mail and
Facebook, keep track of my money with Bank of America on-line;
everything I buy read and listen to drops out of cyberspace. I check my
e-mail four or five times a day and my favorite websites almost as
often.
The
standard complaint at this point would be that the internet has eaten
my life, dissolved it into pulp of procrastination. I often read about
writers valiantly disconnecting from the web in order to get any work
done. But that reminds me of the people who adamantly refuse to watch
television for fear of becoming TV junkies, hopelessly tethered to and
endless series of CNN crisis reports, Weather Channel updates and Law &Order
re-runs. If you have an addictive personality I suppose you can get
hooked on anything. One grizzled contractor I used to work with told me
“I used to be addicted to booze. Now I’m addicted to coffee and work.”
For
those of us who don’t share that particular personality disorder, the
web is nothing to be afraid of. I use it as I write, checking Google and
Wikipedia a dozen times over the course of a morning’s work. When I’m
describing a field I haven’t mastered or a city I’ve never seen, I use a
combination of attitude(usually debunking; people tend to dismiss ort
take for granted the places and things they’re most familiar with) and
well-chosen details. I know what sounds convincing to me, which little
sound-bite or factoid has the ring of truth. From the peeling blue trim
at Corcoran State prison, to key computer geek terms like “hanging a
worm” and Jedgar, I get everything I need from the search engines of the
net.
I
think about the dim old days when people actually had to go to
libraries, and use the Dewey Decimal system and be polite to astringent
squinty librarians and page through dusty books for these same few
snippets of information, and pity them as I would pity people who have
to haul water out of a community well. “Google” is a common verb now –
that’s much more astounding to me than flying cars or jet-packs.
But
the internet has had a much more profound effect on my writing life
than this unlimited effortless well-spring of information, vital as it
is. I connect to my agent and my editor entirely through email, and the
public writing I do – it’s hard to call it ‘published’ in this new world
– is mostly bound up with various web-sites and e-zines (Numero Cinq,
The Good Men project, Big Glass Cases Blog, Salon) that feature my work.
Even the print magazines like Pulp Modern and Big Pulp that run my
stories take submissions on-line and pay with Pay-Pal. All my novel
submissions – including the one to Poisoned Pen press which has advanced
to the third full re-write stage – take place on line. I don’t even
bother with publishers or magazines that use snail mail. So Twentieth
Century!
The
best thing about this new world is the interaction with readers. Social
media may not really ‘build a platform’ for selling my work (I have
three twitter followers), but a good post on Open Salon generates a lot
of comments and my four years on the site have allowed me to be part of a
community of friends who read and appreciate each others’ work. As an
audience, it’s small – I seem to get a steady fifty or sixty visits for
every post. But if that many people showed up for a reading on Nantucket
it would make history. The friends I have made on this site, unlike my
two hundred and something Facebook friends (most whom I don’t even
know), actually like and respect each other, based on something real:
the words we string together to express ourselves.
As
for Nantucket, itself, the island has suffered with the rise of the
internet. “Buy local” used to mean to go off-island to do your Christmas
shopping. Now it’s a pallid protest against Zappos and Eddie Bauer and
Amazon. Sorry, everything is cheaper on line and I only buy ink and
paper books when there’s some special reason … like I want the maps in A
Dance With Dragons or I like the design of the newest McSweeny’s book.
For text, you can’t beat the e-book. And for convienience. I see Jon
Stewart interviewing someone about a Bin Laden biography; before the
interview is over, I’m reading the book. You can’t compete with that,
brick and mortar stores. I even read the New York Times and The new
Yorker and Entertainment Weekly on my Nook. I haven’t bought a printed
newspaper or magazine in years.
People
say, your whole life is tucked away in some internet ‘cloud’ – what if
it fails? But I remember the days when I typed my manuscripts – with
carbon paper! – and I still managed to lose most of those hard copies
without any help from some technological apocalypse.
If
something horrendous enough to take down the internet happens, checking
the comment trail on my latest post will be the least of my worries.
For the moment, I’m addicted to the internet and more than happy to stay that way.
1 comment:
I'd rather read than write, so the net and the convenience of ebooks has been a boon.
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