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E-Readers Catch Younger Eyes and Go in Backpacks

 

JULIE BOSMAN
The New York Times
February 4, 2011 ET

Some­thing extraor­dinary hap­pened af­ter Eliana Litos received an e-read­er for a Hanukkah gift in December.

“Some weeks I completely forgot about TV,” said Eliana, 11. “I went two weeks with only watch­ing one show, or no shows at all. I was just reading ev­ery day.”

Ev­er since the hol­idays, pub­lish­ers have no­ticed that some un­usu­al ti­tles have spiked in e-book sales. The “Chron­icles of Narnia” se­ries. “Hush, Hush.” The “Dork Diaries” se­ries.

At HarperCollins, for example, e-books made up 25 per­cent of all young-adult sales in Jan­uary, up from about 6 per­cent a year before — a boom in sales that quickly got the at­tention of pub­lish­ers there.

“Adult fiction is hot, hot, hot, in e-books,” said Su­san Katz, the pres­ident and pub­lish­er of HarperCollins Chil­dren’s Books. “And now it seems that teen fiction is getting to be hot, hot, hot.”

In their infancy e-readers were adopted by an old­er generation that val­ued the devices for their conve­nience, portability and, in many cases, simply for their ability to enlarge text to a more leg­ible size. Ap­petite for e-book editions of best sell­ers and adult genre fiction — romance, mys­ter­ies, thrillers — has seemed almost bottom­less.

But now that e-readers are cheap­er and more plentiful, they have gone mass mar­ket, reach­ing consumers across age and demo­graph­ic groups, and entic­ing some members of the younger generation to pick them up for the first time.

“The kids have tak­en over the e-readers,” said Rita Threadgill of Harri­son, N.Y., whose 11-year-old daugh­ter requested a Kin­dle for Christmas.

In 2010 young-adult e-books made up about 6 per­cent of the total dig­ital sales for ti­tles pub­lished by St. Mar­tin’s Press, but so far in 2011, the number is up to 20 per­cent, a spokeswoman for the pub­lish­er said.

At HarperCollins Chil­dren’s Books e-book sales jumped in re­cent weeks for ti­tles like “Pretty Lit­tle Liars,” a teenage se­ries by Sara Shepard; “I Am Number Four,” a para­normal romance by Pittacus Lore; and “Before I Fall,” a nov­el by Lauren Oliv­er. (Some sales, pub­lish­ers noted, are from old­er people cross­ing over to young-adult fiction.)

Jon Ander­son, the pub­lish­er of Si­mon & Schus­ter Chil­dren’s Pub­lish­ing, said some ti­tles, like “Clockwork An­gel” and books in the “Night World” se­ries, nearly dou­bled their e-book sales in the four weeks af­ter Christmas, com­pared with the four weeks before.

“We had an in­stant re­action — ‘Boy, a lot of kids got e-readers for Christmas,’ ” Mr. Ander­son said, adding that an­oth­er signif­icant bump in sales occurred over the three-day week­end that included Mar­tin Luther King’s Birthday. “If it fol­lows the same trend as adults, it’s the start of an upward curve.”

Dig­ital sales have typically rep­resented only a small fraction of sales of mid­dle-grade and young-adult books, a phe­nomenon usu­ally explained partly by the observation that e-readers were too expensive for chil­dren and teenagers.

An­oth­er theo­ry suggested that the members of the younger set who were first encour­aged to read by the im­mensely popular Harry Potter books tended to pre­fer hardcover over any oth­er edition, snapping up the books on the day of their re­lease. And anecdotal ev­idence hinted that younger readers pre­ferred print so that they could exchange books with their friends.

That scene may be slowly replaced by tweens and teenagers clus­tered in groups and reading their Nooks or Kin­dles togeth­er, wire­lessly downloading new ti­tles with the push of a button, studiously compar­ing the bat­tery life of the devices and accessorizing them with Jonathan Adler and Kate Spade covers in hot pink, tan­ger­ine and lime green.

“The young adults and the teenagers are now the newest people who are be­ginning to expe­ri­ence e-readers,” said Matthew Shear, the pub­lish­er of St. Mar­tin’s Press. “If they get hooked, it’s great stuff for the busi­ness.”

It is too soon to tell if younger people who have just picked up e-readers will stick to them in the long run, or grow bored and move on.

But Mon­ica Vila, who runs the popular Web site The On­line Mom and lec­tures frequently to par­ent groups about Inter­net safety, said that in re­cent months she had been bombarded with questions from par­ents about whether they should buy e-readers for their chil­dren.

In a speech last month at a par­ents’ as­sociation meeting in West­chester County, Ms. Vila asked for a show of hands to indicate how many par­ents had bought e-readers for their chil­dren as hol­iday gifts.

About half the hands in the room shot up, she recalled.

“Kids are drawn to the devices, and there’s a def­i­nite desire by par­ents to move books into this format,” Ms. Vila said. “Now you’re find­ing people who are saying: ‘Let’s use the platform. Let’s use it as a way for kids to learn.’ ”

Some teach­ers have been encour­aging, too, telling their students that they are al­lowed to bring e-readers to school for leisure reading dur­ing home­room and En­glish class, for example.

“I didn’t buy it until I knew that the teach­ers in mid­dle school were al­lowing kids to read their books on their e-readers,” said Amy Mauer-Litos, Eliana’s moth­er, adding, “I don’t know whether it’s the device it­self that is appealing, or the easy access to the books, but I will tell you, we’ve had a lot of snow days lately, and 9 times out of 10, she’s in the fam­ily room reading her Nook.”

Some younger readers have been explor­ing the classics, thanks to the avail­ability of old­er e-books that are in the public domain — and downloadable free.

Af­ter receiving a light gray Sony Read­er from her grand­par­ents for Christmas, Mia Garcia, a 12-year-old from Touchet, Wash., downloaded “Lit­tle Women,” a book she had not read before.

“It made me cry,” Mia said. “Then I read ‘Hunger Games,’ ” the best-sell­ing dystopian nov­el, “and it also made me cry.”

Her 8-year-old broth­er, Tommy, was giv­en an e-read­er, too. “I like it because I have so many differ­ent books on it already,” he said, including “The Trou­ble Be­gins at 8,” a fast-paced bi­og­raphy of Mark Twain written for chil­dren in the mid­dle grades.

Eryn Garcia, their moth­er, said the fam­ily used the local library — already stocked with more than 3,000 e-books — to download ti­tles free, sparing her the usu­al chore of “lugging around 40 pounds of books.”

“There’s some­thing I’m not sure is entirely replaceable about having a stack of inviting books, just wait­ing for your kids to grab,” Ms. Garcia said. “But I’m an avid be­liev­er that you need to find what excites your child about reading. So I’m all for it.”

Source: The New York Times
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E-Readers Catch Younger Eyes and Go in Backpacks
JULIE BOSMAN
credit: Joyce Dopkeen for The New York Times
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Many young readers like Eliana Litos, 11, of Harrison, N.Y., received e-readers as holiday gifts.
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