One  of the odd convergences of technology and content around e-books is the  availability of many classic authors as free texts through Project  Gutenberg, and even the commercial e-publishers themselves. Being free and easy to  download, there’s a certain attraction to these works over  contemporary (paid) titles.
Will this lead readers back to the pre-modern and early modern classics in the most high-tech context?
To  be sure, the typography and text flow of Gutenburg texts leaves a lot  to be desired. But then, the conventions of modern pages, such as  spacing and the punctuation of speech, are also forms that developed  over a considerable period, and were once much looser.
But,  more importantly, what happens when readers rediscover writers like  Dickens, Wilkie Collins, H.G. Wells, Conrad or Robert Louis Stevenson, in a  perfectly cheap and accessible form? Stevenson, for example, in the  short stories collected in New Arabian Nights, creates deft literary  adventure stories. There’s no sense with Stevenson that adventure and  entertainment are at odds with literary sensibility, or that narrative  momentum is incompatible with compelling characterisation. Are these the  stories the e-book could bring us back to, or invigorate for the  future?
 
 
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