How do ebooks and audiobooks affect appeal factor?
In a discussion on how ebooks and audiobooks affect appeal
factor, it helps to refresh our collective memory on what appeal factors are.
According to NoveList, appeal factors influence whether a book fits a reader’s
style or mood. Appeal factors include such elements as Character, Story Line,
Pace, Tone, and Writing Style (Novelist).
There is little doubt that converting a print book into an
ebook or audiobook format affects appeal factors. Mediatore in her article Reading with your ears: Reader's advisory and
Audio books states that for the recorded format an additional appeal factor
is “audible presentation” (2003, pg. 319). This factor takes into account how
the narrator combines all the other appeal factors in their narration. For many
patrons the narrator can make or break the book.
For the Character appeal factor; what tone of voice does the
narrator use for different characters? For Pacing; how quickly does the author
read and modulate their voice overall? This can cause a mediocre title with a
good narrator to circulate better than a great title poorly narrated. The inclusion of sound effects or music is another factor that can affect appeal
in audio books. As anybody who loves music knows, it certainly can affect mood
and perception. Think of a movie and how powerfully music is used to set the
tone of a scene. Taking out the visual element, as in audiobooks, only increases
music’s power.
I am a much heavier consumer of ebooks than audiobooks and
my experience has been that the ebooks format has a subtler effect on appeal than
audiobooks. With ebooks, at least when they first became widely available, what
type of file (thus device) the title was downloaded on affected the types of
options available to the reader. So appeal varied a bit from
device to device. This is very different from audiobooks where it really doesn’t
matter if you use CD’s, Playaway, or download, the end product is always the
same (Dunneback, 2011, pg. 327).
Today ebook options seem to be more universally similar
between all devices. Being able to change the size of font to me seems the most
obvious way ebooks can affect appeal factors. Less words on a page can give the
reader the feel that the book is fast or faster paced than one would experience
when reading the physical book. Ebooks are also not as easy to jump around in
but they do include cool options such as looking up highlighted words in a
dictionary. Some ebooks I’ve read also will also take the reader to a bio page
about a character when their name is selected in the text. Additionally, in my opinion, when
it comes to ebooks, touch screens are a must.
Dunneback, K., & Trott, B. (2011). E-books and Readers'
Advisory. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 50(4), 325-9.
Mediatore, K. (2003). Reading with Your Ears: Readers'
Advisory and Audio Books. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 42(4),
318-23.
NoveList. (2019). What is Appeal. Retrieved from https://www.ebscohost.com/novelist/our-products/novelist-appeals
You bring up a lot of excellent point and cite some good resources. I think these new formats can help reach other readers with different appeals. Great job and full points!
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