Tuesday, August 22, 2006

An Inconvenient Irony


“The future of the book is the blurb.” - McLuhan

an inconvenient irony
If Marshall McLuhan’s famous book, The Medium is the Massage, were itself a blurb, then I could find the page where this famous statement appears. Having no index, though, the book isn’t convenient enough for me to verify my source! Blurbs, of course, don’t need indices.

a witty hyperbole
McLuhan’s statement was more hyperbole than prediction. Still, it has lasted some forty years because it states the obvious poignantly: As more and more information becomes available, efficient presentation becomes increasingly important. Concision and convenience really matter, but not so much that they should compromise good reading. That’s why the future of the book will always be the blurb.

a simple paradox
Few ideas fit into neat koans. And while efficient writing is not necessarily terse, modern readers dislike wordy text and extraneous content. Truly effective presentation, therefore, requires knowing the message, the audience, and how to make writing on any topic appeal to a given audience.

words to remember
As McLuhan pointed out in his own way, audience-appropriateness is crucial to the effective presentation of ideas. Often, it requires numbering lists and recasting jargon into plain English. Sometimes, it requires adding a few good pictures. Or an index.

- Glenn R Harrington, Articulate Consultants Inc.

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