List of figures
List of tables
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Audiobook reading on digital display
1. Understanding book streaming services
2. Bestsellers and beststreamers: Genre reading
3. The re-emergence of the old: Backlist and frontlist reading
4. Voices leading the streams? Narrated reading
5. The reading hours of the day and night: Temporal reading
6. Repeaters, swappers and constant readers: Expanded reading
Conclusion: Listen up to the reading data
References
Index
Showing how audiobooks affect literary culture, this book provides new insights into reader behaviour, effects of the audiobook boom, and business models for digital publishing and distribution.
Karl Berglund is Assistant Professor of Literature at Uppsala University, Sweden.
The resulting empirical account of the country that streams the
most audiobooks per capita is full of surprises that will make any
book historian or media scholar rethink received wisdom generated
in the absence of such hard data.
*Public Books*
This fascinating book collects Berglund’s research on streamed
audiobook “readership” patterns and influence ... Any library
supporting undergraduate or graduate degrees in literature or
communications will want to acquire this well-documented and
excellently written book.
*CHOICE*
Berglund has managed to gain access to the kind of industry data
other researchers only dream about. His study of audiobook
listeners and subscription streaming in Sweden explodes some of our
most deeply entrenched assumptions about how, when, and what people
read.
*James English, John Welsh Centennial Professor of English,
University of Pennsylvania, USA*
How can the users of Storytel transform our ideas about reading,
books, and bookselling? Anyone who cares about what readers do, and
how publishing is changing because of audiobooks should read this
compelling and uniquely researched book.
*Danielle Fuller, Professor in English and Film Studies, The
University of Alberta, Canada*
Karl Berglund’s Reading Audio Readers is invaluable to the study of
digital publishing, reading and audiobook consumption… The book is
highly useful for researchers of publishing in the streaming
age.
*Publishing Research Quarterly*
Berglund’s book is rich in lucid analyses, perceptive observations,
and well-reasoned arguments, all supported by computer-assisted
methods and refined through qualitative contextualizations.
Although the primary focus is on the strictly contemporary—or more
precisely, the period from January 2014 to April 2021—the
discussion and findings are consistently framed within a historical
perspective. This contextualization is crucial, as the phenomenon
in question appears to represent a significant shift in both
reading practices and book sales.
*Patrik Lundell, Professor in Media History, Örebro University.
Translated from Tidskrift för litteraturvetenskap*
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