A slew of recent music books has resuscitated the old notion of the "enhanced" ebook. From Graham Nash's Wild Tales and Neil Young's Waging Heavy Peace to Dolly Parton's superior Dream More (based on her rip-roaring commencement speech for the University of Tennessee in 2009), these books come with much-trumpeted multimedia content: "exclusive" images, and videos of interviews and performances. Nash's memoir, for example, includes audio clips of more than 20 songs he has written or recorded and which are discussed in the text, alongside 11 photos, and four videos.
What's slightly strange about these offerings is that they beg the question of what "enhancement" actually means. After all, in a conventional biography you would expect the inclusion of photographs from the author's life to be a basic requirement not a paid-for "extra". Another problem is that most of these features are platform-limited: you can't access them in simple e-readers or generic reading apps as they require specialist software or hardware capabilities your Kindle or Kobo won't cut it.
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