Ayesha Karim worked as a literary agent with Aitken Alexander Associates before launching the app with Andrew Kidd, founder of The Folio Prize | Ayesha Karim
A complaint one hears all the time is that people, at least in Pakistan, have stopped reading. Or that people’s attention spans have become too short. Would you agree with this?
There has been a steady decline in people reading or attending cultural activities, plays, exhibits, drama since the 1980s with the adoption of home video — the VCR — and this trend has continued with Netflix. But with changing attitudes over the last few years towards fitness and lifestyle, physical and mental health, we see a new movement pushing back against the fast, processed and short-form: people who hunger for deeper engagement, whether it be ‘slow food’ or ‘slow vacations’ or ‘slow reading’.
Also, we see that people are tired of computer-generated marketing and with Alexi we are offering them a way out of the algorithm rabbit hole. Good books are one of the best antidotes to the distortions of the echo chamber, and we’ve combined the best of analogue and digital to create a new way of bringing them to people.
Then there are people who still prefer holding a paper book in their hands and smelling the scent of a new book. Alexi’s not going to satisfy fogeys like them, is it?
It depends how you define fogey! A significant proportion of our members are book lovers aged 55 and above, who’ve taken very readily to digital reading (not least because it offers them control over print size). We’ve also experienced a number of members who read in both formats, buying a physical copy for when they’re tucked up in bed at night and using Alexi when they are on the go.
And of course, ultimately since it is a mobile platform, Alexi is about access to a great selection of books wherever one may be, whether travelling on holiday, waiting for a doctor’s appointment or having a pedicure, so that instead of spending one’s time scrolling through social media or gaming on a phone or tablet, we can stimulate and enrich our minds by discovering a new book or dipping into one we have always meant to read.
How did you get into this venture? You were working as a literary agent with a well- established firm. Was that not satisfying?
It’s not that we weren’t satisfied in our jobs. It’s more that both my co-founder and I are passionate about access and discovery and helping readers find good books in as many different ways as they can. So we created Alexi to open up a new channel that would be available equally to everyone, everywhere. Also, we both like starting new things. My co-founder, Andrew Kidd, launched a new literary prize — The Folio Prize — a few years ago, and before I worked in publishing I worked in Silicon Valley.
Is Alexi only for readers or does it have any plans for writers as well, as in connecting potential writers with publishers?
We are very much for writers as well as readers, in that we want to help the former find more of the latter. But we don’t have any plans to play an ‘agenting’ role, no. However, we do plan to publish titles ourselves in due course.
How open is Alexi to becoming a platform for writers from Pakistan? Would it have separate feeds for different regions?
Anything is possible. Our dream would be to establish ‘bespoke’ versions of Alexi for different parts of the world, and as Pakistan is near to my heart I’d of course especially love to help its writers and readers find each other.
What are your ultimate goals or hopes for Alexi?
To excite as many people in as many parts of the world as possible about the power of good books to illuminate the human condition, and to enrich and even change us.
The interviewer is Dawn’s Editor Magazines
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, September 1st, 2017