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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Hotel Indigo in England may be the first to replace bedside Bibles with Kindles
- Gideons International, which gives out 84 million Bibles a year, supports the project
- A Bible costs Gideons $5 to print and distribute; a Kindle in the UK costs about $139
- Stolen Kindles will be charged to the guest's credit card
Starting this month, however, the
InterContinental Hotels Group is modernizing that mission at one of its hotels,
replacing the paper tomes with electronic versions of the
Bible loaded on Kindle e-readers. Each of the 148 rooms at the chain's Hotel Indigo in
Newcastle, England, will be outfitted with a Kindle with Wi-Fi. Guests can
use the e-ink devices to catch up on scripture, as well as purchase and read any
other books available in the Amazon Kindle store.
The hotel was chosen for the
pilot program because of its rich literary and publishing history: It's a few
blocks from the Philosophical Society of Newcastle, one of the largest
independent libraries in the UK. If it's a success, InterContinental could
expand it to other locations, and other hotels might follow its lead.
The hotel's Bible-on-a-Kindle
initiative has no connection to Gideons, a Tennessee-based Evangelical group and
association of Christian professional men founded in 1899. However, the
nonprofit group has no reservations about the hotel's program.
"Anything to put the Bible in
people's hands is a good thing," Gideons spokesman Ken Stephens said. "It is a
fascinating idea, and I'm sure somehow, some way, its time will come for us. But
right now just the paper version is the best for what we do."
Stephens pointed out that paper
books are more economical for large-scale distribution. Each Gideons Bible costs
the organization about $5 to print and distribute. Although there are many free
e-book versions of the Bible floating around online, a 6-inch Kindle e-reader
retails in the U.S. for $109 (or about $139 in the UK).
Given the high price tag, Hotel
Indigo is keeping close tabs on the devices. Just like with fluffy hotel robes,
the full cost of any pilfered Kindle will be charged to a guest's credit card.
For the first two weeks of the program, the hotel is allowing guests to download
any other religious texts they like, up to $8 in value, for free.
If guests purchase other books to
read, the cost will be charged directly to their rooms. However, they can't take
the books with them, and the Kindles are wiped clean between visitors.
"As downloads will be synced to
the hotel's account, guests will only be able to read the downloaded book during
their stay," an InterContinental representative said.
Guests not keen on paying for an
e-book they might have to abandon halfway through can choose from the 15,000
free titles in Amazon's free e-book collection.
The Gideons' hotel Bible project
began in the U.S. in 1908 and has spread to 194 countries around the world. The
group estimates it has distributed 1.7 billion Bibles in the project's 104-year
history. While distributing pricey e-reading devices isn't much of a threat to
Gideons, it's likely that the proliferation of e-reading features on all mobile
devices could make a dent in demand.
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