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What Do You Do With Books When You're Done Reading?
John wrote: "Julie wrote: "The book is still a book. The words and story are what I attach myself to. I could never keep all the books I would like to in physical form. This way I can keep them forever and the..."
Call me sceptical but I don't think it possible to feel attached to a virtual 'book'. A physical copy has a smell, a texture. If you've had it a long time, it has stains (in my case, usually bloody ones - from cat scratches). A few of mine have nibbled corners, from when the cats where kittens. They have obvious memories attached and always will. I don't have an ereader, or a Kindle or anything and have no desire for one. They just aren't the same animal, in my opinion.
Call me sceptical but I don't think it possible to feel attached to a virtual 'book'. A physical copy has a smell, a texture. If you've had it a long time, it has stains (in my case, usually bloody ones - from cat scratches). A few of mine have nibbled corners, from when the cats where kittens. They have obvious memories attached and always will. I don't have an ereader, or a Kindle or anything and have no desire for one. They just aren't the same animal, in my opinion.





We have a friend who has literally made millions of dollars selling vinyl records in Europe. So I guess there are some people who still like them. Me, my collection was lost in a flood. And what do I do with over 100 VCR tapes of things I just had to have. We no longer can view them - no tape machine here anymore - and I don't want the expense of changing them to DVD's and then the next thing will come along soooooo

I guess it goes to show that everybody is different. Not one person in this household of six has a Kindle, ereader or anything. We still buy cds and dvds, and we even have a few old tapes knocking around. You remember those old tape players you could hook onto your belt? They are still here too. I think I'm a bit old-fashioned. I don't even consider 'digital art' to be real art. I'm aware that there are people who will strongly disagree, but please, don't all attack at once. This is just my opinion. I'm not saying everybody has to agree with me.




a couple days ago I bumped into just one more reason not to get kindle - I was travelling in town transport bus from work to train station... the bus driver pushed the brakes so hard I accidentally slammed the sharp point of my elbow joint right into my mp3 player, which got pinned in between my body and the joint... result? display totally ruined and I had to buy a new one... my point? yes there are protective cases and all, but this is one thing that physical books are less sensitive to
I get the advantages, but dont count on me becoming one of the convertees saying how they would never get back to a paper book :)
I am WAY too proud of my bookshelf :)


That sounds awesome! My daughter got me a cover for Christmas that's textured, plus I have a standard black leather one. I love "tricking out" my Kindle with skins, cases etc. It just keeps it fresh looking. The new dock is cool too. I have several cookbooks on the the kindle and I can put it on the dock and place it on the counter and look at it while I'm cooking, plus the speakers are great for music and movies. The prices on that can vary, some are reasonable and some more expensive. I got one that's sort of a generic version, but it works for me. Lots of fun!


well, try a ride in Bratislava town transport sometime, and we will see how well your kindle fares against your own elbow :D
no offense meant, just trying to lighten the mood lol :)
and there is another thing that I wouldnt swap anything for, not even for a kindle - I didnt see them, but I can imagine all sorts of weird looks at me when I took out A dance with dragons in its hardback version, or later, when I took out Memories of Ice out of makeshift protective case, all that on a train, after work, night train, lol... y know, all ppl around, or most of them, cell phones, smartphones, notebooks, tablets and all that kind of can-do-everything stuff, plus some e-readers at times... and then, me, taking out a big, thick tome, making myself comfy (when most ppl in the train think either of doing little or just dozing lol), and then taking out a THICK tome :D... I can tell you thats priceless :)

But as I take a break from decluttering and dusting my bedroom. The 900 books in here are stressing me out. The 900 print books which are mostly mass market paperbacks take up 4 full size bookcases, the top of my desk, a plastic underbed container and a minibookshelf. My Kindle has almost 600 books on it and it fits in my purse. I only paid for about 20 of the books on it and the most expensive one was $6.
So .., I really see the benefit of both. I can read at work and use the Kindle there. I try to keep to my print books at home to reduce the stacks. But I check the Kindle price for books first and it it's cheap on Kindle that's where I get it, if my library doesn't have it. I don't buy anything now that my library has.

I have a Pride and Prejudice book that's a fake book with a safe inside. My mother got it for me for my birthday. Must be a common cover for things!

Depending on where it's printed, I like to keep the cuisine indigenous

On the ebook debate, they can coexist but, in my household, that has 4 ereaders, books are purchased more frequently than the files downloaded. I would say 8 books purchase to every one ebook. I was a big proponent of the Nook but, I don't get the same visceral enjoyment from an ereader but, they are great for downloading library books.



Since receiving my iPad as a gift a year ago, I've been given, selected as free (from "Pixel of Ink" ) and purchased ebooks. I've found that I enjoy reading an ebook while working out on the elliptical trainer at the gym. I don't have to turn actual pages from beneath the elastic that is necessary to strap a book to the control panel! With the iPad, I just swipe! Even so, like Mary, I'll never convert completely to ebooks. I like to hold a book in my hand, especially when reading outdoors (where the iPad isn't practical because of its weight) basking in the sunshine of a typical California day. I also like owning collections of books that I can touch and see per the paragraph above. I'm definitely a collector and I like to own signed copies whenever I can get them. So, I go to the book-signings of my favorite authors whenever they're in my region. (I'll drive a few hours if it means I can do a meet and greet and get a personalized signature!)
I'm a book geek and proud of it!

I used to have an issue with hoarding books. I liked the way they looked and, in a few cases, thought a second read may be in the future. Eventually, I got tired of trucking them around when I moved (too frequently). A few moves ago, instead of unpacking them at my new place, I donated over 200 of them to a local charity and have never looked back!
Now, unless it's a gift for someone else, I almost never buy books. If I can't find it at my library or in digital copy, I don't minding missing out on it. Then again, I'm lucky to live in a county with a VERY well funded library system.


His alternate mode is a library made out of them and his main weapon is verbal barrage incorporating various book quotes that can bring down a dream debate team of Stephen Colbert, Jon Stewart, Bill O'Reilly and James Carville.

http://www.operationpaperback.com (my favorite)
These folks just collect large amounts of gently-used books (hardcover and paperback but paperbacks that fit into a side pocket of cargo pants are preferred) and ship huge quantities at once over to known FOBs that don't have BX/PX services.
http://www.soldiersangels.org (I'm a member)
These folks send everything to all kinds of places, from one-on-one gifting to warriors in the field to the en masse support of wounded warriors in hospitals, Soldiers Angels has needs for books, all genres, used, eBook or otherwise. Soldiers Angels actually has a collection maintained in some hospitals for the wounded (and their visiting support of family, friends, etc. who sit by a bedside) mostly over in Germany where yes, there's a BX to buy new books but somehow, people don't think to "go shopping" when they are at their wounded loved one's bedside...however, the bookrack down the hall at the nurses' station is another matter :)
There are other organizations, even donating books to your local VFW is probably helpful because the VFW and VA work together, too. Giving the books to military personnel is one of the few low-cost ways to support our troops with something that lasts longer than a stale cookie in the mail.
-sry
p.s. Chrissy, I'm completely broke--beyond poverty and into destitute--so I honestly cannot remember the last time I had money to BUY a book either. The Great American Library System is incredible. Having lived overseas in non-English-speaking countries myself I can attest that our library system is far more extensive than anywhere else in the world, except possibly India's. The real crime is that our literacy rate continues to fall to sickening levels.

I have to chime in here, even though we're talking about donating books not discussing book recommendation. Buy the Foundation Trilogy and then #4 and #5 but after that, Isaac Asimov didn't write them and they aren't worth reading IMO. I'm old enough, I was reading them when they came out (gasp! OMG I feel so frakkin ancient just saying that!) As for the Robot Universe stories, I'm not sure you're going to get the complete set by buying ANY anthology and his robot books are definitely worth reading prior to reading Foundation. He ended up merging the two universes ultimately, with an elegant and artistic introduction of R. Daneel's "plan for humanity"....kind of a good robot god story, which I found a little amusing and a little bit of a cop out when I read it the first time.
Asimov's robot books, individually, are also worth owning. I think the best are (not necessarily in this order, just as I'm remembering them)




and please note that I, Robot is not on this list--deliberately. I hated that story and it's a short story, not a full-fledged novel anyway. Another outstanding robot short story that was turned into a novel and then into a fabulous movie was

I'd also note that while

And any of these that you buy and don't want to keep to re-read DEFINITELY would be popular donations to serving military!! :)




I have a kindle, but since my wifi's not set up I haven't done anything with it yet, lol. But even once it's set up, I think I'll probably still collect books. I have three or four boxes stashed around my house in various places; and they aren't little boxes, either.

I'm not trading as many print books as before. I used to post anything I could on book trading sites. Now unless it's a book that has a waiting list, it goes in the thrift store box. I keep nothing. There's nothing I read that's hard to find or expensive to replace. I don't need it hanging around the house.

If I don't want to keep them I take them to a local second hand book shop to see if they want to buy them off me (I buy WAY too many books, so I need to get some kind of return if I can). If they don't want them then they go to a charity shop.

I'm worried they may eventually need a room all to themselves!


When I am finished reading a book it goes into my library here at home.

Exactly! nothing better than that old shelf.




Books mentioned in this topic
The Caves of Steel (other topics)Pebble in the Sky (other topics)
The Robots of Dawn (other topics)
Robots and Empire (other topics)
The Bicentennial Man and Other Stories (other topics)
More...
One interesting question is at what point do people make the leap from attachment to the physical book to a virtual one. I still like real bookshelves and books, but am using a reader as well. The same is true with CDs vs. MP3s. I want substance and liner notes, but it is too convenient to browse a music collection on a screen and then click for instant play. Or am I lazy?