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Reading Preference: Paper or ebook?
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Kathy
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Apr 22, 2012 06:35PM

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I've never ever given any though to what the cover looks like, and if someone was to judge me based on the cover of a novel then that's their problem.


However nothing compares to the feel of paper in my hands or the sound of the page turning.
However with both my nook and my paper books, I am able to read multiple books at the same time without the different stories bleeding into each other.

I will always love Paper first though, for good reason.
To quote Giles from Buffy the Vampire Slayer: "Smell is the most powerful trigger to the memory there is. A certain flower, or a-a whiff of smoke can bring up experiences long forgotten. Books smell musty and-and-and rich. The knowledge gained from a computer is a - it, uh, it has no-no texture, no-no context. It's-it's there and then it's gone. If it's to last, then-then the getting of knowledge should be, uh, tangible, it should be, um, smelly. "

Megan that Giles quote exactly sums up my thoughts and feelings on having a book in my hands. Love Rupert Giles <3



That being said, I actually do still buy print books. If I've already got some of the books in a series in paper format, I want to finish the series in paper format. Such as the new Sookie book that just came out. After work, my paper copy should be at home waiting for me to devour. Plus, if the author is someone I really enjoy reading, I might still buy the paper book.

I'm a librarian and I will always prefer books, but I'm happy to have both options. Gives me more room for yarn.

there is a petition on this - hope I'm not offending anyone by sharing: http://ebooksforlibraries.com/


I agree with you wholeheartedly, Jamie, as a librarian and knitter as well. Those are my must-buy authors mostly, too, and trying to fit my book stash with my yarn stash in my apartment is helped a lot now by my Kindle. Also, I find it easier to read on my Kindle while knitting then trying to prop my physical book up proper to read--less juggling for me to handle.

All I'd improve is the sharing/lending function - it's not available in the UK yet and it's very frustrating not to be able to share a book with my husband; and the annoying publishing schedules which vary from country to country. But that's a long-standing complaint with all media.

2. Can't beat the smell of a new Apple Product.
I find that reading on a Tablet is easier and more convenient. Plus, no-one can dog ear your pages. With my work load being so insane I benefit mostly from having the Audio Book + the ePub. Driving and listening can be great way to use your time effectively, but sometimes (and surprisingly) some books demand way too much concentration to listen to while driving. The only disadvantage is you don't get to have a bookshelf filled with books. I love the look of filled bookshelves.

This is why I love my kindle. No more will I be considered a weirdo for my reading habits by airport security, instead it will be for the myriad of other quirks that make up my personality.
I still buy paper books but only of books I really adore and feel the need to have a solid copy of. Everything else if on my kindle. I also read faster through my kindle, I have no idea why.

But when I want to read a book and I can't buy it, I try to get it on my pc and I read it there.

I LOVE books. Paper gives me a tactile and sensory experience that an ereader can't accomplish.
That being said, I have amassed a very large collection and my husband has said no more unless we win the lottery to build a library with a house attached. *hope*
even though I still sneak paper books in, its so much easier with an ebook. Also, I am a free kindle book hoarder. I will sit and get all the free books I can find. Thousands of free books, tens of thousands. Hubby teases me about it, but can't really argue. I will read ANYTHING. Or, at least give it the chance to be read. I can't say I like everything or can even stomach getting all the way through everything.
Added bonus with an ebook, instant gratification. I am a night person, so when I usually decide I need a new book, it's 1, 2, 3 AM and I can go to Amazon and yay! New book.

To combat reading in bright light, I turn my brightness down and set my device to display with white text on a black background. It helps a lot.


We have 3 now, 2 for the grownups and my old k2 for the kids. They are all on the same Amazon account so we have access to the same library and it's great. I read now like I did when I was younger, without a care in the world for shelf space or crazy cover art. Some books you might want to have on paper because they are important to you and you like the visual reminder. But the great majority I just want to *read*, and for that my kindle is perfect.
I do understand that people are fond of "real" books but I find I'm quite attached to my kindle (the device itself, not just as a reading tool). Some of the skins and covers are wonderful and can help make them feel more personal and less like a boring gadget.


Space, weight, money, the amount of books I have direct access to now. The built-in dictionary; I don't use it often but it's really quite handy when I do need it. The ability to keep everything synchronized to the Kindle app on my BlackBerry (even if I don't have my Kindle with me I can still read, I don't go anywhere without my phone. Works really well when you're waiting in the checkout line)
When it comes to the 'emotional' connection to books, I have to say it's always been about the content for me. It's the story I connect to; the memories and the feelings, they all resurface when I read the words. So for me personally, it doesn't matter what format it comes in, paper or e-ink.
As for the 'shame' part mentioned in the original post and article, that's definitely not a factor for me. And trust me, I still blush as badly reading certain scenes on e-ink as I do reading them on paper ;)

I love book shops, be it the little dusty shop that we can get lost in (awesome)that has thousands and thousands of amazing books, or the perfectly clean bookshops (also awesome) that sell only brand new book. (say me who mainly buys from amazon) Where would they all be if...

I prefer reference books as paper because those are the types of book that I will have lying open while working on something else. Otherwise I only by paper copies of books I KNOW I will read again, or when I'm buying as a gift.
I use my tablet and my phone as eReaders. This morning I was reading on my phone, Friday it was a paperback. In many ways for me, the difference is minimal and I read both interchangeably. I do have the Kindle app, but I prefer using Cool Reader because it lets me set a background colour that I can read from (start black and white make the text jumble for me). The thing I like best about an eReader is that I can choose the books I am reading this month for challenges (my addiction) and put them into a specific folder, so when I finish a book, I already have a 'shelf' of this month's reads identified... :)
Technically, I find that in the morning I need to adjust the brightness settings as the sun is right behind me when I'm at the bus stop this time of year :)
Oh, and I'm another librarian.


And you don't have to worry about them running out of batteries or breaking if you drop them. I'll probably get a kindle eventually, especially if storage gets to be an issue, but I will always love paper books.

Also, as I get older I have a harder time reading for extended periods if the font is small, so I love that I can make the font larger in my Nook books.
As much as I love my Nook however, one thing that bothers me is that like all technology they are fragile and older models become obsolete.

On the other hand, I carry three devices with me wherever I go, and adding a book to the mix just weighs down my bag far too heavily - especially given the trend towards publishing bigger, wider books in larger print (and don't even think about getting a decent fantasy or sci-fi book into the bag). And now that I've joined three erotic fiction book clubs, it's easier for me to hide particularly embarrassing covers.
I guess my reading style is mid-week, electronic, weekend, paper.


Don't even get me started on the prohibitive cost of new (meaning recently released) paper books. International shipping rates at an unfavourable currency conversion rate? (Shudder).
Dealing with all of that for a book that I might hate so intensely that I cant get past the first chapter? No thanks. It's the electronic version all the way.

I will still get books by some authors and I immensely enjoy that media.




While I am a kindle user myself I think it's important to remember that an ereader is not more eco friendly per definition.
There have been a few studies to figure out which is more eco friendly, ereader or paper books. Some studies only look at production, others also take shipping, storage, average lifespan of device and disposal into account. In the end there really is no clear answer on when an ereader becomes more eco friendly, some studies say it takes only 10/20 ebooks while according to other studies you'll need to get 100 ebooks instead of paper books (per ereader) to even out the score.
For those interested, here are some articles:
http://www.themillions.com/2012/05/ar... (this is the most extensive article I've found on the issue, great read)
http://danielgoleman.info/2010/e-read...
http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/0...

Thanks for the links. They mention a factor in this discussion that I've noticed when I chat to friends in the UK & USA: how disposable some people consider technology. In between the cost, the availability, and the mindset of disposability, they get new laptops, phones, e-readers etc etc every year or two and think it normal. It boggles my mind!
Everyone I know locally (1st world city in a third world country)with a reading device has had it for a while and doesn't think it worth upgrading until the thing breaks down completely (the curse of planned obsolescence) .... and the only people I know who bought an e-reader did so because they read voraciously (100 books in a year easily) or because they didn't already have phones or laptops that could be pressed into double duty.
Hmmm, I'd never really considered how one's relationship to shiny new gadgets can render the e-book vs paper-book debate irrelevant.


While I am a kindle user myself I think it's important to remember that an ereader is not more eco friendly per ..."
Thanks for the links! It may be comforting (depending on the numbers) to know that I am not (or may not be) the environmental pariah when it comes to paperback book love.



^This. I like the feel and smell of books. It's more comforting to me to curl up around a bound stack of paper than some sort of electronic device. That said, I do use Kindle on my phone when I'm traveling. However, the e-books I buy or borrow are
books that I have only a passing interest in. If it's something from an author I love or a subject that I find interesting, I want the hard copy. I like having full bookshelves. I was the kid that watched Beauty and the Beast and fell in love with the library over anything else.
Basically, Books I'm reading just to read = e-book. Books I'm excited about = paper.

At the same time, I like having an actual book on the shelf (though space is running out, making me more selective about which books I want on it).
Personally, if Amazon would offer special deals where you get the Kindle version for $1-2 extra, I'd probably take it everytime. I'd have the book for my shelf and the e-book for convenient reading.
It's funny, considering that about a year ago I laughed at the idea of reading books on a display. Always hesitated to get a Kindle and was mostly just curious what those fabled e-ink displays would look like.
Then we all got one for Christmas at work. Why did I also go and buy a book for it? Because it was Saturday evening, I was fresh out of reading material and didn't feel like waiting until Tuesday after work for a book to arrive. 2min later I started reading my first e-book.
Still wouldn't want to read on a regular LCD. My eyes would probably force me stop reading after 20min.


I understand and that's why I have everything backed up on the Cloud and my external hard drive so if one fails I have TWO forms of backup...
I also have not bought many books on my kindle. I use my kindle for mostly library books, free books, and other downloads. >.> When I want to purchase a book unless the ebook is under $3 I go for the paper copy.
I still can't wrap my head around paying $9.99 or more for a digital book (I mean let's get real digital movies are like $2.99 and the blu-ray is $34.99, no reason books can't be the same! Or at least give us hardcovers WITH digital download like many dvds/blu-rays nowadays).
I do enjoy being able to bring my kindle anywhere and be able to move from one book to another without having to lug around 3, 4, or 5 or more books in my already enormous and heavy purse. For travel it's great, not to mention it has saved me quite a bit of money buying books because I've been perusing the "Top 100 Free" books sections on Amazon.com and taking books out through Live-brary.com.
I will never be able to get rid of my paper books though. I love the smell, the feel, and the look of my books.


I think I can answer your question. It still costs the publisher the same amount of money to produce a book as far as the editing, marketing, distribution, covers (as a designer, I have to get digital and print rights for images which is usually thousands of dollars per book. Even e-only books still carry image costs of up to a thousand dollars.), rights, royalties, etc, even if a book is on e format. Yes, you don't have to pay for the physical paper and shipping, but those costs are much less than you would expect. The real costs are in making sure you get a quality book without spelling errors or whatnot. Also, because of the whole Amazon phenomenon with pricing ebooks so low, publishers are forced to take a loss on a lot of their eproducts unless they're from the backlist (which is why we're not doing so hot as an industry right now). The reason why movies are able to price so low is because they make most of their profit upfront in theater ticket sales; dvds and digital downloads are just extra. Books don't have the same kind of profit structure by their nature. I know it stinks that books still cost the same amount on the ereader, but when you remember you're supporting a whole network of people like me who make sure your book has a great cover or has no gaps in the story or spelling errors, then it's not so bad, I hope. :)

As for buying on Kindle so that we don't have to worry about people seeing the covers.....thats never really bothered me. If anything I was disappointed when I went to buy the Nalini Singh book in the U.K and instead of a half naked man there was just a face with a black background!
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