Ebook or paper book?
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Re: Ebook or paper book?
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- qhahn3241
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- amarini
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-- 15 May 2013, 18:21 --
have you tried enlarging the print?qhahn3241 wrote:I prefer paper myself because ebooks hurt my eyes.
- Zena
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- Happily Candied
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My dad gave me a Kindle Fire about a year and a half ago. While it was really the only thoughtful gift he'd ever given me (he said he knew how much I loved to read, which I was touched by), I felt bad for knowing that I would never use the Kindle for reading. I carry it around with me to browse the web when I'm bored, but it serves no purpose for me other than that. I can't let go of my books!
- CinnamonB
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I do miss the feeling of having a paperback in reach, but living in NYC, especially Manhattan area, space isn't what we're known for. So, the advantage to have all my reading done from my phone is brilliant!
- ramsterr
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- Karshiva
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- giraffelover66
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Shall I continue? I would definitely recommend getting an e-reader.. I have downloaded about 60 books in the past month.. read 49 of them. Can you really do that with paperback or hard covers?
- LadyStardust
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Ew. I sound like an ad. Haha! But really, it's so nice putting my Kindle in my bag instead of stuffing eight huge novels since I can never decide...

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- Lucy
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My kindle I use primarily for reading commercial fiction. I love the way I can just slip it in my purse for whipping out when, say, I'm on public transport, waiting in line, or being kept waiting by obstructionist bureaucrats (yup, I do that a lot, I work in a profession where keeping people weighting is a common ploy to show you that they are more powerful than you). My kindle ensures that I do not get impatient with administrative power plays and they will never know what I am reading - I could be reading the latest powerful tome on law and bureaucracy, or sneakily reading a sword-n-horses fantasy. They don't know, because that little grey case hides all. Of course the downside of this is that you cannot pose in the park trying to get noticed by high-brow hotties with your high-brow reading material either.
The kindle is lightweight, and so you can carry thousands of books in something which weighs a few grammes. A further advantage is that ebooks are cheaper than their paper counterparts, and prior to buying my kindle I kept having to clear out my bookshelves of fiction and take them to Goodwill or the thrift store. I also love the fact that I can vary the text size if my eyes are tired and I still want to curl up with a book. You are stuck with the text the publisher chooses for print, and that is often a financial decision rather than one based on reader comfort. My father and brother are both dyslexic and have reported that since they got their kindles and could adjust text, contrast, etc the world of books, closed to them before, has now been opened. The best endorsement for the kindle came from my brother who said "at the age of twenty-seven, I finally understand why people read for pleasure". My father, aged nearly 70, told me "I've never read so much in my life. This month I read ten books!"
The kindle (and other e-readers for that matter) is not good for children's literature, anything with illustrations or photographs, or academic texts, unless you have a kindle fire, if you use this for study. For my own courses of study I am a fanatical deployer of the yellow and pink highlighters, and a consummate margin scribbler, for which the kindle is pretty much useless.
My bookshelves at the moment have plenty of room for my passion rare historical volumes, my law books, my childhood favourites and most importantly, plenty of amazing books to ignite a love of reading in my child. While the kindle will never be able to replace print books - at least not in my home, I think it is an amazing device which has opened up a world of reading to many who would not be reading at all. The soul of a book lies in the human imagination, after all.
- Jinkies83
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