I don't care if you're a technophile who sleeps with your Kindle under your pillow. Or if you think books are "too expensive". If this story doesn't make you at least a little bit concerned, or sad, there's something wrong with you.
Laredo, Texas, population 250,000 now has no bookstores at all.
http://www.cnn.com/2010/LIVING/01/22/laredo.books/index.html
To be fair, I don't know if this includes used bookstores or not. But still.
And before you say "well what about Amazon", wait till you read the whole story. Amazon is great if you already know what you want to buy, or know what to look for. There is a difference between that and walking into a bookstore and seeing the books actually there. And public libraries aren't always an option for increasing literacy, either. I bet half the people you might see in a B&N or Indigo wouldn't be caught dead in a library.
As for Laredo I can only hope someone sees a business opportunity and moves in. I refuse to believe everyone in the United States is really willing to leave their cultural literacy to things like Kindle that rely on technology that could render today's e-books unreadable in 6 months. Or that can be altered remotely (I will never trust Kindle after the B.S. Amazon pulled with Nineteen Eighty-Four).
Alex
Laredo, Texas, population 250,000 now has no bookstores at all.
http://www.cnn.com/2010/LIVING/01/22/laredo.books/index.html
To be fair, I don't know if this includes used bookstores or not. But still.
And before you say "well what about Amazon", wait till you read the whole story. Amazon is great if you already know what you want to buy, or know what to look for. There is a difference between that and walking into a bookstore and seeing the books actually there. And public libraries aren't always an option for increasing literacy, either. I bet half the people you might see in a B&N or Indigo wouldn't be caught dead in a library.
As for Laredo I can only hope someone sees a business opportunity and moves in. I refuse to believe everyone in the United States is really willing to leave their cultural literacy to things like Kindle that rely on technology that could render today's e-books unreadable in 6 months. Or that can be altered remotely (I will never trust Kindle after the B.S. Amazon pulled with Nineteen Eighty-Four).
Alex