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E-Books or Paper Books??

I bought a Kindle a few years ago when we literally ran out of space in our house for books. My eyes are light sensitive, so reading on the iPad is out of the question for me, but I have no problem reading on the Kindle. I still prefer paper books and buy non-fiction books in paper format, as well as favourite books (I'm on my third paperback copy of Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose). However I'm buying more and more fiction books for the Kindle, and in the case of large books like the Game of Thrones one it makes reading in bed much more comfortable. Rather than sit up in bed, which hurts my back, I lie on my back and hold the book above me, and this is much easier with the Kindle. I'll always have a house with hundreds of books, though.
 
I buy anything that I consider a collection as a paper copy. I only tend to buy cheap 'deal of the day' stuff for my Kindle.

Having said that, I've got Game of Thrones and its sequels on both. It's a damned site easier to read on Kindle and the ebooks were only £0.99 each...

I should also point out that normal priced ebooks can be expensive in the UK. In dollars, Trek novels tend to cost between $6.50 and $8.00. Sadly, even 'Absent Enemies', a novella, is $6.50...
 
I'm surprised by how many of you like to re-read your books. I can honestly say I've never read the same book twice, just like I don't enjoy watching the same movie or TV show twice (but at least there it's usually only an hour or two so I'm not as opposed to seeing it again). Once I already know how the story ends, there's just no point in going through it again. All mystery and suspense is lost, which just leaves me bored.
 
^ I happen to be a re-reader more than anything else. Sometimes I enjoy picking up on plot and character and thematic moments I missed the first time through a story.

Still, if it's something I am going to read more than once, I'd prefer to have it in paper form.
 
I'm surprised by how many of you like to re-read your books. I can honestly say I've never read the same book twice, just like I don't enjoy watching the same movie or TV show twice (but at least there it's usually only an hour or two so I'm not as opposed to seeing it again). Once I already know how the story ends, there's just no point in going through it again. All mystery and suspense is lost, which just leaves me bored.

I find if I enjoyed the experience the first time, I will read it a second or third. My initial reading is just the first taste. I may go 6 months before I read it again, or longer, but I come back a different person and it hits me a different way. Things that escaped me, or my memory, the first time, become a little more ingrained. As with most things I care about, I don't want to say "it's good" and leave it at that. I want to have a conversation about it, be able to have a conversation with someone who knows nothing about it or knows everything. I also read many non-fiction books, so gathering information is more important than the narrative or if it grips me.

For example, recently I have been making "greatest books" list (3 of them in the last six months). Every time I talk about them, I want to read them again. So I have read two books in the last six months, that have been on my all-time favorites list: Under the Banner of Heaven and Of Human Bondage (currently on page 120 of 700 pages).

I spend about 1 hour a day leisure reading (not counting the news, Trekbbs, Facebook, etc). I have the luxury of being able to do it. Sometimes it's all day and sometimes it's 15 minutes, but it all averages out to an hour a day. I find the more I read, the more I can concentrate. The more I read, the more articulate I am. I like to look for words I don't know. I like to look for characters and themes. And I find it more stimulating than a movie or television program. When television or music makes me look up a word, I am endeared to it. But that happens less often than it does with books. I even prefer to read out-loud because I process the words better and my mind is less likely to wander.

I am very particular about my books. If they speak to me, I will treasure them and they give me such joy. I cannot tell you how many times in the last month, I have written the words The Art of Falling. If they suck--their conclusions or the prose bothers me--I won't finish it. I like to use books as study materials to keep my mind sharp. I like to look up words, look up references because I genuinely feel like a student of the world, always improving, always learning something new. And they say it's good for your brain as well.

So, yes, I do re-read my books because when they are that good, I want to know them like an old friend.
 
I re-read many books, because I often forget the details (and yes, the endings) so it's like a new book. I read a LOT, though. Stuff gets jumbled up in my brain.
 
I actually prefer regular paper books, but by now I have about twice as many books as I have book shelf space
I know this problem all too well...

The trick is to make literal book shelves. That is, use the books to build shelves to stack more books. This works great in the corner of a closet. What I do is use thick heavy books as the sides and then big encyclopedia-type books for the planks. And then lay lighter books on them.

That would look cool, I suppose.

I was very, very sceptical regarding ebooks at first, but it really isn't the same as reading off a computer. Especially the kindle paper white is pretty awesome.

I still prefer real books, however, so I might try out stacking lighter books on heavy ones.
 
/.../ I like to look for words I don't know. /.../

Can't say I actually look for them, but reading in English, when it's your fourth language, makes the 'tap-the-word'-dictionary in the Kindle a brilliant tool! (plus: it means I don't have to also drag a dictionary along).

I tend to read a lot of garbage (SciFi and fantasy'ish stuff without redeeming qualities), but inbetween I happen upon something written so well, with such a brilliant prose, that I just have to read it again at some point and maybe again and again and again -just for the sheer geekish joy of reading something so well written that mere words feel like music when you read them.
 
I'm surprised by how many of you like to re-read your books. I can honestly say I've never read the same book twice, just like I don't enjoy watching the same movie or TV show twice (but at least there it's usually only an hour or two so I'm not as opposed to seeing it again). Once I already know how the story ends, there's just no point in going through it again. All mystery and suspense is lost, which just leaves me bored.

I understand what you mean. There are some books I've reread so often I won't read them again for years because I practically know them off by heart. Other books, like The Name of the Rose, are so complex with detail that no matter how often I reread them something new jumps out at me that I missed the last time. This is especially true with non-fiction books. Also, my memory is pants, so within a few years I've often completely forgotten what the book was about anyway.
 
A good book is like a well made film. Often you have to read a book several times because there's just so much nuance and literary master craft that you'll never consume it all in one go.

Like, with a good film, it's impossible to fully comprehend the magnitude of the director's vision in one viewing.

There are books I've read at least five times and can't still pick up on a small plot thread or thematic idea that I never noticed before.
 
Paper.

I like having a physical book, with pages to turn and a spine to crease. I like having books on my bookshelf or sitting on my coffee table. I like the way a book feels in my hand when I read it and the way the stack of pages on the right side shrinks till I'm down to the last few and I know I have to slow down so I can enjoy them to the fullest before the story ends.
 
/.../ the way the stack of pages on the right side shrinks till I'm down to the last few and I know I have to slow down so I can enjoy them to the fullest before the story ends.

I thought I was the only one reading slower and slower by the page :rommie:
 
The end of a book is my greatest nightmare.

My greatest nightmare is losing my life in a weather event (tornado, flood, hurricane, etc)...or not living up to my potential and feeling like I wasted my life.

But the end of a good book is like the end of life for a dear friend. A friend made you think and challenged you and comforted you and that you talked away the quietest moments of the night with. Sometimes you go back to your favorite meeting places to remember, to relive, the great times on page 153 or 257. But, alas, all good things...It can never go on in perpetuity. If you read it every day, your friend would become predictable. It is a finite time with them. All the adventures are memories now.

:mallory:
 
Of late I've found a cheap e-reader (the Barnes and Noble Nook made it to the UK a while back, £30 for the basic touch model) and a bigger phone (a Galaxy Note) have been a boon for large collections of public domain novels and cheap graphic novels respectively.

But there's nothing like a shelf full of good books for looks and the furthest fall back for entertainment there is should all other electronic means fail (and there's still sunlight in the event of a power cut :))
 
The end of a book is my greatest nightmare.

My greatest nightmare is losing my life in a weather event (tornado, flood, hurricane, etc)...or not living up to my potential and feeling like I wasted my life.

Well... yeah, okay, that's bad. Let me rephrase it as saying one of my greatest nightmares is reaching the end of a book. :lol:

But the end of a good book is like the end of life for a dear friend. A friend made you think and challenged you and comforted you and that you talked away the quietest moments of the night with. Sometimes you go back to your favorite meeting places to remember, to relive, the great times on page 153 or 257. But, alas, all good things...It can never go on in perpetuity. If you read it every day, your friend would become predictable. It is a finite time with them. All the adventures are memories now.

:mallory:

Amen.
 
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