Trek totally missed as an inspiration for the Kindle. Picard and later Janeway were always shown doing their recreational reading with print books, rather than on a pad. It's kind of like someone today doing all their writing on parchment using a quill pen, instead of using ordinary pen and paper. It's especially eye-rolling with Janeway in the later seasons, less than ten years from the invention of the Kindle.
Even with the data pads, Seven of Nine is shown on two separate occasions giving Naomi, then Icheb several pads; one for each subject, instead of it all being on one pad. Again, not all that many years before the inventions of the Kindle and Ipads.
There's no reason why Janeway and others would prefer to do their reading on the computer rather than with a physical book. After all, she would be reading everything else on a computer screen and may find a book more relaxing. And consider that like everything else, books can be replicated. There's no reason to suppose that Janeway keeps every book she's read. Most of them are probably recycled into her next cup of coffee.
I agree that the thing with the padds was beyond ridiculous. Having someone with a stack of padds - representing all the "paperwork" they had to do - was supposed to make them look terribly busy. But why didn't they just email the reports?
All this said... I've done some of my writing with calligraphy pens and ink. It forces a person to really think about what you want to say, since it's such a pain to re-do any mistakes.
On Voyager, especially, where replicator use was rationed, I can't see Janeway using hers for print books and I refuse to believe that she brought enough space-taking books with her on what was supposed to be a short voyage, so that she'd not be reading the same books over and over
The book would have been recycled after the person was finished reading it. People would have used their replicator rations mostly for food (I'm guessing), but they could also have subjected themselves to a month of Neelix's cooking if they wanted to have something else, like a book or a new outfit for a holodeck program.
Besides, RHIP. Janeway probably got a few more replicator rations than the rest of the crew. Or maybe she won some in one of Tom's betting pools.
It's like the history buffs all picking the 20th century as their favorite era - very eye rolling.
Sulu's favorite era (one of them, anyway) was the 18th century, since he was into The Three Musketeers. Another of his interests would have been the 19th/20th century handguns. That doesn't mean he was into these eras wholesale; he just liked certain things about them.
As for Janeway, I know of the one book she had, Dante's Inferno. It was gift from her fiancé. sigh...Janeway's such a classy woman.
I realize that they couldn't quote just any book, without paying the author/publisher to use it on-air, but it's a real eye-roller that nobody on Star Trek reads anything other than novels between the 16th-19th centuries. What about the novels of the 22-24th centuries? They must have some besides those ridiculous Flotter holonovels that have about as much appeal as a Barney the Dinosaur video.
Picard only had one book too, the complete works of Shakespeare, and he had multiple copies. He kept one in his ready room, and one in his quarters, and I've heard he has more around, but I don't remember where. Having Peekard always reading Shakespeare was a little on-the-nose if u ask me(no offense to either Picard or Shakespeare, of course)
It may be like his version of a security blanket.
I have maybe half a dozen Shakespeare plays (separate paperbacks) in my book collection (and yes, I do read them for fun). I stopped collecting the paperbacks once I realized that the whole lot of them are free to read online.