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message 1:
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Pamela
(new)
Jun 28, 2012 12:47PM
I am 'old-school' too. I want and need paper books. I can read digitally, but I do not enjoy it. I get distracted. Whereas with a paper book the physical world drops away and I am teleported into the reality of the book. Often someone will have to touch me to get my attention and bring me out of the book.
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Pamela wrote: "I am 'old-school' too. I want and need paper books. I can read digitally, but I do not enjoy it. I get distracted. Whereas with a paper book the physical world drops away and I am teleported into t..."Yes, it takes getting used to reading a Nook, Kindle, or whatever your favorite ereader is. I do like the ability to enlarge the type print for my eyes at the end of the day. Given a choice, I'd take paper over Kindle, but if I 12 paperbacks, I'd rather have the smaller Kindle. Thanks for the comments.
I felt the way you did, until I actually received my kindle for Christmas. I actually read faster with the Kindle and because many of my friends have a Kindle - I now have 740 books on it - which saved me $2,960.00 if you get the books for a penny on Amazon but still are paying 3.99 for shipping and handling. Of course, I still have some paper books, books that are not on Kindle - but the majority of my books are now on kindle. They say you can't teach an "old dog" new tricks - oh yes you can :)
Marianne wrote: "I felt the way you did, until I actually received my kindle for Christmas. I actually read faster with the Kindle and because many of my friends have a Kindle - I now have 740 books on it - which ..."Economics is not a reason I had considered a Kindle, but it sounds like it is a good reason.
I love the convenience of ebooks: instant delivery, not having to store another physical book but there really is no substitute for holding a printed page in your hands. If I were really wealthy, like mitt romney wealthy, I'd build a wing for at least 5,000 books and buy, buy, buy. sigh.
Michele wrote: "I love the convenience of ebooks: instant delivery, not having to store another physical book but there really is no substitute for holding a printed page in your hands. If I were really wealthy, l..."5,000 books is a lot of books for a personal library!
currently own about 750 physical books. another 1100 on my kindle and 550 on my nook. don't watch much tv. love to read.
Michele wrote: "currently own about 750 physical books. another 1100 on my kindle and 550 on my nook. don't watch much tv. love to read."Your ebooks outnumber your paper!


