Pages

Thursday, June 2, 2011

The Invasion of the E-Reader



I’m going to make a general assumption that most people who write also love to read. I know that’s the case with me. I read at the dinner table, and earned spankings for it as a child. (Even having my own children can’t cure me.) I take books to doctor and dentist appointments. You won’t find me at the license branch without one. I read in bed and outside on my deck, whenever and where ever I get a chance. I haunt the library in the summer, and bookstores are my favorite stores at the mall. When I go antique shopping, I end up with books, old favorites to treasure again.

So when I saw the glamorous commercials about the new e-readers, I was torn. I love technology, but I also love the anticipation of putting a new book on my lap. The stiff feel to the spine when you first open it. The colorful (and sometimes hideous) cover art. The smell of fresh pages. The relaxing rhythm of turning those pages. Getting back into those favorite or new characters is such a thrill. How can you get that from a device that’s a combination of plastic and parts? An e-reader lacks the soul of a book, right?

Then my wonderful husband bought one for me for my birthday. It was a complete surprise, but an intriguing one. How would this thing, with its glitzy buttons and screen, compare?

First off, I discovered e-books are cheaper than new hardcover novels. Pleasant shock! A way to save money and justify buying more books! It’s even true of established authors. The most expensive E-books are a good ten dollars cheaper.

Next, I found the e-reader is lighter than the usually vast tombs that make up my fantasy novel selections. Another bonus! I can hold it easily with only one hand, and it fits in my purse. Who knew!

When I set it on the table with my peanut butter sandwich at lunch time, the pages don’t flip closed! I don’t have to turn the book over to keep my place and risk injuring the spine, and I don’t have to fear losing my place if a bookmark falls out. The dang thing remembers exactly where I stop reading. It goes to sleep when I have to stop and attend to a teenage drama fit and wakes up when I’m ready to read again. It plugs into the wall or my laptop and the battery lasts for days. I like this! The thing even gives you pages numbers and shows how many total pages so you know where you stand.

Turning the pages isn’t the hassle I expected. There’s two ways to do it. You can press the button each time or drag a finger across the touch screen almost like turning an actual page. And the time it takes the screen to change isn’t more than turning a real page either.

Then the first drawback greeted me. You have to wait for it to start up. No instant gratification like a true book. Any amount of waiting is too long when you have only twenty minutes to sneak in your lunch break before returning to work. I labored around that by starting it up before my lunch. Problem solved.

To balance that, I don’t have to drive anywhere for a new book. Books download in minutes, and it holds more volumes than I can afford. Hey, I’m saving gas!

Then I learned you have to go through every page to reach where the book actually starts. That means the title page, the copy write page, and all the author thank you and dedications, plus any blank pages and chapter indexes. Well, that not a big deal. I can flip through ten pages or so to find the start. Not a problem, just an annoyance.

The next drawback held more challenges. Say you’re reading along and you forget something and want to flip back to it. In a book, it’s pretty easy to hunt around and find what you’re looking for because you’ve got a general idea based the amount of pages you’ve read. On an e-reader, it’s a bit more difficult. Want to refer to that map at the beginning of the first section? Do you remember the page number? Probably not. Did you think to bookmark it? Call me stupid, but I never do. Run across a name you don’t remember and want to check the glossary? You’ve got to use a search to find it. Not so reader friendly. Okay, so there’s one thing I don’t like about the experience so far, but it does keep me from skipping ahead to get to the good parts. No more indulging my weakness of passing over the boring scenes to see who lives or dies. My stealing a peek at the ending days are over!

Also, I can take it outside and read it in sunlight, unlike my laptop. The screen is not an LCD so glare doesn’t affect the pages. Excellent! I can enjoy my deck and fresh breezes while continuing to read.

On it goes, back and forth and back and forth; is the e-reader plus or minus? I don’t have to find space on my already crowded bookshelves. Big plus! But, on the other hand, I can’t display my new acquisition for visitors as proof of my good taste. (Yes, I’m that shallow.) Minus. If I drop taco sauce on my e-reader, it wipes off without an embarrassing stain on the pages. (This seems to happen a lot.) Plus. Yet, my local library is behind the times and doesn’t have e-books to lend. (Darn, no freebies!) Minus. Hooray, I’m saving paper and not cutting down trees. That’s the ultimate plus of an e-reader for me.

Improvement keeps balancing against setback. Perhaps what I’m complaining about is not the e-reader itself, but the differences it makes in my life. Though I still buy traditional books at times, my reading habits are forever altered. What I saw as drawbacks were simply changes. Changes? Adjustments to welcome and come to treasure like an old friend with a facelift. Reading is still the same friend, who’s just been made fresh with an electronic scalpel. Shouldn’t we all try to stay fresh?

What’s your opinion? Have any of you gone through the e-reader switch? Love it or hate it, want one or shun them? Give me your story.

12 comments:

  1. I've debated about switching to an ereader simply because I can't stand staring at a screen all day and I don't completely trust technology.

    I might try it after you laid out the bonuses but I'll probably still buy books because I just love to have that full bookshelf feeling and going out to buy another bookshelf. Anyway, thanks for your thoughts about the ereader. I know my mom has been pushing me to buy one!

    ReplyDelete
  2. It turned out I enjoy the e-reader much more than I expected. The money savings over buying a hard cover is great, but if I can find it free from the library, I go that route. Unless my favorite authors have a new book where I want that hardcover for the shelves.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hey, please stop by my blog to pick up your reward!

    http://teacherwritebookaholicohmy.blogspot.com/2011/06/my-first-blog-award.html

    ReplyDelete
  4. I think they both have their positive, and negative traits. The e-revolution has certainly opened a few more venues for aspiring authors.

    All that said, I still prefer a good old fashioned book. I don't have to worry about batteries, program bugs wiping out my entire library, or possible EM pulses doing the same thing.

    Not that I'm against an e-reader... I just like a book better.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I have e-books I've bought from fellow writers...debut novels and such. For now they sit in my laptop, awaiting my first ereader. I think they are a great thing. But I was a hard sell. Didn't like the idea at all when they first came out. I'm like you...Love the feel of opening a new book, the pages, (I think it's the rustling sound) and etc...
    But then I saw the prices, the great stuff out there from authors who are brand new but so great and thought heck, it's not such a bad thing! I am looking forward to getting my ereader. Hoping it's soon. :) While I'll always prefer a real in my hands book, I gotta agree that these things are far lighter to tote around than dozens of soft/hard covers. Lol.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love this post. I didn't know if I wanted an e-reader, but after reading this, I'm starting to want one! I can't get out often, and I can't afford the money it costs to buy most of the books I like to read, so I don't read as much as I should. Getting an E-reader would probably have me reading more.

    The second little picture is a nice touch. And I love the facelift comparison. LOL! I'm glad you were able to post this without problems. Nicely done. See? Told you you'd be good at this! ;P

    ReplyDelete
  7. My e-reader was an unexpected gift that I never asked for and assumed I would hate. I have always loved having books. Opening one was like greeting an old friend. Well, I have found that now I can have hundreds of my old friends with me wherever I go. I love my e-reader.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hi can you do white background color your website? I mean, If you can do it then we can read article carefully and easily. please don't mind

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hi Michelle 4 Laughs, I am really sad to read your post and your post photo. it just remind me my child. education system is really hard today.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Is it an apps ? I actually didn't get you because the post is on dart background. I cant read it properly. I hope you will reply me. thanks

    ReplyDelete
  11. Taking enlightening advance is the lifetime decision of an understudy and it should be taken skillfully by provoking someone's lord. Understudies should in like manner take proper measures before picking any program for taking credits. explore more

    ReplyDelete
  12. PC gaming world is very wide and Pc gamers are at increasingly higher numbers as contrasted and the Console gamers. Other advantage of utilizing pc stage is that pc games are reasonable than the support games. check it

    ReplyDelete