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eReading is reading but then…

ebooks, eReading

ebooks, eReading

eReading is reading but then…

February 16, 2009

Reading and eReading are the same. But then… I have second thoughts. I suppose what I was thinking of was that eReading can be as absorbing and imaginative as conventional reading, yet there are advantages to eReading. Often, we think in reverse, about what is lost or diminished by a mechanical device. Yet I don’t want one or the other, but both. I’ve been regularly reading both ways for well over a decade, like everybody else, or at least so many people now.

I can flip things off the net, into a reader, and take it with me for snatches, long or short, when I can. Having hundreds of books and articles with me at all times has advantages. Depending on the inspiration of the moment, there’s always something to read, something I *want* to read, not a soiled, wornout magazine at the doctor’s office, a newspaper at the restaurant that has been handled by dozens of people that day, over their eggs and toast, french fries, and other greasy fare, coughing all over it. I find I actually can read that marginal article, which I wouldn’t have otherwise read, life being too busy since it’s a little lower on my list of priorities or interests. It’s easy to copy and paste it into my eReader to get around to maybe weeks or sometimes months later.

I can’t carry around hundreds of physical books, but I can carry around hundreds of books on my Palm or Sony Reader (PRS-505), anywhere I go.

And then the experience of ereading, I still believe, being tugged in both directions, isn’t quite the same. It can even seem better; right with the right book. The qualitative experience of reading an ebook is as deep and engaging as a printed volume.

Frederick Glaysher

 

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Qualitative Difference

ebooks, ereading

ebooks, eReading

February 11, 2009 Qualitative Difference

Reading is reading is eReading. And then I have afterthoughts. It is different. I “access” it in a different way. It feels different. Personally speaking, I wouldn’t want to read every book in digital format. Cover and paper weight have an aesthetic feel to them that steel and aluminum can’t provide. The leather case for the Sony Reader helps, but it’s still different.

Yet I found myself fully immersed in Cervantes’ imaginative world. The allegory took over and pulled me into it, as I eagerly suspended my disbelief. All the cliches about reading were just as true. I escaped from the harshness of reality into the perfection of an ideal world, relishing the delights of his intellect and humor.

Since I’ve read so many ebooks now on electronic devices than I can even recall, I continue to be surprised when I come across protestations against ereading. Even educated readers can be resistant to the idea that there is “no difference,” yet ereading is just as intellectually exciting, rewarding, invigorating, and capable of changing my consciousness.

Is all that self-evident? There are a lot of people resisting the notion… the experience.

I suppose my point is that the quality of the reading experience is or can be every bit as deep and reflective as with a physical book. One needn’t feel one has betrayed books and letters by admitting as much. Far from that, it is the experience that counts, and the cultivation of consciousness that only reading can provide.

Physically, there’s a qualitative difference; intellectually, reading is reading is eReading.

Frederick Glaysher

 

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