Like others here, I have pretty much given up on hardcopy books, preferring to read them on my iPad. Not to say I don't enjoy visiting a bookshop and occasionally buying something, but nowadays it has to be something special. I have a weakness for the products of the Folio Society.
Weeel, I like a good hardcopy, especially when there are images or maps, but I spent most of my life buying increasingly bigger houses to store my books in and let's face it most of them get read once and then set on the shelf.I much prefer hardcopy, something pleasurable in seeing rows of books in either a library or even a bookshop.
I did enjoy the Mark Colvin book Ebooks are ok for travelling but prefer hard copy. I’m a big library userI much prefer hardcopy, something pleasurable in seeing rows of books in either a library or even a bookshop.
Whenever I visit London, the first shops I go to are Waterstones, Foyles and Stanfords books and maps.
SWMBO prefers online and I will admit it annoys me when I see receipts for kindle on the credit card statement with imo nothing to show for it!
Magazines are the same, I have had online versions, but tend to forget about them, seeing hardcopy reminds me to read them. Club magazines are the same, I’m happy to pay extra for something solid.
I often think that if I had my time again, I would have quite happily been a librarian, something nice and ordered and quiet!
Now back on topic, I’ve just bought a second hand copy of Light and Shadow, Memoirs of a Spy’s Son by Mark Colvin to add to the pile I‘m slowly, very slowly working through!
People are different - my books are all eBooks now and I have seriously cut down. Mark Colvin's Light and Shadow was an interesting read but knowing of his death was quite sad.I did enjoy the Mark Colvin book Ebooks are ok for travelling but prefer hard copy. I’m a big library user
People are different - my books are all eBooks now and I have seriously cut down. Mark Colvin's Light and Shadow was an interesting read but knowing of his death was quite sad.
I like to read before sleep (and I know the light from an iPad is supposed to be bad but stiff). My mini iPad is much easier to handle in bed than a hard copy book. I have tried off and on recently but it just doesn't work. That said, I am very stingy and have a large collection of free books from the past - many 'light' ones like Dorothy Sayers and Earl Biggers but also Hemingway and the like - before sleep don't need anything heavy.
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Dorothy Sayers are always great to go back toPeople are different - my books are all eBooks now and I have seriously cut down. Mark Colvin's Light and Shadow was an interesting read but knowing of his death was quite sad.
I like to read before sleep (and I know the light from an iPad is supposed to be bad but stiff). My mini iPad is much easier to handle in bed than a hard copy book. I have tried off and on recently but it just doesn't work. That said, I am very stingy and have a large collection of free books from the past - many 'light' ones like Dorothy Sayers and Earl Biggers but also Hemingway and the like - before sleep don't need anything heavy.