Audiobooks, e-Books, Paper, etc.?

  • @Michal@discuss.tchncs.de
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    21 year ago

    Ebooks. Kindle has a nice display showing how much is left in the chapter. It has a warm light back light, and i can take multiple books with me on a trip (i have some unfinished books).

    I can put down the kindle without losing the page, or having to bookmark it. And i can sideload the books for free.

    Physical books are tempting too as i can get them free at a library and very cheap second hand, but i know i would still prefer to read it on kindle where i can choose the font size I like.

  • DarkMatterStyx
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    21 year ago

    I only read e-books anymore. However; when I find something I love I buy the hardback to have on hand to loan to friends and family that wouldn’t want to buy before reading.

  • @palazuelos@lemmy.ml
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    11 year ago

    Old small books with bible paper and leather cover. It’s amazing how you can have a 1.500 pages book in your pocket.

  • @Lemmylefty@vlemmy.net
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    11 year ago

    When I was younger…well, there were only Palm Pilots back then, so it’s a bit unfair, but I’d prefer physical books, and if I were doing active reading then it’d usually be with a physical book.

    Reading digital books now requires using a device that often has access to Youtube or something else that’s shorter and snappier and yet pulls hours upon hours out of my life.

    And as I’ve gotten older…I haven’t read read a book in years. Is it a lack of attention span? Yes, which makes me feel sad and ashamed and so fucking frustrated because I could, I could read long books as a kid and now…I can’t.

    It’s also that I have more to do: laundry, cleaning, work, cooking, errands, exercise… So there’s less time to sit down and read, or if I do, it feels increasingly hedonistic and therefore wrong to just do one thing at once. If I can multitask then shouldn’t I?

    Audiobooks are both a godsend and a curse. I can actually consume books again! But I’m locked into the ease of it.

    Actively choosing to doing just the one thing, for myself, is far harder than it ought to be.

  • @CorrodedCranium@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    11 year ago

    I prefer physical books for the most part but I have a hard time justifying their cost when I own an ereader.

    I like listening to audiobooks when I’m out and about but I find I’ll occasionally miss the odd sentence when I get distracted or forget to pause when I take my headphones off which leads to me skipping around trying to find where I was at.

  • @spaduf
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    11 year ago

    I read so much more an epaper ebook. It’s so nice to be able to quickly swap between a handful of books in a form factor smaller than an already small paperback.

  • Attikus
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    11 year ago

    I prefer ebooks. I like to be able to carry my library around with me. Also, I rarely reread books so they end up collecting dust after I read them.

  • @InvisibleShoe@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Audiobooks are good for doing yard work and for the books that I want to check out but find to be a bit of a slog. There are also some great narrators who really bring something extra to the story.

    e-books for the last 10 years or so. Some books can be large and/or thick and are a hassle to cart around. My e-reader is slim and lightweight - very easy to take with me when I’m out and about. Also like being able to tap a word and have a definition popup. E-books are also cheaper and have great sales regularly.

    Never liked jacketed books, they are silly things.

    • ArmoredCavalryOP
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      11 year ago

      Do you have any favorite narrators? I enjoy most things by Tim Gerard Reynolds!

  • ArmoredCavalryOP
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    01 year ago

    I started listening to audiobooks for my commute, and that’s mostly what I stick to these days. The right narrator can make all the difference though!