Shelf Awareness, January 7, 2011
"Late in the day on Tuesday, a couple came into the store. After browsing a bit, the wife approached the desk. Her husband, she explained, is a voracious reader. So, she got him a Kindle for Christmas. He tried it and didn't like it. So, she returned the Kindle and was at Battenkill Books to apply the same amount of money to a gift certificate for her husband. It made my day!"
--Connie Brooks, owner of Battenkill Books, Cambridge, N.Y.
Great story, and thanks for the blog over the holidays, it has kept me sane!
ReplyDeleteI don't like e-books either; they take the relaxing out of my reading experience and, possibly because of the former, tend to tweek the OOS as well. I also love having books just lying around the house, so I'll be sticking to the old technology as long as it's there to be stuck to. I realize though, that this undoubtedly qualifies me as a 'curmudgeon' and a 'luddite', all in the one 'non-hip' package.
ReplyDeleteWho wants to be non-luddite*, hip & youthful if it interferes with reading pleasure?
ReplyDeleteNot this bibliophile.
Bookman Beattie, may you & yours' have a very pleasurable & mentally enriching 2011. Your blog is appreciated so very much.
O- an addendum to my post:
ReplyDelete* I love a very great deal about technology. I fail to see how refusing to buy into the current i-Pad/Kindle/Kobo-et-crap-all hysteria is being a Luddite. Things will settle down, and a substantial minority of people will have the equivalent of mp3 players for reading (newspapers & magazines & genre fiction by & large) and the rest of us will get on with our lives...
o, except quite a few newspaper & magazine publishers, and a *lot* of extortionate book publishers-