<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[the feminist librarian]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://thefeministlibrarian.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Anna Clutterbuck-Cook]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://thefeministlibrarian.com/author/feministlib/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[e-reading: the pros and&nbsp;cons]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="float:right;margin-left:1em;text-align:right;">
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<td class="tr-caption" style="text-align:center;">this is my new favorite picture of geraldine</td>
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<p>Welcome to 2012!</p>
<p>The past week has been full of reading and writing, much of which I&#8217;m planning to share with you eventually (a lot of the writing was in the form of reviews of the stuff I&#8217;d been reading &#8212; it all gets a little circular). In the meantime, I thought I&#8217;d kick this year&#8217;s worth of posts off with a few musings on that perennially-hot topic of e-books.</p>
<p>I want to preface this post with the disclaimer that while I prefer, on the whole, to read books analog, I am not into the doom-and-gloom prognostications of those who rend their clothes and gnash their teeth over the rise in popularity of digital reading. So while I&#8217;m presenting this in a pro/con format I remain agnostic on the general principle of e-books as a thing in the world. Basically, I&#8217;m the biblio equivalent of an omnivore: I&#8217;ll read wherever, whenever, whatever, as long as it captures and holds my attention.</p>
<p>So: e-reading.</p>
<p>About six months ago, I downloaded <a href="http://www.adobe.com/products/digitaleditions/">Adobe Digital Editions</a> in order to read advance review e-galleys of forthcoming books on my laptop. Using the interface is my first sustained interaction with &#8220;e-book&#8221; reading &#8212; as opposed to reading online content which we&#8217;re used to reading on the computer (i.e. this blog). More on that later. But reading books I&#8217;d normally read in actual physical paper-and-glue-and-ink form in digital form has given me a chance to think in a more concrete way about reading digital vs. analog texts, what I like and don&#8217;t like about the experience, and where I&#8217;d love to go from here.</p>
<p><b>The Pros</b></p>
<ul>
<li><b>Price. </b>I already have a laptop, so downloading the software from Adobe incurred no additional expense. Since I&#8217;m reading e-galleys for the most part, those are also free. I have only actually purchased one e-book so far (a Laurie King&#8217;s short story) but do notice that e-book versions of texts are often significantly less expensive than their analog counterparts. So, assuming one has the budget to purchase and maintain a laptop, tablet, or other e-reader device, I can see where the financial incentive to adopt e-book reading might come from. I&#8217;m also grateful for the way the low overhead of producing e-books and e-galleys has made publishers more open to providing advance review copies to bloggers and other reviewers who previously might not have been considered worth contacting.</li>
<li><b>Speed of Access. </b>It&#8217;s great to be able to download a galley or e-book and begin reading immediately, I have to say. If an e-version is going to get me an advance review copy of a book I&#8217;d otherwise have to wait six months to read, I&#8217;m totally down with all the other inconveniences entailed.</li>
<li><b>Compactness. </b>So I don&#8217;t really have any portable devices (I carry my netbook to work <i>sometimes</i>, but as Hanna and I walk daily the two miles to work and back and I have to carry lunch, etc., plus there might be errands to run on the way home, I usually think carefully about whether the additional 2-3 pounds of computer is worth it. But I can see the appeal of e-readers for people who want to pack 5-10 titles (or more) and have some options for their lunch-time reading. Similarly, I can see how e-readers appeal to minimalist folks who are looking to strip down their material possessions &#8230; though I personally feel no living space is quite complete without the teetering stacks of library books and the overflowing bookcases stacked with $1 cart finds. </li>
<li><b>Environmental considerations. </b>I haven&#8217;t actually looked for any sort of analysis of the &#8220;green&#8221; rating for various e-reader devices, or the cradle-to-grave environmental impact of electronic vs. analog books. However, if a compelling case could be made that e-reading was somehow less environmentally wasteful than traditional book production, it would be a point in favor of e-books.</li>
<li><b>Co-sleeping. </b>The backlit screen of the laptop makes it a convenient choice for reading when Hanna wants to get to sleep before I do at night. I can cuddle up next to her and finish a chapter or read some fic without having a bedside light on. Obviously there are solutions to this problem for analog books as well, but it&#8217;s a nice perk with digital reading.</li>
</ul>
<p><b>The Cons</b></p>
<ul>
<li><b>More time staring at a screen. </b>I don&#8217;t obsess about the number of hours a day or week I stare at a computer screen (it&#8217;s 10pm and I&#8217;m blogging, for goodness sake), but during the weekdays especially when I spent 7-8 hours at work per day working heavily with computer interfaces, I resent coming home at night and remembering that the book I was in the middle of reading requires that I spend <i>more</i> time looking at a screen. I find I put off reading my electronic books until the weekend, and even then sometimes drag my feet.</li>
<li><b>Marginalia. </b>God, I&#8217;m addicted to taking notes &#8212; particularly in non-fiction books which I plan to review or otherwise interact with intellectually. And yes, ADE and other interfaces have highlight/comment/bookmark/sticky note functions. I AM NOT CONVINCED. I have yet to find an electronic interface that allows me to scribble notes, underline, annotate, argue with, and generally synthesize my reading experience to the same degree that a plain old pencil or ballpoint and a pack of post-it notes does. This is a serious downside (for me) with the e-reading experience. </li>
<li><b>Accessing Endnotes. </b>ADE, at least, doesn&#8217;t have any sort of dynamic way to access references in a work. Again, this is largely a non-fiction problem, but I love being able to flip back and forth between end-notes and the body of the text (I love footnotes even better for ease of reference). The clumsiness of the interfaces I&#8217;ve encountered basically mean I avoid moving back and forth through the text in significant ways because it&#8217;s difficult to get back to where you were. This leads to a thinner reading experience, since I&#8217;m interacting less with the various portions of the book and thinking less about how they&#8217;re related.</li>
<li><b>Physical time/space experience. </b>This is a very specific-to-me sort of complaint, but I read and relate to books in a very physical fashion. When I need to access a particular passage I remember it in a physical way &#8212; I remember where it was located on the page, at what point in the text, etc. The book as object is an integral part to how I access the information contained within it. And I find that without that physical object, I digest and retain the information within the e-book with much more difficulty. I&#8217;m open to the possibility of re-training myself, but for now &#8230; it&#8217;s really an inadequate way for me to encounter important texts. </li>
<li><b>Attention Span. </b>I&#8217;m not into the moral panic over digital devices and how they&#8217;re changing our brains in horrible ways OMG!! (I&#8217;m overdue to write a ranty post about that &#8230;) But I <i>do </i>notice for myself that certain kinds of reading are much better done away from the computer and its associated distractions &#8212; the constant compulsion to check email, check Google Reader, Twitter, etc. All of the internet reading I do is, I believe, important in its own right. But it requires a different sort of attention and interaction than book-length works of fiction and non-fiction. And reading in a digital interface cues the short-form attention span part of my brain to activate.</li>
</ul>
<p><b>What I&#8217;d Love to See</b><br /><b><br /></b><br />So, overall, right now, I find e-reading to be a highly second-rate experience compared to analog books. I&#8217;m still more likely to tuck a print book into my bag for reading at lunch, or over coffee in a cafe, or to request a print advance review copy of a book if given the option. Even at reduced prices, I don&#8217;t find e-books worth the cover price over an actual physical print book at this point &#8212; even setting aside the worrying &#8220;who owns a book that isn&#8217;t really a physical object&#8221; question such a purchase raises. Here are the improvements &#8212; including a couple of fantastical ones &#8212; I&#8217;d like to see when it comes to digital reading in the years to come:</p>
<ul>
<li><b>Interactive references. </b>Seriously. Wikipedia already does this, and I know other web interfaces as well, where the footnotes are hyperlinks or pop-out text bubbles, <i>anything</i> so that you can access a person&#8217;s sources without scrolling to the end of the damn book and back. </li>
<li><b>Better marginalia</b> <b>options. </b>On the one hand, I love the speed of keypad typing but with marginalia I&#8217;m old-school and like that pencil in my hand so I can triple-underline and put in as many outraged exclamation points as I so desire. Also happy and sad faces. Any successful e-reader is going to have to allow me to doodle in the margins of my reading matter, and access said doodles at a later date in order to write those oh-so-serious reviews.</li>
<li><b>A screen that didn&#8217;t tire my eyes. </b>Computer screens are getting so much better, and I know the Kindle and other custom e-readers are way better at this than a simple netbook &#8230; but as helpful as the light from the computer screen is in bed, the light from the computer screen is also a pain in the ass (or, more accurately, the eye). Half my wearyness for looking at the screen comes from the light. So obviously, the less overtly computer-like a reader screen can be, the better.</li>
<li><b>The ability to transform e-reading to print and back again. </b>Obviously, there are times when e-reading is the most efficient option, and times when print is best for the situation at hand. I personally would love some sort of book-like <a href="http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/Teselecta">Teselecta</a> to come along allowing me to turn print books into e-book and digital reading matter into print depending on the most appropriate form for the occasion. I&#8217;d love, for example, to be able to turn my favorite fan fiction stories into anthologies to flip through on the T or cozy up with in bed. </li>
<li><b>An object is an object is an object. </b>There&#8217;s something about books <i>qua </i>books that I find to be not only pleasurable on sensual level (ah! the smell and feel of a well-made book!) but also integral to the intellectual act of reading and integrating what I&#8217;ve read. I&#8217;m not sure how e-books are going to offer a workable alternative to my physical-object-as-intellectual-reference way of taking in and retaining knowledge, but in order for me to make the switch from primarily analog to a higher proportion of digital books, a solution will have to be presented.</li>
</ul>
<div>Have any of you used digital readers? If so, what kinds and what have your experiences with them been? What do you love and/or hate about them? What do you find easy and/or difficult to read in digital form? Share away in comments.</div>
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