I agree with Ray about the digital books.  They are easy to read and you can 
change the font size to your own preference. I also love the built in 
dictionaries as their are always words I don't know the meaning of. All I have 
to do is tap it twice and the definition appears. 
 As for signing the book my Pocket Sony e-reader allows the user to scribble on 
screen and it will stay forever if I want. Have you signed a digital copy of 
any of your books yet Ray?

David.

Sent from my iPhone

On 21 Nov 2011, at 00:25, "Raymond E. Feist" <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> On Nov 20, 2011, at 3:59 PM, James Young wrote:
> 
>> I'm with Barry, John, et. al.  I spend 8+ hours a day looking at a computer 
>> screen, and I don't have any interest in an e-pub.  As much as I'd like to 
>> purchase the work, I am not going to if it is only offered in e-format.  
>> Sorry Ray, digital media may be the hip thing, but I'm not going to give up 
>> my dead trees quite yet and the only way I am going to convince them to be 
>> kept is if I refuse the alternative completely (which is easy since I don't 
>> like it).
>> 
>> -James
> 
> 
> Certainly your choice.  And if enough people follow suit, paper books will 
> linger for a long time.  However, I am not making the call; my publisher is.  
> One thing I've noticed; once I put an anti-glare screen on my iPad I find 
> reading on it pretty easy.  At my age I also enjoy the scaleable type fonts.
> 
> Best, R.E.F.
> ----
> www.crydee.com
> 
> Never attribute to malice what can satisfactorily be explained away by 
> stupidity.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 


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