I greatly prefer books to any kind of display device I've ever seen. I
own some volumes that are more than 200 years old and others that I
treasure because they moved me deeply. But I"m a realist. Mass
production books will soon be a thing of the past.
Paul
On Feb 27, 2009, at 6:12 PM, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:
What no reader device can replace ... aside from the obvious things
that Marnie suggested, is the feel and smell of paper. Of the cover.
Of turning a page. Or the little notes jotted in the margins of a
print or book by a previous owner, a sense of passage through time.
A book, like a fine photographic print, is tactile - is a part of
the living world - not just a conveyance for information storage and
display. I use computers to find, manipulate, collate, arrange,
assess, and obtain information. But I can't read a book on a display.
Whether they go the way of all things or not is not a question ...
it ain't called that for nothin' ... but it will be a different
world in which books no longer exist. Happily, I don't think I'll be
around for that world.
G
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