The Brodkey and the Thompson lasted until I got to
But near the end of Vanderhaeghe, a problem. Stuff was jumping into the page. The screen to change the font would appear out of nowhere. It was easy to swipe away, but still. Then I noticed that sometimes the swipe to turn the page did not work. Swipe, swipe, nothing. I watched the video again and learned the tap. Tap on the corner and the page turns. Tap, no, tap no, tap, yes. Pages on an e reader are short. So is my patience.
The diet book gave me pause. From time to time, I wanted to go back to reread a section and I could not find it. Recipes were scattered here and there. To back up, one swipes the screen. I swiped until my index finger was a nub and still I could not find the recipe I wanted. I checked the index but that did not help. A physical book is so much easier to manipulate, riffle through.
Half way through The Little Shadows by Marina Endicott and caught up in a great story, the Kobo sulked. Pages popped backward, jumped forward. I got in the habit of checking the page number so I knew where I was. I plugged it in to keep it charged. Half way down a page, the thing backed up three pages. Swipe swipe, damn. Swipe, swipe, damn. Reading became annoying.
I found myself holding the device carefully, so the page would not disappear. The slightest jiggle and away it would go, forward or backward, it did not care.
Time to e-mail the help desk. “Your query will be answered in two business days.” Yeah right. As much a fib as, “your call is important to us.”
Home again after a month in Arizona . I felt reading by e reader was slow going but why? Perhaps the fact that one reads a quarter of a normal page at a time, about 60 words rather then 250. Then the swipe, or the tap or if necessary, the poke. On to another quarter page. I am a fast reader who inhales books and the hand flapping was slowing me down.
Or perhaps I had joined those of my friends who wanted a book in the hand, the feel of the page, the piece of paper bookmark, the heft, the book lying upside-down beside my chair, an invitation to loll and read. I wanted a book I could back up and reread favourite bits, skip ahead if I wanted. I like mooching around Chapters or the Northern Woman’s, often with a friend, picking up and putting down and checking the sale bins and then having a café Americano. I love bookstores and I do not want to give them up.
Now I have a Kobo book (Half-blood Blues by Esi Edugyan) to carry in my purse and a “real” book (“Underground” by Antanas Sileika) to read at home.
A letter which discusses this article
Dear Joan,
Just read your entry on "literarythunderbay.blogspot.
I bought a Nook e-reader when I was in Chicago. Wanted to avoid bring 20 pounds of books back to Thunder Bay. Convenient - the pile of books by me bed is lower. I miss the cover art and the feel of paper and turning pages. I can't write comments in the margins - I rarely do that in novels.
The Nook has behaved well. Purchasing books from Kobo was very frustrating - the customer service replies - more like a week after my request and then the reply was no different than the information on the website. I found a way to convert Kobo books and Kindle books into formats that I can read on Nook. A bit of technical messing around, but do-able.
I have just finished The Sisters Brothers and Half-Blood Blues. I like getting the book in a few minutes, rather than taking time to go shopping or ordering a hard-copy online. I think they are both excellent. Half-Blood Blues is so interesting for opening an aspect of history that I never had even a hint of before.
Brenda misses seeing what I am reading, even if she isn't interested. I'm sorry I can't just hand it on to her or others.
Best wishes,
Oliver Reimer
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