Kashmir Observer

E-Books’ Case Against Paperbacks

- The author is Assistant Professor Government Degree College, Sopore

Though One cannot overlook the pleasure of having a book with physical pages in hand, one must acknowledg­e that the possibilit­y of carrying a library with you wherever you go and that of affording books that only a few had access to is awesome and a dream-come-true feeling, to say the least. Gone are the dayswhen to read a book one was sometimes required to travel thousands of miles to a library. Now, the same is available at clicks of fingers.

It should not take one long to understand that the convention­al definition of a book is a bygone tale. Having a material existence is no longer a need when it comes to being a book. A book no longer requires to be between two physical covers, and yet it can be covered from cover to cover.

As per research published by Pew Research Center, “Thirty per cent of those who read e-content say they now spend more time reading, and owners of tablets and eBook readers particular­ly stand out as reading more now.” They further noticed, “In a headto-head competitio­n, people prefer eBooks to printed books when they want speedy access and portabilit­y, but print wins out when people are reading to children and sharing books with others.”

If you own a Kindle or any other electronic book reader, you have the potential of owning not just books, but libraries. You have access to some of the rarest masterpiec­es that humankind has ever produced. It does not matter whether you read on paper or on some device as long as one is inclined to reading. For J. K. Rowling, “We should be delighted people still want to read, be it on a Kindle or a Nook or whatever the latest device is.”

Those who remain rigid in the choice of printed books over the electronic ones fail to appreciate that it is the content and not the material that matters. In the words of Douglas Adams, “Lovers of print are simply confusing the plate for the food.” One must not miss the forest for the trees. Jocularly, eBooks can help save some trees in the forest too.

It might astonish the readers that nowadays some books, magazines and newspapers are available only in the electronic version. It is somewhat tickling to imagine the fate of printed books had they come intoexiste­nce only after the invention of eBooks. There would not have been very good reasons for choosing the print over the electronic. In the words of Mokhonoana, “If eBook readers were invented before print books, the smell of ink would have been some people’s only reason for not abandoning eBooks.”

When it comes to reproducin­g copies similar to the actual one, eBooks are unbelievab­le. Remember that if you own a printed book, reproducin­g it is costly and difficult. If you have an eBook, you have not one but as many copies as you seek. You can gift your eBook to a thousand people and not need a return. You can provide access to awesome stuff at no or low cost. You can lend a book without ever needing or losing your copy of the book. Those who have a craving for reading books;those who are bibliophil­es know well that the problem is not the physical or virtual, the problem lies with passing the material for the content. In the words of Laszlo Krasznahor­kai, “Devices are not dangerous for literature. People can be dangerous for literature. People, for example, who do not read.”

Those who are or will be filled with the reminiscen­ce of the feel, the smell and the pleasure of printed books will hopefully not regret the option of turning to eBooks for the pleasures- the ease of access, the availabili­ty and the benefit of being light on pocket-they offer. The print lover will soon be inclined towards the electronic love for the temptation is hard to resist. In the words of Craig Mod, “Nostalgia is very quickly replaced with convenienc­e.” With the advent of eBooks, one is no longer required to lick the tips of one’s fingers to turn pages.

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