cthia
Fleet Admiral
Posts: 14951
Joined: Thu Jan 23, 2014 1:10 pm
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Maxx, your daughter sounds like all of my sisters and a couple of my nieces. They don't read books either. They inhale them. My reading rate is muuuuch slower. It'll probably take me a week to get through an Honorverse book. Seriously. It isn't that my reading rate or comprehension is so abysmally slow. It is this overabundance of compassion that I've been "blessed" with by my maker. I used to think it a curse. But now I think not, now that I'm older and have learned to embrace it and can see the joys (and sadness) of it.
'Why does it take you so long?' I hear everyone asking - except those of you who have already read my explanation. Simply, too much compassion. I'll read a particularly emotional passage and literally get stuck on it for hours, sometimes days before I can pick back up where I left off. At that point, I oftentimes reread the passage that made me stumble on my own tears in the first place, causing me to stumble again. Then again and again.
The Mueller School Dome collapse threatened to have me committed. There were so many tears, I just had to back away from it. The fiasco with Honor being "exiled" and her wallowing in her sorrow on Grayson, made me wallow in mine. Honor aboard Tepes? OMG!!! How do you people just roll right over those passages without drenching your book? I feel the pain of my characters. I become them. A death brings me to tears. Sometimes happy tears, in the case of Ransom.
And it doesn't have to be the sad parts that cause me delay, but the emotionally uplifting passages as well. When Truman brought the cavalry over the hyper wall to save Honor, I celebrated for quite a while with tears of joy. Trust me, when there are tears of any type invading your tear ducts, reading is out of the question. Too much distortion.
Since I have this "thing," I usually relegate myself to reading in private, sparing myself and the poor public the sadness of seeing a grown man crying. Which leaves me to "plan" the initial reading. For all of you astute readers who may be wondering, the answer is yes, television, movies, has the same effect on me.
Technical books is where I catch up. I can inhale a science book in an hour. Physics, math, history, computers, etc. Which takes most people forever if at all.
Also at Maxx, I envy your daughter, my niece and all other students attending school nowadays, who can take advantage of ebooks. I was a bookworm in school as well, loved school. Never actually skipped a day in my life (Why?, all the girls were at school!) I always brought all of my books home. All of them! Every day. I hated leaving a single book in my locker. If inspiration hits to read one and it is in your locker, especially over the weekend or holiday, torture! My books tended to be like encyclopedias, especially in college. Ebooks would have been perfect. So there is a place for ebooks for certain!
My book collection is impressive. Probably everyone in my family has an extreme book collection. We don't like paperback unless it is a tester book. The inspiration to read any particular book could strike at any time, especially while on vacation. So I have gigabytes of ebooks as well. But most of my reading isn't "leisure" material. It is technical material - where I inhale as well. My family and friends tease me that technical reading is my leisure reading. shrugs "The Mathematical Universe" "Lightness of Being" "The Elegant Universe" just to name a few, is my kind of reading. Even then I prefer the hardback. Equations simply look better on a page. The formatting of some ereaders simply cannot handle technical books properly. In my experience.
I don't know how ereaders actually make it. A regular tablet does the same thing, always has color. No formatting limitations, and is actually a convenience - being an actual computer as well. And then some ereaders have STUPID proprietary formats. I'm a geek so I can always circumvent that, but why bother when I can just opt for a regular tablet, oftentimes cheaper!
Gigabytes of ebooks on a digital device is appealing, convenient, archival and downright necessary if you're an avid reader. It is only that "maiden voyage" into a new work of fiction that I simply must enjoy the old-fashioned way along with my paper cuts and the rustling and wetting of pages.
So, I'm not killing trees. I'm still watering them - in a way.
Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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