THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

The Kindle Versus the Book

The Kindle Versus the Book

Opinion by Deanna Atkins

Author: Bodine, James/Friday, November 7, 2014/Categories: Opinion

Rate this article:
5.0

As a communications major, I do a fair share of reading. Novel after novel and textbook after textbook, I devour the pages so that I can write five to six page papers for multiple classes. In order to do so, a stack of books lined the corner of my desk, each with bookmarks and penciled-in notes from class lectures. Lugging them around from class after class seemed normal to me because I needed them. What would I do without these textbooks? I never thought to ask myself that until I started reading e-books from a Kindle.



I had never used a Kindle until I received one as a gift for Christmas a year ago. At first, I turned it on, looked at what it had to offer and turned it back off. I went months without using it, and then, one day, curiosity got the best of me. I decided to see what it would be like to use one, so I bought a book, downloaded it and began reading. Now, I find myself reading from this backlit electronic rectangular screen daily. Instead of turning pages, I tap the right side of the screen. Instead of penciling in comments and notes, I touch and highlight passages with my finger.



After some time using my kindle, I began to add more and more books on it. It was like taking around a laptop with multiple files. Instead of buying books from the store, I just tapped a screen and had a book within seconds. This became surprisingly useful because every book I needed was in one place and took only seconds to receive no matter my location. Not to mention, the Kindle is compact and light; whereas I used to carry around six textbooks a day, now I carry one. All the electronic files of those 500-plus-page books are accessible immediately, when I want and where I want. Talk about a load off my back; do I even need a backpack anymore?



Along these same lines, since this new technology reduces the need for physical paperback books, what will eventually happen to them? After some research, I read an article from Slate that pinpointed exactly what I wanted to know. It talks about the sales of “adult-fiction” paperback and hardcover books. It said, in the year 2012 alone, sales dropped for the first time ever under e-book files. However, although the sales are down, paperback books may never go away completely. This is because these books can be sold several times over and over secondhand while an e-book cannot. To me, as a student, this is very true. Since my first year in college, I bought every book I needed secondhand or rented a book that had been used several times before me.



But, what happens when the book I need does not have an e-book file? Well, that means I will buy or rent a physical paperback or hardcover book, which also tells me that the e-books and the kindle have not quite taken over yet. Even though I and others may use our kindles more than actual books, these books may never go out of production, or at least, not any time soon.



 
Print

Number of views (11658)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

FLC Men Win Two Home Thrillers This Weekend

By Matthew T. Roy

The home crowd was rocking and the home team was flying as the Fort Lewis College Men’s basketball team won both of their Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference home openers this weekend with victories against the Colorado Mesa University Mavericks on Friday and the Western State University Mountaineers on Saturday in overtime.

The home crowd was rocking and the home team was flying as the Fort Lewis College Men’s basketball team won both of their Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference home openers this weekend with victories against the Colorado Mesa University Mavericks on Friday and the Western State University Mountaineers on Saturday in overtime.   Friday: FLC puts down the Mavericks, 96-80....

Trail Time: Winter Trail Closures

By Aidan Multhauf

These will be closed until April 15th, when the elk return to the high country:

Hiking is a favorite pastime for many Fort Lewis students and faculty, and Durango offers year round weather that is conducive for a good time. Unfortunately, weather isn’t the only aspect that affects trail closures. Since Durango is a mountain town, we have wildlife, like bears and deer, that live in and around town year round. We also have wildlife, such as elk, that migrate through...

Victim Escaped Unharmed From Armed Carjacking at FLC

By Ryan Simonovich

More details have been released about an armed carjacking beginning on the Fort Lewis College campus Monday night.

 

    Update Nov. 29 at 12:40 p.m.   More details have been released about an armed carjacking begining on the Fort Lewis College campus Monday night.   A man, who is not a student, was waiting in his vehicle in the Jones Hall parking lot, according to a release sent to the student body by FLC public affairs officer Mitch Davis.   The suspect,...

How Wildfires Work

By Ryan Simonovich

Wildfires have burned over 8.8 million acres of land in the United States this year, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.

 

Wildfires have burned over 8.8 million acres of land in the United States this year, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.   Southwest Colorado has a legacy of wildfires. In 2002, the Missionary Ridge Fire burned over 70,000 acres north of Durango, and in 2013, the West Fork Complex Fire burned over 109,000 acres near Wolf Creek Pass, according to the National Wildfire...

Changes to Durango T Could Impact FLC Students

by C.J. Calvert

The Durango Transit is set to go through major changes within the next year due to budget cuts.   “We are faced with service reductions due to budgetary constraints,” said Amber Blake, the transportation director for the Department of Transportation and Sustainability of Durango.   On Nov. 1, there was an open house to discuss the change in the Durango Transit...

First6263646567697071Last