Posts Tagged ‘e-readers’

Reading on the Kindle Notes

Sunday, January 2nd, 2011

I’ve finished my first book on my Christmas Kindle: Anthony Trollope’s The Prime Minister.  I did not start the book on the Kindle, having read maybe a fifth of it in a Penguin paperback, but read most of the book on the e-reader, including early pages that I didn’t read well becaues of self-awareness and awareness of the device.

Once I got used to it, I liked it a lot.  Here are some initial observations:

The lightness of the device (when it isn’t wearing its new protective cover), is amazing and much better for reading in bed than any book I’ve read since comix.

Something about the format, the relatively small screen, which is highly readable, changes my reading style with the intense focus on the present paragraphs.  I find it hard to skim and modulate my speed, which I apparently never realized I did so much of.  Since I will also be reading hard copy books, as well as the Kindle, I hope this simply turns into another way of reading, an addition to my reading repertoire.

What does look likely, and as I planned, is that I will gradually get all the free Victorian novels onto the Kindle and always travel with Geo. Eliot, Jane Austen, Uncle Tony, Charles Dickens, and all the rest of them.  I’m not so sure about the Great Russians because of the issue of translations– the best translations are probably not going to be free.  Do I really want Constance Garnett’s Tolstoy?  Maybe I do.  Anyhow, what I’m likely to carry with me is going to be out-of-copyright English language novels.

I haven’t tried poetry yet.

I haven’t bought a book  for money yet.  I was going to try the last of the Fire and Ice George R.R. Martin sword and sorcery books, but had already ordered a cheap used copy– a giant hard back.  Too bad.  I might still shell out six dollars to try it on the Kindle.

I’m not satisfied with how some of the books for Kindle look that are from sources other than the Amazon store (including the Smashwords books ): they have a double space between paragraphs, a combination of business letter and conventional narrative paragraphing that irritates me because it denies us novelists another means of expression– the double space.

More anon.

Turning the Page…

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

I don’t know why I didn’t notice this on the first two days with my Kindle, but suddenly, last night, reading in bed, I started noticing a black  “negative” of the page as it advanced to the next page.  I thought at first it was some kind of lowered power level as the battery got used up, or maybe my tired eyes.  But the battery was fine, and it was the same in the morning.

Well,  I googled “kindle page turns negative,” and there was a site with a lot of commentary about this from people with identities  like  “Shangrilachica,” “Desertmama,” “Mccook666,” and a whole host of others who all agreed that there is something inherent in the e-ink technology (Nook, Sony, Kindle, all of them) that causes a black flash (what I called a negative) when you turn the page.

So it looks like get used to it or don’t use it.  Which is fine, I’m willing.

What’s odd is why it took me so long to notice it.  Was it that I was only beginning to get comfortable enough to sink into the story and be irritated by something pulling me out?  Up to this point, I may have been less reading and more enjoying the awareness of Me Reading My Kindle.

But now I know: I have to suck it up until it becomes as invisible as my hand picking up the corner of a piece of paper and turning it.

I Got A Kindle Wi-fi!

Sunday, December 26th, 2010

It’s the day after Christmas, and I got my Kindle! The lightness and relative transparency– directly to the words!–delight me. I downloaded Trollope’s The Prime Minister (free)– which is what I had been reading in a paper back– and is something I like but am not totally caught up in or totally admiring of. In other words, I don’t mind practicing the new device with it.

The black words on gray are a complete pleasure, the lightness of the  thin little  machine on my fingertips and its size and shape please me.  I lay in bed last night and held it up in the air over my face, so much lighter that a big book.  Easy.  I also immediately liked the two sided controls forward and  back, although the left hand one, useful as it is, takes some getting used to  — intuitively, left should be  back in my old brain.  Being able to make the letters of the text bigger for reading at least  temporarily sans glasses is good  (I’ll try that at night to read in bed).

The only thing that is disturbing me at the moment is the narrow focus on the present of the screen.  I think (and I didn’t know this) that I must , when I’m reading a conventional book, flip back and forth a lot, unconsciously checking how much of the book is read, yet to read, taking a break from the simple focused reading.  I check things, move back and forth a lot.

Can the electronic device be more linear than a book!  Wow!

Romance Novels are going Electronic

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Today’s New York Times has an interesting article about how romance novels are the fastest growing e-book market.

The Latest Newest Hottest, well, at least the Latest Way to Publish Is….

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

… the Kindle Singles or the Borders  version of the same thing. Businessweek has a piece describing   this .  The idea, I think, is that people who don’t want to (a) go looking for an agent for a book they haven’t written yet or (b) don’t want to self-publish or (c) maybe just have a monograph or chapbook length publication  (twice as long as a New Yorker article) that they want to put out in the world.  So for a few bucks, you can publish an e-book version of  it.  Note that you have to pay.  Interestingly enough, you can upload e-books for the Kindle for free at Amazon’s Digital Text Platform.  So I’m not sure why a person would use this.  The Digital Text Platform requires you to convert your book into html, which you can do in Word or other word processors.

Basically, it’s one more sign of how it’s all in flux, if you ask me.

Old published books– Going digital…

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

I am still splashing around in the web water, not always quite sure why I do what I do, but the one thing that has become clear to me is that whatever I write, web-based or hard copy, it has to be digital.

My latest book (just published:  a short story collection called Out of the Mountains ) had electronic galleys that came to me by email.  I was supposed to print them out and mark them, but some publishers I’m told are asking the authors to do mark-up electronically as well.

But here’s the point:  I have at least three books from the early nineteen eighties when I was first publishing that are out of print from the original publishers and were never digital in the first place.  A couple of them can be ordered now through the wonders of one-book-at-a-time technology  (the hard copy was scanned in as  .pdf files), but as I begin to prepare some of my books for e-readers, I wanted to get them scanned in as word processer files so I can make changes and digitalize for e-readers.

I’ve now done one with a pleasant-to-work-with company in Missouri called Golden Images, LLC. If you try them write to  Stan Drew, who may be the whole show, but is in any case very responsive to email.  The price is less that .50 a page, much less for .pdf files, but I think most of us with old books want the word processor files.  Even with Stan’s good work, I am having to go through the book  (Higher Ground) looking for anomalies  (apostrophes that became Greek sigmas, etc.) but that’s fine because I wanted to see how the book felt anyhow– this was a book that I wanted at one point to make changes in, but couldn’t face retyping.  So I’ll take my time and have fun.

More later about the differences in a typewritten book and a word processed book.

Reversal of Fortunes?

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Is Barnes & Noble in trouble and the remaining private bookstores in a better position to handle physical books in the age of e-books?  See what the New York Times thinks.

Agency Becomes EBook Publisher: Random House P.O.’d

Monday, July 26th, 2010

I received emails from the Author’s Guild today telling how the Wylie literary agency has set up its own publishing branch called Odyssey Editions and cut a deal with Amazon for twenty in-print, famous books like Lolita, Invisible Man, and Portnoy’s Complaint.  Random house is up in arms  (I assume they have print rights to these books). It turns out that these are books for which the authors kept electronic rights, which the publishing houses are trying to get.  Read the whole story here and here.

Interesting stuff– I’m on the writers’ side of course, except that I want all information to be free, live long, and prosper.

David’s Kindle

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

We’re at the lake with Andy’s brother David, and David has a Kindle.  It’s a first generation Kindle, and David says he uses it primarily for reading fiction– pleasure reading.  He says he doesn’t use it for anything that he would take notes on. I fooled around with it for twenty minutes, as I have in the past, but this time more serious about turning it on, reading some pages of Booth Tarkington’s Magnificent Ambersons, turning pages, testing larger font sizes  (can I read without my glasses?– yes, but such short pages who wants to?), tried it outside on the hammock, and yes, sun and shade, very readable.  He says images and maps, photos of, say, the subject of a biography– all of that is pretty useless, as is the miniature keyboard at the bottom.

And!  He has an app for his computer that reads books for Kindle, and he bought a copy of Trespassers (Hamilton Stone Editions)  from Smashwords and loaded it, and there it was, my first ebook sale, sort of.  Well, well, well.

Libraries

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

I always loved them, as buildings, as spaces: the dark side of the single standing shelf in the one room woman’s club library in Shinnston, WV, where the grown up books were.  Where I met Dostoyevsky.

The awesome lion-guarded 42nd Street Library in New York far more like the Metropolitan Museum than the library where I first took out books.  But in some weird way libraries never became my preferred  source of books: the books I loved most were in people’s houses (my mother’s set of Charlotte and Emily Bronte with the Rockwell Kent woodcut illustrations;  a book of cartoons in my aunt’s house in Scott County Tennessee that were like a twisted version of New York to me– drunk flappers and street urchins, pigeon breasted matrons).  I liked to own books.  I bought all the Black Stallion books, $2.00 each of birthday and holiday money over several years.

Why did I never bond with libraries? It wasn’t about ownership as much as about intimacy, perhaps.  I know people who read constantly from libraries, sometimes visiting several branches in a day to get enough books to tide them over their vacation. And I DID sign out books, stacks of books, but they weren’t mine.  I had to return them.  There was a vague anxiety about getting them back in a timely fashion, unsoiled, with no dog ears.

Partly, I think  I don’t like the social aspect of running into people I know. Reading is deeply private to me.  When I read, I leave my body here, and go elsewhere.   I trade books on Paperback Swap; I buy cheap used books via Bibliofind and the other places for used books. I look through my husband’s mysteries and thrillers if I’m really at a loss.  I hope soon, finally! to have an electronic reader, access to all books, all knowledge, all entertainment, all experience.