Book Bites Announcement

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Showing posts with label ereader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ereader. Show all posts

07 November 2011

Book Bites' hiatus


Hello my lovelies! Gosh I miss you! And blogging! And ebooks! And everything about the internet that I can't do over my phone!

I need to apologise! Three months and no word from me! :o I was on holiday and had planned to be away for a mere month or so, but when I returned to Sydney, my computer died and I have been without the internet ever since. Regular readers will know that I quit my job to pursue other interests (including blogging and writing - kinda need a computer for those!) and while I am looking for a part time job (so I can do part time archaeology as well), I have a very stunted cash flow. Basically that means I can't afford to fix my computer at the moment, or any time soon *kicks motherboard* I was planning on buying a small netbook with my tax return, but I used it to buy flights to volunteer at an archaeology convention in my home town. Totally worth it, but... Well I really miss having a computer *sigh* I'm an internet addict, so this has been driving me insane.

I am currently at a library using their computers, however I usually get to the library on closing and the computers are busy. Today was pure luck! So, here I am. Explaining. And gosh I miss Book Bites! Oh, I suppose this is the perfect opportunity to say welcome to all the new faces!! :D I know quite a number of you from twitter and your own blogs, but I shall say welcome all the same! And apologise that I haven't been able to say welcome before today.

So, what have I been up to in the last three months? Well I went home to Toowoomba for a month or so - I had a blast! And had some ideas for a dystopian story clobber me over the head. I'm using them for NaNoWriMo this year, which is handy.  I'm going absolutely crazy not being able to read any book I want to, and being limited to the library's collection and my own bookshelves is hard. I can't charge my ereader, and I can't upload new books to it without my computer anyway, so that avenue has also been closed to me. So yes, I have also been seriously searching for a new job - something which is also hard without a computer LOL I've also been attending some readers and writers events in the last few months and I'll be blogging about Paula Roe's talk at the Burwood library in a few days.

So, where do I go from here? I will be attempting to upload some posts from my Android Blogger app, but I am not sure how good the formatting will be. I would like to say sorry in advance if there are any issues with typos, images, alignment, quotes, italics, bold font, and anything else that can go wrong and probably will go wrong... Murphy's Law and all that... I had some giveaways planned, and some guest bloggers lined up, but I'll be leaving those until I have my computer up and running again. And no, I have no idea when that will be. It might be in 2012, unless a nice cushy job falls in my lap today *looks up expectedly* Nope, nothing happened... So, basically I have no idea when I can get my computer fixed. I have some techy friends of friends, but I can't afford to pay them, and I don't expect them to work for free. So it may be a while before Book Bites can power forward again.

I hope you are all well, that your TBR pile is nice and beefy and that life is providing you with the time to read them!

08 July 2011

Sony can't keep up the the demand for the Sony Reader 650 & accessories


 
So I wasn't able to buy the case I wanted. The Sony Centre in George Street had run out, and told me they had been discontinued. They are still listed on the website. I called Burwood's David Jones store and they only have the hideous red ones {pic1} {pic2}. I will only buy one of the red ones if I have to. I'd prefer my pretty red Sony Reader to be in a black case. I didn't buy one when I bought my ereader because I had limited funds at the time. I do now as well, but as I explained yesterday, a girl has to do what a girl has to do! Tomorrow I am getting Lillian to scout Myer's in Toowoomba, and I'll spend the day with the phone calling around stores in Sydney. I really don't want the red one. I am not an eBay user, but the search I did on eBay today turned up no sources. I am ready to scream or cry or something emotional. If the case was cheaper I would just get the red one, but I am NOT spending $60 on something I find unattractive unless I have no other options. The "red" binding is too brown for my liking, and although the red flap is a gorgeous red, the brown detracts from it. If in doubt, go black! Not that it is my favourite colour or anything! *snickers* (coincidently, nearly all my clothes are black LOL The only colours are for contrasting the black.) Anyway, I am in a quandary. What to do, what to do!?!

I've been talking to @fangbooks, @staticsan and @SonyNZ on twitter, and apparently there is a high demand for them and they are sold out and unlikely to get new stock soon. I don't know who to believe. A busy manager who could have been fobbing off a customer or a twitter account. I'll go with the twitter account's reasoning because the girl looked busy and annoyed. Also, I would hate to think this product has been discontinued. It would be such a loss!

I guess it doesn't really matter. I'll be leaving NSW for the sticks in QLD in just under a month, and I need a case with a light. Unless I can find the black one, I'll have to buy the red one. But it may sell out. In that case, I guess I'll have to get a normal book light and *cries* clip it to my pretty red ereader.

God, these are SUCH #firstworldproblems! But I don't have much money, and when I buy something, it needs to count. Also, a month with solar power. It is lovely on paper, and I am proud that we aren't using grid power and all it's nasty associations, but I grew up on solar power, and it is not fun when you are a book worm! You either drain the batteries and get yelled up (just remember, I have been dealing with this since I was 6. I am now 27. I moved out of home when I was 16, but I visit as much as I can. Every night I was yelled at to put down the book and turn off the light!), or huddle with a torch which constantly kills the batteries, or ring your bed with 20 candles to get light bright enough not to give you eye strain. The option of not reading in bed of a night is a no brainer. So, yes, I need a solution. I will be home for nearly a month. A month of not reading of a night? Have I mentioned I am an insomniac? And books are my cocaine? I have? Well, you can see why this is the most pressing issue about visiting my parents. And that it is a problem I'll have in the future. My ereader was partly bought for travelling. I can take hundreds of books with me and they won't take up any room. I tried to take 20 books with me on a flight home once - it cost me a fortune! So this case will be an investment! All those times I am trying to read in low light - either on holiday, camping, on trains or in blackouts - I can just use the light!

Wish me luck! I have 3 or 4 weeks to find a solution! Damn you Sony! You create such an amazing product and then can't keep up with the demand? You need better planning in place!! Serious book readers are addicts! We can't not read. It is a compulsion! And we share our love with those around us. Three people at my book club last night were interested in buying a Sony Reader after Maria and I waxed lyrical. Three people! I guess they luck out. And apparently @staticsan hasn't been able to buy one for months... And Rosie from @fangbooks lost hers when travelling and has been desperately trying to find a replacement. There is such a demand out there for the Sony Reader Touch 650, but it seems everyone is out of luck. So good luck to everyone else who is on the endless search for the ereader and accessories!

Edit: A quick update. Rosie from @fangbooks called around about the Sony Reader 650 and apparently there are none to be had in Australia! The new release is apparently in a few months.

Edit: My friend Zach just made a comment on the Book Bites facebook page about the availability in America: "The 650s are becoming rare here in America, too. There are very few left even on Amazon. The Daily and Pocket editions are a bit more available, but that's understandable, considering the Touch is more popular. All three are out of stock according to Sony's website. I've decided that I want a Reader over a Kindle or a Nook, so I'll patiently wait for the release."

07 July 2011

Travelling, so I'm off to buy a Sony Reader case with booklight...

As a change of plans, I am now going to be staying with my parents for a couple of weeks after I finish working. I am really looking forward to the peace and quiet (and puppy kisses) which I can find at the farm. I have two problems with going home to Queensland. One is I won't have internet access, and if anyone follows me on Twitter, you can see why that would be a problem! I've also recently become addicted to theforcebook, which is a social networking site for fans of Star Wars (join us!) which will be painful to abandon for any period longer than half a day. The second problem I have is our power at the farm is completely solar! I mean, yeay, us! But it also means that we have to conserve energy. All my life I have been yelled at to "turn off that bloody light and go to sleep!" ALL. MY. LIFE! And no, it wasn't so much because I was saying up until 2am reading (although I was), but that I was draining the batteries to do so. I tried everything. Torches, candles (I need 15-20 to avoid eyestrain), book lights and being sneaky. Nothing really works. But... I have an ereader! So, tonight, I am going to buy the Sony Reader case that comes with a built in book light! I don't want to clamp a generic book light onto my ereader, and although the official case is a bit expensive, I think this is the solution. I don't actually have a case for my ereader. I have a doll's rug from my childhood that I wrap it in, papoose-like, to guard it from scratches. So tonight, after work and before book club, I am going to the Sony Centre and buying this case!

And yeay, Queensland!!

I'll need to fill my ereader so freaking full of ebooks! There is NOTHING to do out at the farm except hours of reading and writing and playing with my puppy. Oh, and housework *sigh* I think I need to um.. write... *snickers* Somehow I don't think that excuse will work on my Mum.... I do plan on writing a lot though. And typing up my Nano manuscript on Mum's laptop for an hour each day. I'm getting excited!

24 February 2011

A guide to ebooks in Australia


Note: You can use this appended URL to share this guide http://tinyurl.com/OzEbookGuide

I bought my first ereader in November and have been trying to find my way around in the world of ebooks ever since. If you don’t live in America most resources are closed to you and as a lot of bloggers and tech blogs are based in America, these challenges are not addressed in such a way to be helpful to non-Americans. There are a number of ebook resources online but I was unable to find a comprehensive starter’s guide for Australian readers. For this reason I am writing my own guide, and I hope my research can help others who are new to the world of the ereader. First, before I even touch on topics like where to obtain ebooks, there are two major hurdles you will need to be aware of. The first is Digital Rights Management (DRM) and the second is geographical restrictions.

Terminology

The terminology used in this field of publishing changes depending on which publisher, electronic company, blogger, author or reader you talk to. As Kat from BookThingo pointed out to me some companies have terms under copyright, and so we should be careful which spelling we use regarding these. Nyssa from Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers Association has been talking to friends in publishing and said that after a recent discussion they are happy to refer to “ebooks” and “ereader” for the spelling. Some people and organisations in the industry use “e-book”, “eBook” or “digital/electronic book” and “e-reader”, “eReader” or “digital/electronic reader”, etc. However as the digital option becomes more and more entrenched in our reading culture, the spelling is becoming generalised to the simplistic spelling without capital letters or hyphens. Other friends on twitter and blogs have suggested the opposite, but I am most comfortable using “ebook” and “ereader” as my standard terms. The Oxford English Dictionary recognises “ebook” but currently still has ereader listed under “e-reader”. I suspect this will change as the dictionary catches up with the rest of society. It usually takes a while for colloquialisms and common spelling to work their way into institutions like the OED.

Digital Rights Management

Digital rights management is the term for copyright holders and publishing interests which lock down access and distribution capabilities of ebooks. This limits copying, printing and sharing of ebooks, and usually limits a file to a certain number of reading devices and computers. Different ereader manufacturers use different file types, and this limits where you can buy ebooks from. Most ereader companies now provide access to .epub and .pdf file extensions, but manufacturers still have special file extensions dedicated to their devices. Amazon still has cornered the market, limiting access to their ebooks to their Kindle device, but most stores sell multiple ebook extensions, and include .epub and .pdf options. If you do use ebooks, you should take the time to get an Adobe ID because you will sometimes be asked to verify your identity to access certain ebook files. I borrow temporary ebooks from a local library, and they have quite stringent DRM.

Geographical Restrictions

Geographical restrictions are restrictions to sell ebooks in only select regions of the world. It is easier to buy ebook titles if you live in America, Canada and the UK than it is for the rest of the world. Before you purchase a book from a website, always check their FAQs to see that they are available in your region. These restrictions evolved because authors traditionally had their publishing rights sold to different publishers in different parts of the world. Unfortunately this has not been resolved, and while you can order a paper book from overseas, you can not buy a geographically restricted ebook from overseas. There are some work around methods of procurement if you are knowledgeable (proxy servers, American address with a working credit card, etc.) but they almost seem too complicated to bother. This is something that only the more influential authors can have any control over. Most authors are not able to alter the clauses of their contracts. Please, if this frustrates you, please don’t harass the author in question, but contact their publishers. This is a matter of too much red tape, and hopefully one day the idiocy of geographical restrictions for internet ebook sales will disappear. Until then, read the FAQ and T&C of your chosen ebook store, and perhaps try downloading a free or inexpensive book from them first.

Formats

One of the biggest difficulties that ereaders have is the variety of file extensions used. Companies producing ereaders have cornered their markets (Amazon is the big bad at this) and not only block other readers from using their formats, but are not able to use the other ones available on the market. The only format that all/most ereaders use is .pdf, however this may be difficult for the reader, especially if they are formatted for an A4 page. You will need to zoom in and play with the font size, and this can be quite problematic. The format that is becoming universal is .epub. I currently buy all my books in .epub and it is so much more versatile than .pdf. I cannot comment on other formats, so you will need to research your ereader and its formats to see what is your best choice for downloading. Most stores will sell you .epub and .pdf and a number of other options, depending which market they cater for.

Buying an ereader

Really, I will leave this one up to you. I can’t make your mind up for you. Pay attention to extension file types. The most common ebooks are .epub and .pdf. .pdfs will display broken lines of text on your ereader if you zoom in. This can’t be helped, as they are meant to be displayed as a document, not text. .epub and other specialist ebook formats tend to be free flowing text, so you will not have this problem. Check to see what ebook stores that sell to Australians have the file type available of your prospective ereader. Don’t be fooled if they say they have their own dedicated ebook store, as that store may be an American only offering. Read the fine print! Nearly all ebook stores (except Amazon, because they like to play king of the castle) sell ebooks in either .epub or .pdf. What are your reading habits? Do you read outside? Read in the dark? Does it use eInk? Do you need a light weighing device or can it be heavier (I can’t hold the iPad for long – I need to set it on a desk or my lap)? What is the battery life of your reader? Do you have a computer with internet access or do you need a wifi enabled ereader? Can you use memory cards? What dictionary capabilities do you have? Is it a touch screen, and if so, how responsive is it? I suggest doing a lot of research before buying your ereader. Ask friends, ask followers on twitter, look at book blogs, tech blogs, read articles in tech zines and go into the store and test drive it before you buy. Research the hell out of it, unless you want it to go dusty on a back shelf from lack of use. I did my research, and I am extremely happy with my purchase.

Free Books

Before you go to pay for any classic literature, you should know that once it is out of copyright, websites like Project Gutenberg can distribute it for free. If a book is older than 50 or so years, I suggest checking the free sites to see if you can obtain it there. I downloaded a lot of classics from Project Gutenberg and then found out ebook stores were selling them for $7+, so it is worth checking first. Project Gutenberg does not have DRM or Geographical Restrictions, so Australians CAN access these books! They have a variety of formats and have even made their own java apps so you can download books to your smart phone! Also check out the regional Gutenberg sites.

Baen Library is a resource that the Baen publishing house has set up. It provides readers with a few free books for a large variety of authors. It doesn’t list their entire back catalogue of course, but it is a good selection for people who read fantasy and science fiction. I found some books on there that I loved as a teenager and others I had always wanted to try, so I am quite happy with their service. They also have a paid service on their website (link below).

Tor.com is a website affiliated with Tor Books (and Macmillan by default). It offers free short stories, novellas, and if you are really lucky, you may find an entire novel. Some authors are unknown, but some are big names you will definitely recognise. You may need to sign up to download these, although you can read them online (update: I think these are now a nominal $0.99 per story. I skimmed the email, so I need to check their website again).


Check your local and state libraries to see if they lend ebooks. A good tool to look for libraries that lend ebooks is Overdrive.

Follow all your favourite authors on twitter, facebook and blogs and you may be lucky! Sometimes they offer free short stories or novellas associated with their established series. It is also worth visiting author’s websites to see what free content they have available to their fans. You won’t be able to download all their books for free (understandably) but they may have Easter Eggs hidden for their fans! :D Oh, “Easter Eggs” is a gaming term – they may have bonus content tucked away on their websites or blogs. It really is worth checking!

Enter competitions! Lots and lots of competitions! You can enter for paper books and ebooks depending on the competition. You discover these by following blogs and people (authors, bloggers, publishers, etc.) on twitter. Good luck!

Join review sites such as NetGalley. You will need to follow their terms and review their books on your blog, as it is part of their PR campaign for new releases.


Purchasing Books

Note: You will need a credit or debit card. Some ebook stores seem to offer PayPal transactions, but not all. Most banks, credit unions and building societies will be able to provide you with a debit card if you don’t want to get into debt for the sake of buying (more) books. Some stores, despite offering the PayPal option, still require a credit card purchase if it is a secured format.

I will list some stores that I have found in my wanderings or my bookish twitter friends have recommended. I will try buying from all these stores eventually, and will put an asterisk beside them when I am successful. If you are an Aussie or a Kiwi and buy ebooks from a different store, can you please leave a comment below and I will update the list. My first recommendation, when you think you have found a site that you think will sell you an ebook is to find check the FAQ’s and help section to see if they say anything about geographical restrictions. If you think you are able to buy there, search for a free book or a very cheap book, sign up and see if you can download it. It really is a process of trial and error and if you have problems buying, downloading, syncing ebooks with your ereader it is best not to have spent a fortune on the ebook in question. Check to see if your ereader software links to a store (my Sony Reader has links to Borders and Angus and Robertson) and see if you can buy there.

Ebook Resources

The sites below with an asterisk are ones I have successfully used to obtain at least one book from using an Australian credit card (or PayPal) and an Australian address. I cannot guarantee they will work for you, but I can tell you that I have downloaded books from there successfully. I will be systematically going through these sites and purchasing books for my Sony Reader (.epub and .pdf files) and will update the list as needed. If you have any other suggestions, please let me know, either in the comments section or on twitter. Please use direct links, as I only access shortened links (tinyurl, etc.) if I know and trust a person.

This list will be constantly updated as I come across new resources (and check the bookmarks on my home computer) so it may be an idea to bookmark this page and refer back periodically. I’ll post a note on twitter when there have been updates to this list.


Free

Project Gutenberg* {link}
Project Gutenberg Affiliates and Resources* {link}
Project Gutenberg Australia* {link}
ManyBooks.net* {link}
Tor.com* {link}
Baen Library* {link}
Everyone's Reading* {link}
Bookyards {link}
Open Library {link}
Feed Books {link}
Complete published works of HP Lovecraft {link}

Borrow

Overdrive Library Search* {link}
Open Library {link}

Review

Net Galley {link}
Angry Robots {link}

Paid

Dymocks* {link}
Angus & Robertson {link}
Borders* {link}
Booku (Australian based store) {link}
Book Depository {link}
Books On Board* {link}
Diesel eBooks {link}
OmniLit * {link}
All Romance* {link}
Decadent Publishing* {link}
Ebooks.com {link}
Smash Words {link}
Read Without Paper {link}
WebSubscription Ebooks (Baen)* {link}
Twelfth Planet Press {link}
Amber Quill {link}
Total-e-bound {link}
Carina Press {link}
Amazon {link}
Samhain Publishing {link}
Bookstrand.com {link}
eReader.com {link}
Noble Romance Publishing {link}
New Concepts Publishing {link}

Please comment if you know of others!

Please note that this article is my current understanding of the ebook industry in Australia. I bought my ereader in November 2010 and started buying ebooks in December of the same year. I am by no means an expert, but on discovering the lack of information for new Australian ereader owners, I felt it was my duty to compile my research for others. I have not included hacks – you can search for them if you want. I wanted a place that shared with other Australians which stores they can access and to explain some of the lingo that is important to us. Most ereader blogs (bookbee.net, etc.) will be able to explain how to get around these limitations of not being American or British and I don’t feel qualified explaining them. They are out there if you do get fed up with the limitations of buying ebooks from Australian soil.

[Note: Updated 27/04/2011. This is a working article. I will be updating it as I come across new aspects of the epublishing world. Please let me know if you think there are other aspects I should cover in this article.]




05 November 2010

Book Bites on hiatus because of NaNoWriMo!


I won’t be posting my usual memes for a few weeks. I have been distracted by planning for NaNoWriMo, and now writing, so I haven’t been reading all that much. Add to that, the books I _want_ to read were lent to me by Rosie, and I have a rule about borrowed books – they don’t leave the house! So I haven’t been reading as frenetically as I normally do. I've just been reading a few chapters a day. As someone who reads most of a book per day, this is quite mind boggling for me, but I just haven’t been able to churn through them like I normally do. I think I could if I could take them with me during the day – I am so rarely home! But books that travel with me become well loved. My book bag also has my notebook, bottle of water, and umbrella, so it never stays pristine. If it is my books, that is okay. I don’t mind a book that is well loved. But I am not going to prematurely age someone else’s books! So they get to stay cuddled up on my bed while I go to work *sigh* This is also the reason I am still reading Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. Because I have all these goodies waiting at home for me to read, I haven’t been just reading Never Let Me Go. I read it in my lunchbreak and while I am commuting, but not at home. I’ll have to start, because the book club I am reading it for is on the 13th of November! I've only read two thirds of it so far! I am really really enjoying it however. It seems to be the type of book that sneaks up on you. You aren’t expecting it, but it just keeps on drawing you in. I don’t know how to define this book AT ALL! I don’t know who I would recommend it to, or who else would appreciate it. It will definitely be on my recommendation list however.

I am currently focusing on Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro and Beyond The Night by Joss Ware. Both are dystopian, but with different bents. Beyond The Night seems to be a dystopian romance or science fiction romance? I haven't gotten far enough in to see if it is a romance, but it definitely has that feel to it. The story is interesting enough and the writing is good enough that I haven’t been focusing on the couple, but the whole story. I can’t wait to see what happens!! And if the Strangers have created those zombie like creatures! o_O And how they kicked off the apocalypse! Love it!
Edit: I finished it last night. Epic! So buying this series!


As I mentioned, I am undertaking NaNoWriMo this year. It started this week, and to put it simply, it is an international month-long write-a-thon. The goal is to write 50,000 words in the month of November. So I would basically need to write just under 2,000 words per day. That doesn’t seem like a lot, but life gets in the way. I don’t want to be writing complete and utter crap, and I have a very definite story in mind. I gave up on the concept of writing seriously when I was a teenager, so I am doing this for myself. I spend all my time editing, reworking and waxing lyrical and never finish a story. I am using this NaNo to try and overcome that problem. I’m not allowed to get hung up on editing. Which is going to be so bloody hard! I am the type of person who dithers over each sentence, and the challenge for me is to leave them be and come back latter to edit them. The problem with that is that I love words. I love making them work together, and I love them individually. So choking that impulse down will be difficult. I am already behind, so I need to up my daily goal to catch up. I am writing by hand, so I don’t have a fancy automatic word count *sigh* I thought I had a system worked out for estimating, but I counted it by hand yesterday, and I am about 1000 words behind what I thought. So instead of being about 4000 words I am about 3000, give or take. I was sick yesterday, so I only wrote 3 pages *sad face* I went to a write-in in the city on Wednesday night and found it really helpful, so I think I am going to go to the one on Sunday as well. I’ll miss the one next Wednesday because it is the same night as the Galaxy EOY party. I also miss the Galaxy book club because I am going to see Metallica (!) perform *grins* Worth missing one night, surely! Anyway, I am hoping the write-ins help me spew words onto the page, because leisurely scrawling in my lunchbreak is only churning out 3 to 5 pages… those pages have anywhere from 150-200 words per page, so it really isn’t enough! :( My friend Ari has already passed 25000 words!!! And Bons has passed 10000! O.O I need to get my freak on! Wish me luck! I already want to go back and edit the crap out of it *sigh* Are you doing NaNoWriMo? Do you want to add me as a buddy? I do have a writing blog, but I am not really writing much on there at the moment. Nothing is ready for someone else to read. It needs a lot of pruning! Instead I am commenting on twitter and facebook LOL You can add me at http://www.nanowrimo.org/eng/user/682560 and follow me on twitter at http://twitter.com/obsidiantears83 Good luck if you are doing NaNo this year! :D

I have a rule for November not to read anything urban fantasy, because I am writing an urban fantasy and I don’t want to be influenced, even subconsciously! Already it is starting to seem like her dog is a little bit more than just a dog *sigh* I need to turn him back into a canine and not a lupine! Maybe he is just a smart and empathetic puppy?

Oh, and I am also reading up on Jung's theory of collective unconsciousness in relation to my story :)

Also, I am hopefully buying the Sony Reader next week! :D I am so freaking excited!!!

Sorry if there are any typos or badly constructed sentences above! I haven't time to proof it, and I wanted to get it up and out there why I have been so quiet :) I may still pop in now and again, but I won't be blogging religiously!


08 October 2010

BTT: Travel



Booking Through Thursday asks:

When you travel, how many books do you bring with you? Has this changed since the arrival of ebooks?

This is a timely question, as I just got back from a holiday. I normally take a minimum of three books with me when I travel. It depends how long I plan to be away, and if I have the funds to purchase during that holiday. My destination is also important, as I may be able to borrow books whilst on holiday.

This time I was visiting my family farm for a week. I knew I wouldn’t have much time to kick back and read (we have solar power, so I don’t get to read much of a night) and I also knew that I could borrow books from my parents, my friends or a local library if I needed something to read. I took three large books with me, borrowed a few paperbacks from my mum when I was there, and used her library card (apparently I still owe them money?) and borrowed a book I needed for book club tomorrow. I didn’t finish my books, because I felt like light reading, not the doorstoppers I took with me.

When I am visiting my grandmother for the weekend, I normally take three books. One I am currently reading at the time, one solid read and one light read. I get brainfog, so I need something to read when I can’t concentrate properly.

I am getting a Sony Reader, and I envision this will make it easier to travel! I can take hundreds of books with me and not need to worry about baggage allowance. I used to go home for 3 months at a time as a student, and most of my luggage was books. It made my bags quite heavy *snickers* When I get my shiny new toy *ahem* tool I can have more selection while on holiday. It means I won’t have the same problem I had when I was visiting my parents. The Sony Reader has a good battery life, so it won’t need power, and I can read of a night if I buy a booklight (I find them clunky when attached to books, because of the page turning and curve of the pages). I can have multiple light reads and heavy reads but only have the once item packed. It will save so much room in my luggage. The only issue I have is when I am flying. I know you have to turn off all electronic devices at certain times during the flight, so I guess I would still have to pack a paperback LOL


28 September 2010

On holiday, out of books and getting an eReader

I am intermittently on holiday this fortnight. I was on the Central Coast for the last three days, and as of Thursday night I am in Queensland for a week. For this reason, my blogging will be practically non-existent for this period. I may be able to get near a computer, but I am not making any promises. I had to skip yesterday’s Manic Monday, and Booking Through Thursday doesn’t get released until late on Thursday so I am unlikely to be able to complete that before I board my flight. Next week’s Manic Monday and Teaser Tuesday will depend if I can borrow a friend’s computer in my home town as my parents don’t have the internet on. I will be updating my twitter from my phone, so if you want updates, you can follow me on http://twitter.com/obsidiantears83

I am still on a book ban because of limited finances, but I may splash out and get a book for the flight home. I hate having nothing to read!!! :( I am rereading all my novels, and have been for over a month. It is driving me crazy. I visited my (Great) Auntie June yesterday and she gave us (my Mum and I) a big bag of “sloppies” as my dad calls them. Yes that is right, I have been reduced to reading old Mills and Boons to keep myself entertained! I have reread my books SOOOOO many times that I can’t stomach much more of it. I also found out the Gutenberg Project has a mobile website m.gutenberg.org and that they have a java app for books you can download called QIOO! So I downloaded a few. It is hard though, because my screen is so small, and my phone battery gets chewed up. But I have been reading Around The World in 80 Days and have decided that I am either buying the book, or the eBook when I get my Sony Reader. I've also been reading HP Lovecraft, Wilke Collins, Dante, Kafka, PG Wodenhouse and Oscar Wilde. Yes, I downloaded a lot of books, but the only one I have read a lot of is the Jules Verne one. I will probably get the rest in hard copy or EPUB later. I keep meaning to join the Campsie library, but I am busy on weekends. My car has been fixed, so I may be able to go after work and join. I need to find a copy of Storm Front by Jim Butcher to have read by the 11th of October for book club. I bought it last year, read half, hated it, gave it away. I refuse to buy it again. Especially because it is part of a series I choose not to read. I can’t remember exactly why I hated it, but I remember thinking it was very dry and that it was a bit sexist. It felt like a noir film, in which I overlook sexism, because it was part of the times. Modern books tend to turn me off when they are sexist. I need to reread it to back up this statement, but I remember that feeling of sexism was one of the reasons I stopped reading it. That and I just wasn’t interested. Book club should be fun! I wonder if I still have this feeling when I read it again.


My other news is I have decided I want to get a Sony Reader. I give myself one present from my tax return every year, and it is that time again! I can buy cheaper books, download free classics and not lug around a million books with me. I normally take two books with me everywhere, more when I am travelling, and have six books stashed around my office. Instead I can have one slimline device and one book with me and not need to lug around a book bag with me everywhere! No, I am not forsaking the printed word! I love books with a passion! If I gave one a squishy hug, I would squish all the ink out of the pages, that is how hard I would hug it. I can’t see my life without books. My earliest memories are of books, and I am never not reading something! The smell, the texture, the tactile nature, the concept… I just don’t think I will every solely read eBooks. But I still can’t buy certain books in paperback, and I can’t afford them in hardcover. So this is my answer: http://www.sony.com.au/product/prs-650
It comes in black and red, it has expandable storage, can read EPUB, PDF, Text, RTF, Word and BBeB, plays audio files, has 12 inbuilt dictionaries (English, plus German, Spanish, French, Dutch and Italian), it has a touch screen, but it isn’t built into the screen, so it is readable in the sun! It also has 2 weeks battery life :D I am gonna love that baby! I am getting the red one, of course. I thought about getting the black one, but my twitter friends talked me out of being sensible.

Would you ever get an eReader? And if so, would that be instead of books, or as a supplement?


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