In Defense of Kindle (and other eReaders)
Talk to any group of voracious readers, and eventually the topic of electronic reading devices is going to come up. Several times at science fiction conventions and Renaissance Faires I’ve been involved in some discussions and arguments that have made me think, Can we please talk about something less volatile, like the 2012 Presidential Campaign. Yeah, people can get pretty heated, and in most cases, it’s the people who believe that eReaders are the most recent blasphemy sent to earth by whichever embodiment of evil their spiritual path happens to believe in.
Even legendary science fiction author, Ray Bradbury had this to say when asked about Kindle and other eReaders: “Those aren’t books.“
Ouch. Really ouch.
Ray Bradbury was one of my early writing heroes. And while I don’t hold him on the same pedestal I used to, I still respect him as a pioneer of genre fiction and as a brilliant writer. This particular quote hurt me a bit, as I make a decent part of my living selling eBooks for the Amazon Kindle. To have one of the greats tell me that they aren’t real books hurt a lot.
Then, later that same week, I had a parent-teacher conference with the teacher of my eleven-year-old son. For those of you who follow my Twitter stream, Mathew has been the source of #TenYearOldWisdome and #ElevenYearOldWisdom. The teacher showed us an argumentative essay Mathew had to write for class. The title is “Kindles at School.”
For those of you who can’t quite make out the image, allow me to transcribe it. (To maintain the authenticity, I have transcribed the paragraph without edits.)