

Why the eReader beats paper and I will never do without books

Paper is out, say manufacturers like Amazon and Kobo. Soulless electronic waste, say book fans about eReaders. In short: digital books are the big controversy in the book trade and among readers. An attempt to calm the waves.
Nevertheless, my Kindle is my daily companion. Of all my consumer electronics, the Kindle is the device I would least like to do without. Book purists have probably already pulled out their torches and pitchforks, conjuring up the death of the bookshop and demanding an apology in the name of Gutenberg. But I'm sticking to my guns: not without my Kindle.
Consumption vs. enjoyment
Nothing will ever replace a book for me. That's for sure. A hundred Kindles can come along and Amazon can offer as many Unlimited products as it likes. Because my expectations of a book are completely different to my expectations of a story.
My Kindle is therefore always with me because it is miles ahead of a book in terms of technology. I can pick up a new story in seconds when I'm on the move, at an airport somewhere in the world or on the bus on the way to the office, and read it straight away. For bookworms like me, this is infinitely valuable and a great quality of life.
The ubiquitous books aren't even my favourite feature of the Kindle. It's the illumination of the ePaper screen. No matter how light or dark it is on the bus, at the airport or at home in bed, the story in front of me is always the same brightness and I can immerse myself in the book even when I'm on the move.
When it comes to consuming a story, i.e. just the content of the book, then an eReader is clearly the winner.
The opportunity for independent authors
The Martian is considered one of the best and most influential science fiction books of recent years. The success story has come to a temporary end with the film adaptation of the story by science fiction grandmaster Ridley Scott.
The world is a strange place.
Between Weir and Sims/Branwen, there are thousands of authors trying their luck away from the established publishers and that's a good thing. Time and again I discover short stories or entire books that are good to read but would never make it into a publishing programme.
Why books will never die out
But a book is no longer something I read on the bus or tram. A book has gone from being the carrier of a story to an object of quality of life. When I read a book, it's a conscious pleasure. I smell the paper and the glue of the book, feel the roughness of the paper and sit in a comfortable chair or curl up under a blanket on the couch and successfully hide from the world.
Over the years, my eReader has taught me one thing: books are more than just words that become a story. I have rediscovered books, something I never expected as a bookworm since the age of four. I have also bought far more books despite having a Kindle. Because if I like a Kindle book, I want to have it on my shelf. So I have bought strange books that are far outside my favourite genres. My Kindle has made my library better.
Ideally, however, only one thing counts for me in the end: that you, your family and all your friends read. No matter what. Read newspapers, comics, books, Playboy, instruction manuals or articles on digitec.
And while you're here: What do you think? Are eReaders better than books? Why are they or why aren't they? Tell me and everyone else here in the comments. Then there'll be even more reading material.
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Journalist. Author. Hacker. A storyteller searching for boundaries, secrets and taboos – putting the world to paper. Not because I can but because I can’t not.
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