Crunchy Con

Thumbs down to the Kindle

Sunday August 2, 2009

Categories: Technology

At lunch just now here at the St. James House, Shelley, a reader of this blog, mentioned that she didn't understand why anybody would want to trade in an old-technology book for the Kindle. I've seen the Kindle, and I completely agree. It's not that the Kindle is in principle a bad idea, at least not to me; it's that the page is hard to read. If the Kindle offered type in a crisp black and white instead of shades of gray, I'd be willing to reconsider. But to me, nothing can match the reading ease and pleasure of standard ink on paper.

Writing a long essay about the Kindle in the New Yorker, Nicholson Baker comes to more or less the same conclusion. And he has a suggestion for people who want to read books on electronic devices:

Amazon, with its listmania lists and its sometimes inspired recommendations and its innumerable fascinating reviews, is very good at selling things. It isn't so good, to date anyway, at making things. But, fortunately, if you want to read electronic books there's another way to go. Here's what you do. Buy an iPod Touch (it costs seventy dollars less than the Kindle 2, even after the Kindle's price was recently cut), or buy an iPhone, and load the free "Kindle for iPod" application onto it. Then, when you wake up at 3 A.M. and you need big, sad, well-placed words to tumble slowly into the basin of your mind, and you don't want to wake up the person who's in bed with you, you can reach under the pillow and find Apple's smooth machine and click it on. It's completely silent. Hold it a few inches from your face, with the words enlarged and the screen's brightness slider bar slid to its lowest setting, and read for ten or fifteen minutes. Each time you need to turn the page, just move your thumb over it, as if you were getting ready to deal a card; when you do, the page will slide out of the way, and a new one will appear. After a while, your thoughts will drift off to the unused siding where the old tall weeds are, and the string of curving words will toot a mournful toot and pull ahead. You will roll to a stop. A moment later, you'll wake and discover that you're still holding the machine but it has turned itself off. Slide it back under the pillow. Sleep.

I've done this with Joseph Mitchell's "The Bottom of the Harbor" ($13.80 Kindle, $17.25 paperback) and with Wilkie Collins's "The Moonstone." The iPod screen's resolution, at a hundred and sixty-three pixels per inch, is fairly high. (It could be much higher, though. High pixel density, not a reflective surface, is, I've come to believe, what people need when they read electronic prose.) There are other ways to read books on the iPod, too. My favorite is the Eucalyptus application, by a Scottish software developer named James Montgomerie: for $9.99, you get more than twenty thousand public-domain books whose pages turn with a voluptuous grace. There's also the Iceberg Reader, by ScrollMotion, with fixed page numbers, and a very popular app called Stanza. In Stanza, you can choose the colors of the words and of the page, and you can adjust the brightness with a vertical thumb swipe as you read. Stanza takes you to Harlequin Imprints, the Fictionwise Book Store, O'Reilly Ebooks, Feedbooks, and a number of other catalogues. A million people have downloaded Stanza. (In fact, Stanza is so good that Amazon has just bought Lexcycle, which makes the software; meanwhile, Fictionwise has been bought by a worried Barnes & Noble.)

Forty million iPod Touches and iPhones are in circulation, and most people aren't reading books on them. But some are. The nice thing about this machine is (a) it's beautiful, and (b) it's not imitating anything. It's not trying to be ink on paper. It serves a night-reading need, which the lightless Kindle doesn't.

Sooner or later, somebody's going to get the e-book right, and I'll buy it. But not just yet.


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Comments
iew
August 3, 2009 9:07 AM

Most of the negative comments are that: 1. Can't afford it, 2. Rather buy a Tome, 3. Hard to read. Yep, it does come at a high price, this is because E-Ink technology is leading edge. I can go to the cigar store and take a couple of books with me without any weight or bulk. I can read for hours with the light gray background without eye strain and the print is clear and sharp. Also, my arthritic thumbs don't hurt from holding a one pound plus book. I have about 400 physical books in boxes, what the he!! do I do with them? Hmm, where's my "History of English Speaking People" by Winston Churchill?

Observer
August 3, 2009 9:58 AM

It's hard to read.

Sorry, but that just doesn't compute. I've read the Lord of the Rings on a Nokia 9300. It's a question of getting used to it.

Now, just like that, I know your age. You're under 50, probably under 45.

Just wait a few years, and you'll catch onto at least this part of what I'm saying. My opthamologist says the only way to avoid losing your close-up vision as you get older is to die young.

itsmike
August 3, 2009 11:10 AM

Thanks to airline miles, I have a Sony Reader. I understand some of the arguments against electronic books, and I've had my share of frustrations. On the other hand, what I love is that fact that there are thousands of books now on public domain that I've been able to download free of charge. Now I can get caught up with all those Russian novels I've always wanted to read, not to mention an early Proust translation, and lots of good religious books. And, like many of you, I'm hopelessly addicted to books and reading - my place is a bit of a mess because I can't keep up with the bookshelves. The idea of a device that holds, potentially, thousands of books is a good thing for me.

ScurvyOaks
August 3, 2009 2:50 PM

To comment in a different direction: what a delight Nicholson Baker's prose is. I certainly don't like everything he's written, but, man alive, can he write. His essay "Leading with the Grumper," in The Size of Thoughts, is one of the funniest things I've ever read. The matrix for building your own compound obscenities near the end of it had me rolling on the floor.

Your Name
August 3, 2009 3:08 PM

I don't want a kindle, but I read loads of books online -- out-of-print books, from Project Gutenberg. I download them onto my laptop and get just the same kind of convenience, for no cost, plus I can finally find some of the more obscure books by my favorite authors.

By the way Rod, have you ever read 'My Wife and I' by Harriet Beecher Stowe? It's about a young journalist who goes to New York to start his career and search for a wife. You can download it from http://www.archive.org/details/mywifeandiorhar00stowgoog

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About Crunchy Con

Rod Dreher is an editorial columnist for the Dallas Morning News, and author of "Crunchy Cons" (Crown Forum), a nonfiction book about conservatives, most of them religious, whose faith and political convictions sometimes put them at odds with mainstream conservatives. The views expressed in this blog are his own.

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