13
votes

In Praise of Bibliophilia

posted May 31, 2008 - 11:59am
In Praise of Bibliophilia

Don’t get me wrong. I love the Internet. Even though I was already in my 40s by the time the PC revolution happened, just like virtually everybody else, I’ve gradually become reliant on e-mail and surfing the Net. For anyone who hasn’t been living in a cave for the last twenty years or so, it’s no secret that the Internet contains a wealth of information (and misinformation); it’s entertaining; it’s opinionated; it’s a companion when you’re feeling in need of a friend and a battleground when you’re in the mood for a good old-fashioned food fight. The Internet is also a great resource for writers trolling for facts to back up their arguments. But it’s not the only show in town. Not by a long shot.

In a comment to a xombyte of mine, someone actually made fun of me for saying that I preferred books over the Internet. After considering the implications of such a peculiar reaction, it occurred to me how radically the world has changed since I was his age. I speculated on what a life glued to a computer screen or a mobile device every spare moment must be like, where you inhabit a virtual world and only come up for air to eat and sleep, watch a little mindless TV, and interact with friends and family off-screen if you happen to run into them.

Recently I was horrified to watch a segment on one of the TV magazine shows on how computer communication has taken over the academic and social lives of kids. One teenager who was interviewed commented blithely that he couldn’t even remember the last time he cracked a book. He claimed that instead of actually reading the required books for a course, he would just visit a Cliff Notes-style website popular with students and download summaries to hand in to his teachers. And this kid is apparently the rule, not the exception. One can only imagine with horror a future filled with accomplished technogeeks like him with the attention spans and intellectual capacities of turnips: virtual world-addicted kids who’ve never read Shakespeare or Emerson or Darwin in the original, but rather sterile summaries of the plot lines and major points from one of thousands of cheat sheet websites.

The moral to my rant? Remember that books have a vital role to play in the mental, spiritual and intellectual lives of human beings. Don’t give up the intense pleasure of reading books in favor of an Internet-obsessed life. Books expand your mind and lift your spirits in a way that the Net can never hope to do. If you can’t afford your own books, check them out of the local library. That way you’ll save some trees and be inspired at the same time. Yes, you can read many books on line, but for me, reading off a plastic screen is no substitute for the simple act of page turning. As much as I wouldn’t want to give up what the Internet brings to me, it will never take the place of the books in my life.



Comments

Love Books Too

Although I spend a lot of time on the Internet, I love the pleasure of reading a good book. I love the smell, feel and just the words on the page. Agree with what you said Veghead. Don't know what's going to happen to the younger generation.

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Collectors are a small, kinky subset

So there's no danger that words will go unread as long as normal people are willing to absorb their spine-tingling wisdom (especially mine, I might add). Ever watch the film "The Collector", by the way? With the great Terence Stamp in the title role (I think it was Stamp, I don't feel like googling it). Anyway, talk about spine-tingling. But actually the book was better. That's usually the case with movies made from books.

veghead's Xombytes

The Internet: Salvation for Writers in a Book-Collectors' World

A world full of book-collectors (the ones who keep their books in unread, mint condition) would be Hell for writers ... their work meaning NOTHING unless the words are read. Thank Luck for the Internet! With More Devotion to than Words Dare Express, Uncle MythMan

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Attention spans of web obsessives are really short

I hope books, newspapers and zines will never go the way of records. People need to challenge themselves intellectually--to read that 5,000-word New Yorker article, for example--or, just like their abs, their brains will grow flabby and useless.

veghead's Xombytes

You can definitely learn from the past

My husband is a local historian who's been poring through old editions of our newspaper (from the 19th century, mostly) gleaning bits of information about the past lives of people in our area, mostly the miners who used to populate the county. He loves that stuff and reads aloud the more interesting bits. He also gets off on old history books that talk about how life used to be around here.

veghead's Xombytes

Like Vinyls and Phonographs in This Age of DigitaStereos and CDs

So are books and newspapers becoming to we web-readers and -writers. With More Devotion to than Words Dare Express, Uncle MythMan

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Collectible old books

Well most of the ones that I have are not collectible by today's standards. And they get used. They get quoted, especially when I find good nuggets of information that most people no longer remember... - - - Read Bytes & Blurbs by Phloydius - - -

I'm impressed: most old book collectors don't bother to read 'em

And yes, I imagine you'll be able to get some bucks for them, especially if they're first editions in mint condition (I think that's why collectors don't read the books they collect; they don't want to get them dirty or worn out).

veghead's Xombytes

Happy I didn't inherit my mother's large, uh, chest

It's no picnic carrying those babies around, and I'm not talkin' infants: bra straps digging into shoulders, back pain as previously mentioned, cleavage that begins at the neck, the embarrassment of being stared at by drooling oglers such as yourself. Nope, not much fun for the oglee, especially when she gets old and they kind of empty out and hang down to her waist. Of course, your girl doesn't have to worry with the silicone and/or salt water implants to keep 'em perky well into her 80s. Oh god! I just had a horrible thought! Carol Doda at 80 years old!

veghead's Xombytes

Old books

I actually collect (and read) old books... since no one wants them, they will probably be collectable in the future.

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