A beginning
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You've got a lot of great stuff on that shelf outside of the WoT books.
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You've got a lot of great stuff on that shelf outside of the WoT books.
Thank you; I certainly think so.
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Thank you; I certainly think so.
The visual you're posting is one of the few things I miss about paper books. In one picture you're communicating your preferences and experiences, and I know a dozen conversations I could have with you from our shared experiences in the stories we've read.
I've found ebooks are a much better fit for my lifestyle, and their many benefits, the cost of which is I can't share one picture with you the way you did for us here.
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The visual you're posting is one of the few things I miss about paper books. In one picture you're communicating your preferences and experiences, and I know a dozen conversations I could have with you from our shared experiences in the stories we've read.
I've found ebooks are a much better fit for my lifestyle, and their many benefits, the cost of which is I can't share one picture with you the way you did for us here.
I feel this in my bones. I'm surrounded by friends with large libraries but I cannot give up so much space when I mostly read digitally. Nobody casually browses someone elses elibrary.
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I feel this in my bones. I'm surrounded by friends with large libraries but I cannot give up so much space when I mostly read digitally. Nobody casually browses someone elses elibrary.
Nobody casually browses someone elses elibrary.
How will society evolve with this? Casting your eyes across someone's bookshelves has served us well as a social mechanism for a number of things since the widespread adoption of the Gutenberg press. With the absence of these book shelves, what will fill in those social vacuums or will we just go without?