Today I got a Kindle. It was delivered to me by a wonderful
elf (a fellow American expat who bought it for me in the U.S. and hand-carried
it all the way to Shanghai). As you can imagine, I am wildly grateful because
while we do have a number of bookstores that carry books in English, the books
are not necessarily the ones I want to read.
So…
Minutes after my friend the elf handed me my new toy and
went home to nurse her jet lag, I met another friend for coffee. “I got my
Kindle!” I said.
This friend (who had been away for a month or so) was
confused. For a long time, I had been vehemently anti-Kindle (well, not really
anti-Kindle, but anti-reading device). “A Kindle? I thought you hated those
things,” she said.
“I did,” I said, “but I’ve changed my mind.”
Then I started to think about why. After all, I’m a writer
and a voracious reader. I love books. I love paper. I love bookstores. I love
libraries (to see just how much, click “Because of a Book”).
In fact, an important part of my writing process happens while I’m reading.
Believe it or not, I actually write IN books…my own stuff in books...hardback and paperback…whenever I get inspired
by what I’m reading. (Shock…horror…I know…but I write all over my books. In the
margins. Between sections. On the title page. On the covers. Heck, I write
right over text if I’m on a roll.) Without the ability to write by hand while I
read, what will happen to my writing process?
Great question.
And how will I “browse” for new books…the way I do at a library
or in a bookstore?
Another great question
AND...if I have such concerns, why am I suddenly so gung-ho
about my Kindle?
Because…
- The
publishing world is changing and I’m choosing to change with it. While I
love books and hope they stick around for a long, long time, I have big
doubts. Besides, I’m good at change (heck, I got married and moved to
China in fewer than six weeks)...change is my middle name.
- I want
to give reading devices a chance. Sure, they are in their Jurassic Period,
and sure, they are guaranteed to change a great deal in the coming years
(probably in the coming months), but so what? It’s cool to be starting out
with an (somewhat) early version of a device that will inevitably alter
how we take in stories. (And how we write them…)
- Since moving
to China, I haven’t done a whole lot of traditional bookstore browsing…and
I’ve been fine. I choose most of the books I read via referrals from my
husband’s cousin Mary in Ireland, Twitter, friends, Goodreads, various
email newsletters from publishers, and other sources.
- I’m
desperate for books in China.
- I
believe words have possibilities we still know nothing about, and if we
limit ourselves to a traditional book, we’ll never discover those
possibilities. I’m an explorer. I want to explore.
- I’m
just gosh-darn curious.
So as we enter 2010, picture me here in Shanghai, powering
up my Kindle, deciding which book I’ll download first. And second. And third.
And 1,336th.
And guess what?
I’m not the only one talking about this. Seth Godin (the
Godfather of What Comes Next) and The Christian Science Monitor are talking,
too. See what they have to say.