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Week 11 Prompt

The change from printed book to ebook or audiobook does imply some shift in appeal factors; an ebook is no longer subject to possible restrictions on length because of the heaviness of the book (or portability, whether or not it will fit into a purse), and an audiobook may be limited in its appeal to readers because of the style of the narrator.   This change affects our knowledge of the genre because we can no longer make snap judgments based on the publishing company’s dustjackets, blurbs, or the physical attributes of the book (font, paper type, cover material, etc.) and does not allow for browsing a shelf as easily as has been done in the past. We must learn to browse electronically and make connections through online networks (GoodReads, YouTube, various bloggers, NoveList—just for a few examples!).   The fact that readers are able to change font, line spacing, color, etc. of an ebook could have an effect on the reader’s appeal but I think individual rea...

Reading Profile

I deliberately try to read widely, and I do take recommendations. Last year I finally finished ‘War and Peace’; I adored ‘H is for Hawk’, ‘A Shepherd’s Life’, and Naomi Novik’s ‘Spinning Silver’ & ‘Uprooted’. I read other things, too, but those are books I really enjoyed. I tend to shy away from most modern bestselling authors; not sure why they just don’t spark my interest.  Here are the books I end up rereading every year: Gaudy Night (Dorothy Sayers) Persuasion (Jane Austen) Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell (Susanna Clarke) Lord of the Rings (J.R.R. Tolkien) Sunshine (Robin McKinley) Gawain and the Green Knight (Anonymous) Jane Eyre (Charlotte Brontë) None of the books I love are perfect. I know. Fight me. I like books in which there are rich inner lives of dynamic characters, a well-told story even if I see what’s coming next, a good eye for the description of landscape/place, and, where possible, dragons.  I’m usually somewhere in a tra...

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