As I look around my home, I look at all my books. I love reading and have been one of those people that never throws a book out. I am thinking that once on the road with space a premium I will not have room to keep books. Figured that a kindle pad or something similar would be the way to go. How do others do this. I will miss the feel of the pages and the weight of a book, however one does need to be practical also.
Sharon.
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Sharon
Dream it, believe it, live it.
4WD with a ford ranger. The possibilities are endless.
we looked at the same question and as we were in the market for a PC as well settled on the Ipad 32GB wifi, we use it for all of our computer based needs and reader as well. works for us.
It looks like I'll have to work at getting published on E-books so you caan read me on your travels. Getting published is the hardest part of writing. I can write for hours, yet I can't sit for a few minutes to even read a magazine. Books or the reference genre' I can read to learn, but I can't do fiction.
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20ft Roma caravan - Mercedes Benz Sprinter - SA-based at the moment. Transport has no borders.
Management makes the decisions, but is not affected by the decisions it makes.
Go to op shops for books, and when finished donate them back. You can do this as you travel from town to town, its cheap, supporting a charity, not too heavy to carry a small(ish) number of books. You still get to turn the pages, my eyesight and computer screens arent the best of friends.
join the rest of us that love reading on the road.
Last year we were on the road for 8 months, with lots and lots of reading, I'm like you don't like to get rid of my books, which were about 30 by the time we got,that was after giving some away.
Then my girlfriend put me onto the Kindle reader, I haven't looked back since.
You go onto Amazon. com I think, you can buy it through them, you set up an account and as you click on the book you want the money comes off your account , your book is there with in a minute.
Believe me you soon get used to not holding a heavy book anymore, the average price I pay in $10 a book.
Some caravan parks have a book exchange for free. Sometimes in the office/shop, sometimes in the laundry. Swap 'em, read 'em, leave 'em. How many times do you read a book? What's the hardest part about giving them away?
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20ft Roma caravan - Mercedes Benz Sprinter - SA-based at the moment. Transport has no borders.
Management makes the decisions, but is not affected by the decisions it makes.
I go to the op shops and buy magazines and books. cheap enough. when finished I either give them to someone or take them to the op shop in the next town. cheers. rocket n strop
You can find a second-hand book shop or book exchange in many towns. You get some money or credit for books you take in, and their stock is cheaper than new. So you do pay the differential between what you bring in and what you take away, but it is cheaper than buying new, and prevents building up too many books as you go. Another option is that some towns will allow you to join the local library cheaply, or borrow books on a surety that you get back when they are returned. This is great if you are staying a while in one place.
Op shops work for me! Despite my limited space I prefer books over the alternatives, of course, I haven't tried a Kindle, but I've tried reading books on my computer and would rather have the paper version. It is your decision, tho, and probably worth a look at alternatives.
Books were the hardest for us to part with, Sharon (we had a LOT!), when 'going feral', but like others here we used op shops, etc. for three years - a mostly satisfactory solution for casual reading, and reference material can mostly be found on the web.
Then I got a Kindle for my birthday in January - and that's opened up an whole new world. We bought it from an Australian distributor, ReaderShop.com.au, so it came with the necessary power adaptor, a USB cable, a silicon case and a DVD with the books from the Gutenberg Project (about 29,500). Amazon downloads (the 3G version) on its own 'Whispernet', costing you nothing, and so far I've not paid more than $6 for books that I've wanted - some are free, some only 99c.
The Kindle screen is not like a PC screen - it's not backlit, you need a light to read it and it's non-reflective. And my husband, who can no longer read a book for more than half-an-hour or so, can comfortably read the Kindle (when he can get it away from me!) for two hours and more.
More choices to make!
Andrea
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Free-ranging, in a Southern Cross 5th wheeler, in between property-minding (to save money!).
Today I gave away a large bag full of books that I always intended keeping. I realised that having read them once I would not read them again. I'm like that with DVDs too. I never go back for a 2nd look. Cut my book pile down to just a few that I know I want to read. It was hard but when moving house and not having a lot of room you do make that decision you thought you would never have to make.
we looked at the same question and as we were in the market for a PC as well settled on the Ipad 32GB wifi, we use it for all of our computer based needs and reader as well. works for us.
Bob
I am with you florinhill, have an ipad and use it for all our communications, research and my reading. Purchased a kobo reader but gave to a friend as I found the ipad so much easier. Can change background light to be the same as a book if necessary.
Glenda
I can't live without my books and have found a kindle invaluable. They are easy to use and store up to 3000 books and even then you can stick them on a cloud somewhere, although I haven't investigated that. You can also share and swap with other kindle users but again I haven't learnt to do that yet. I made a false economy of buying the smaller kindle and would now happilly spend an extra $80 or so buying the biggest version as you don't have to turn the page so often and have a bigger screen. make sure you get a 3g wispernet version. You can download books within seconds anywhere there is internet access. You can also access a huge range of free books, especially the old classics which have fallen out of copy right.
Keeping a kindle charged is really easy and cheap - it just has a usb which connects to your laptop or bluetooth gps etc. You can buy a separate power charger for it but you don't need it. A kindle will actually stay charged for 3 or 4 weeks if you only use it to read. If you connect to the net to download books etc it will obviously use more charge and you also need to make sure you disconnect from the net once you have downloaded your books otherwise it will use power. I've accidentially left mine connected ot the net and it's lasted a week or so before running out.
I have had a kindle for over a year now and find it very good.Low battery usage,light to carry,easy recharge USB or car charge. And best of all I have not bought book in all that time.I have full collections of my favourite authors ( to buy any one of these books in paper back would cost me approx $28 each).If you want details let me know and I will help you set it up...remember all for FREE :)
Have a good day/read
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Have a great day where ever you are. Happy Campers