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Books. Booooooooooooks. If I were a zombie, I wouldn't eat brains. Just books.

1. I don't remember learning how to read. Presumably I did learn at some point. I miss knowing what that "eureka" moment was like for me.

2. I'm a crazed text addict and have been for as long as I can remember (see #1). My parents tried punishing me by not letting me read; my reaction was to read, out loud, whatever text was in sight. Since this was in the car, the proliferation of signs visible from my seat was enough to drive them to distraction, and they relented for the sake of their own sanity.

3. I will, if driven to extremes, read anything. After a bag-snatching incident left me in a hotel room with nothing else to read (having already read the local paper, which was the only printed material available for purchase at that time of night, praise be to newspaper boxes) I read The Marriott Story. All the way through. Next up would have been the Book of Mormon, but I got to sleep before needing it.

4. My standard trip planning level of book packing is "a book a flight and a book a night". With the advent of e-books on my PDA, that's less true for long trips than it used to be, but I will always pack books. As I once put it, "I could be going for a sleepover in a freaking library and getting there by riding in a bookmobile—I'd still pack a book or two."

5. I can read in every form of conveyance I've tried reading in (cars, buses, trains, planes, boats). I have not tried reading while riding an amusement park ride; I wouldn't want to drop the book.

6. I used to read while walking, and never ran into anything (or anyone) while doing so. I don't do that now for reasons having to do with the greater density of Stuff What Can Kill You in a major city, as compared to a small town where the single traffic light was actually outside the town limits.

7. The "mass-market[1]" paperback form factor is my favorite for reasons of portability and safety. Safety as in "not dropping it on your head, or anyone else's head, when reading in bed and falling asleep". This also accounts for requiring paper books to be packed on trips; dropping the PDA over the side of the bed is Not Good.

8. Online fora have found me a lot of good books, not just through recommendations, but through authors being interesting in discussions. [livejournal.com profile] autopope, [livejournal.com profile] joel_rosenberg, [livejournal.com profile] lwe, [livejournal.com profile] scalzi, [livejournal.com profile] skzbrust...this means you, among others.

9. I had to write a college admissions essay on a book that had changed my life, or had a great influence on me, or some such silliness. So I used The Elements of Style. It must have worked, since I got in.

10. I used to enjoy haunting used bookstores from coast to coast, looking for particular out of print books (usually SF/F paperbacks). The whole Internet/eBay/abebooks thing has made that both far less fruitful and far less interesting, since the thrill of the hunt was part of the appeal. Point-click-ship doesn't have the joy of saying "aha!" in a used bookstore in San Jose as I find the last book I need to complete a series. I even kept a used bookstore database in the HP200LX (a PDA, sort of).

11. I may well be the only person who ever checked out Asimov's book on using a slide rule from my high school's library. The school opened in 1981. I very much doubt the book is still there, alas; if I'd had a chance, I would have taken it when they got rid of it. (If it is still there, someone please let me know.)

12. The Cambridge Public Library has a pretty good SF collection, which is no longer in the farthest back shelves of the lowest level of the stacks; they're renovating and expanding the main library, and are in a temporary facility that's closer to my house. (Yay, but I still want them to open the new, bigger library.)

13. I like visiting libraries. Both Seattle and San Antonio have neat new libraries.

14. I prefer the Library of Congress classification scheme to the Dewey Decimal system, but can deal with either. Boston uses LCC as do the university libraries I have access to through work or alumni IDs; Cambridge and most of the rest of the Minuteman network use DDC. I've never used the Cutter system, though the Boston Athenæum apparently uses it for some of their collection.

15. I need to make a books/reading icon.

[1] Yes, I know that the real difference is strippability. Pedant.

Date: 2005-12-14 22:10 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hr-macgirl.livejournal.com
errr. I plead guilty. What can I say, I've been an avid reader since I was in utero.

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