Audiobooks equivalent to reading?

Random Bookish thoughts, reading

Audiobooks have become my latest favourite form of reading. Gone are those days when I used to commute for hours to go to work, or have idle mornings, or an evening tea break; all of which included a book in my hand.

As time passes by, we tend to become really busy. Being a married freelance designer now-a-days, my days are full of work and cooking and cuddling the pets. But my love for books hasn’t died. I may not have the time to read all the books I want to, but books still excite me and give me major FOMO. That’s when I found out about audiobooks. I knew about them, obviously, but I did not know if they were for me.

The very first audiobook I listened to was Harry Potter. Of course. 😀 I love Harry Potter and I love Stephen Fry. It was magical. I would listen to it all the time. While cooking, eating, bathing, working, before bed, almost all the time. And I loved it. Absolutely loved the experience. I always liked being read to, and now I did not have to ask my husband to do that for me, I had Stephen effing Fry!

I went on to listen to the whole HP series, The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt, Born A Crime by Trevor Noah, some Jane Austen, and Murakami’s Kafka On The Shore. They were amazing. All of them.

You know what the best part about the audiobooks were for me? I would sometimes miss the tonality of a statement while reading. The sarcasm or the jibe. But in audiobooks, it cannot get clearer and easier. Books, because they come from various places have a different cultural context to them. When Trevor Noah uses Afrikaans in his book, it is a hurdle for english readers like me. The pronunciation. How the hell does one pronounce an exclamation mark?! But in the audiobook version, Trevor himself pronounces these for you and you just go with the flow of the whole thing.

On the downside, there are so many narrators who just don’t click with you. I was heartbroken when I couldn’t listen to Michelle Obama’s narration of Becoming for more than a chapter. It felt so slow. I downloaded that book purely out of my love for the woman. And I thought I’d finish the book in a day, but I couldn’t. I just couldn’t concentrate when she was reading. Such a bummer!

Another pitfall is when someone walks in on you listening to the book and starts talking over the book! Argh! It is so irritating. I have to shush them, then pause the book, then ask them to continue. And once they’re finished, go on to rewind the book and start again.

But all in all, I think audiobooks are pretty close to reading. I retained all the information a book had to give me. It’s like a friend telling you some fresh gossip or something. You remember everything. And I finished many more books that I would’ve, had I been reading the physical copies only when time permitted.

An advice for people starting with audiobooks – give yourself time. Like you pick up speed by the time you are towards the end of a book, you’ll get so much better at listening to the books. You might have to rewind many times during your first book or the first chapter of the book. But eventually, you get used to the accent, the speed and the characters, and then there’s no going back.

Do you listen to audiobooks? How’s your experience been?

Does reading make you sensitive?

Random Bookish thoughts

I was in a random bookish discussion with a friend the other day and this question just snaked in my mind. And I began to think about it.

As I started to think about all the books I have read, I realised a few things.

I have experienced things in the books. Things that I haven’t experienced in my real life (and obviously don’t want to experience some of them). For instance, best friends committing suicide. A close friend committing suicide is one of the most common events in YA books. Some describe it at length. Some focus entirely on how the person’s life changed completely by that one event. Death, in general, has been described ‘beautifully’ in books. The sense of loss… does that make one sensitive to suicide?

Some other books describe lives of people from different perspectives. The Witch of Portobello by Paulo Coelho is a fine example. For those of you who haven’t read this book, it describes the same event of a woman’s life through the eyes of different people. And each person has a different point of view about the same event/action. Some call her an angel, some call her a witch.
Does a book like this make you sensitive to other people’s situations?

Does it make you more sensitive to relationships and the society at large?

Tell me what you feel in the comment.

 

Book Lover’s Struggle No. 1

Random Bookish thoughts

Who hasn’t faced THIS? Every person who loved reading has faced this never-ending struggle of wanting to read soooo many books, but alas, life gives us only 24 hours in a day and a person gotta earn! Damn Capitalism!

Designed by crafts.delhi

I am working on a Thursday series that shows the struggles of a book lover. And the struggle is real! Share yours, so I can try and illustrate them.

 

It Is So Hard For Me To Read Non-Fiction. Help!

Random Bookish thoughts

A new year is here and I am absolutely glad that I am entering this year loaded with books to read. I have on my list four Man Booker awardees, namely, The Underground Railroad , Lincoln in the Bardo, A Horse Walks Into A Bar and The Sellout. These books will take about two months to finish. So yeah, I’m sorted for the beginning of the year.

What I am sad about and want to change in the year 2018, is that my shelves are loaded with fictions. If you go through my Goodreads, you’d see a variety of fiction novels. But alas, I have not read one non-fiction. It is so very difficult for me to read a non-fiction. Why, you ask?

Consider this. I really wanted to know about the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks. And I have an absolutely amazing book, The Siege: The Attack on Taj by Adrian Levy, sitting on my bookshelf (my husband’s actually). I picked that book up. The author starts with the names of all the real people in the attack. After the list, he starts telling us about a father-daughter duo who worked at the Taj. A real father-daughter duo. And that was it. I couldn’t read further. I knew that either one of them was going to die, or rather all the people on the list. Yes, characters die in fiction, but fictional characters. Not real people!! Do you understand? I cannot live with the idea that all the people who suffered in the book suffered for real. Their pain was real, their losses were real.

30986A60-5AFB-4D37-9314-9C331D8E9B35

GIF source- giphy

My eyes welled up when I realised that the father-daughter duo would either die or get separated for life. And I couldn’t take it anymore. This is the reason I cannot read non-fiction. I get too attached to the people. So I need your help here.
I really want to read all the lovely books out there, but what is it that I am doing wrong? Am I picking the wrong books for the start? Am I reading it wrong? Or what is it?

Do you have some tricks or tips under your sleeve that can help me read better without crying a river?

Help!

Is Amazon Kindle the right thing for you?

Kindle thy inner reader

Amazon Kindle is absolutely amazing. Hands down, it is the best gadget for all your reading needs. A decent Kindle costs about Rs. 10,000. And although Amazon tempts you with discounts and brings down the cost by three grands, you’re not sure if you should spend that hard-earned money on the device. I have owned a Kindle for five years. And I have decided on these 9 questions that will help you decide if you should buy the gadget.

  1. Do you love showing off your book collection?
    Yes
    – The Kindle is not for you. All your books are digital. However expensive, beautiful or show-off worthy, they’re inside your device. So you cannot really sport a wonderful teak bookshelf.
    No – Buy the damn thing. If you’re someone who doesn’t care about who sees what you’re reading, then the Kindle is for you.
  2. Do you lend your books to others and love sharing the experience of reading?
    Yes – If you’re a lender and like it when people read your books and enjoy it, then the Kindle is not for you. Kindle does not allow sharing books, at least in India. They do offer this in the US, but not in India.  
    No –
    If you hate people taking your books or even touching them, the Kindle is for you. Your books stay yours, now and forever. You just don’t share because you can’t. Yay!
  3. Do you wear spectacles?
    Yes – I wear specs myself, and half the time, I forget them on my bed post, or my side table, or in the pocket of a coat. I am often seen squinting to read something. And when I don’t have my specs, reading a book can be a nightmare. A paper book, that is. But my dear Kindle lets me set the font size. Specs or no specs, I can read my books with minimal stress. If you can totally relate to this, you need a Kindle.   
    No – 
    But, do you often find text to be too small, or the size being a problem when you’re on a bus because it all gets so shaky? A kindle can solve this problem. It can adjust font size and font face. Which is absolutely great.
  4.  Do you travel a lot and read a lot during those travels?
    Yes –
     I haven’t met a person who likes to travel heavy. And a Kindle weights about 200 grams. That’s feather light. And in 200 grams, you can carry hundreds of books without the weight! And what if you’ve finished your book and need a new one? Well, just download a new one! All you need is the internet. 
    No – Well, if you don’t travel a lot, you could probably do without a Kindle. But that is when you don’t travel to work as well. Because reading on a Kindle is a hundred times better when you’re on a bus or are crushing between people in the metro. Sometimes in the rush, your book falls, you have to shut it because there is no space, people go tugging at your bookmark etc. But in a Kindle, one button and there you go. You’ve closed your book, put the bookmark, and what’s more, the size lets you slide it into your bag, or jacket pocket with utter ease. Your books wont crease!
  5. Do you read many books at once?
    Yes- 
    Buy the Kindle. One, because it can carry thousands of books on the device without any ‘space’ problem. Two, it bookmarks your last page read on every book without you having to remember where you stopped. You can read many books with absolute ease, without even having to carry the load.
    No- You don’t need a Kindle just for its feature of holding a thousand books at once.
  6. Are you forgetful?
    Yes- So, you forget your book at home, at office, on the metro, in the car? Buy a Kindle. You will remember carrying it just as you remember carrying your phone. And you’ll never be without a book again.
    No- You mean you’ve never forgotten to carry your book with you? Well. Okay.
  7. Do your devices always show ‘low battery’?
    Yes-
     Relax, you need to charge your Kindle only once a fortnight. And that’s when you’re reading all day. And if you’re also reading all night, probably a recharge once a week will do it. I’m serious. The battery life of the device is killer.
    No- Then you have one less device to charge! A Kindle needs to be charged only once in a fortnight! Isn’t it a dream device?
  8. Do you read at night?
    Yes-
    And if you have someone sleeping next to you, you can turn those lights off and turn on your Kindle. No, it does not strain your eyes. The lights in the Kindle don’t work like a mobile phone’s, it is soft and adjustable. Which is pretty cool.
    No- Then you can probably do with the cheapest Kindle. It does not have backlight, but has all the other perks.
  9. Do you really want to read the books but find them way too expensive?
    Yes- 
    You’d be glad to know, Kindle versions of books are often very cheap, or they are available at considerable discounts. So that’s a plus.
    No- But who minds cheaper, yet legal, books?

So there you go. decide for yourself if you really need it. As for me, I love the device. It is awesome to own one. Even if you don’t use it everyday, you can always read on it sometimes. Some books are way too expensive, and Kindle comes to the rescue. Some books are hard to find or are not available in your country, use Kindle versions. A Kindle is a beautiful gadget, to own and to gift.

Â