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Does listening to an audiobook "count" as reading a book?
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I don't like to listen to music while reading, but I love audiobook. If I am just walking outside I can listen to them. And while it is not "reading" but "listening", it's still a book. But I can really do anything that needs my concentration while listening or I want remember anything.


I suggest those of us who voted "yes" do listen at the level suggested by Anna and not as an alternative to music.
Debbie wrote: "I suggest those of us who voted "yes" do listen at the level suggested by Anna and not as an alternative to music."
Hah, thanks for that. I agree some books are better in audio than printed words. I tent to listen to books I don't have the patience to read.
Hah, thanks for that. I agree some books are better in audio than printed words. I tent to listen to books I don't have the patience to read.
I agree that not every narrator is good for the book they read, but I always listen to samples. One book that I will not be listening to is the Fahrenheit 451 that is narrated by the author. On the other hand I love the Ender's Game cast narration and the author was in it as well. (I think it was the 25 years edition)


Knowing what's going up there may shift your views (but not in one direction)
Let me explain
You see, when taking in information while listening the left side of the brain's hemisphere is activated. The paris triangularis if we want to get technical.
While reading various areas are activated in the right side of the brain.
What does this mean!
There is more brain activity going on while listening, which means it helps train your brain to process more, making you have a better memory overall.
However
Reading is better at recall, which means you can recall a specific story you read better than one you listened to.
That is quite interesting. Thank you for explaining the differences between listening and reading to a book. But for me it is about attention. You maybe listening but you still need to be concentrated. Oddly enough I learn better when I listen, not when I read.

my sister being blind loves her audio books despite some being read by 'not so good' readers - there is an extra layer which comes into reading this way in that the voice is shading the words not yourself - another's emotional take on the words being given - despite that she and many others would certainly say it is reading a book -
my mother also when she grew to frail to hold or see a book went over to audio - and I use them to contimue my addiction to reading while driving gardening walking
Listening to someone else having to take in the words at a slower pace than I can read (I read very fast indeed) enables me to access a different region of some books say a Dickens or books written as character driven rather than plot - I catch the subtle naunces and descriptive gems \I might miss a pyhsical read
- def yes listening to audios is reading a book but reading with different textures and experience - wonderful invention:)


I prefer reading for a number of reasons. I like that reading allows me to get through a novel at a faster pace. Looking at the size of my TBR and it's rate of increase, I still can't read fast enough to get through the list in my lifetime. I tried speeding up an audio and the whole chipmunk-voice-thing threw me off. Additionally, sometimes writers choose to add visual aids and this obviously is something that is lost through audio. Plus, I hate that the narrator sometimes wrecks the experience for me.
Aya you must be a fast reader, for me audiobooks are often a faster "read" then paper/e books, because I get too distracted with them.
Did you try to speed up the book with the audible software?
Jamtheory, for me audiobooks are quite a revelation. The only other audiobooks, that I've never considered as such were some vinyls that I used to listen to a child of stories. I don't remember seeing any equivalent on the market after '89 (the fall of communism) like cassettes.
Did you try to speed up the book with the audible software?
Jamtheory, for me audiobooks are quite a revelation. The only other audiobooks, that I've never considered as such were some vinyls that I used to listen to a child of stories. I don't remember seeing any equivalent on the market after '89 (the fall of communism) like cassettes.

Aaahh... good old cassettes, remember when you had to wind them back up with a pen if your player screwed up?
Aya wrote: "Hehe, yes I did. If you can ignore the high pitched voice coming out of your speakers it's a time saver. I gave it a go when I was in the kitchen trying to bake a cake, my sister happened to walk i..."
I've tried it with some books and had no such problem (no pitch distort), but as non-native English speaker it is quite difficult to follow.
Some people use "Smart AudioBook player" app because it has a bigger range of speed values. I'm not sure if it is free. I use a different player that allows me to fast-forward (not many such for android).
I remember doing the pencil trick to save battery for the ones you had to rewind.
I've tried it with some books and had no such problem (no pitch distort), but as non-native English speaker it is quite difficult to follow.
Some people use "Smart AudioBook player" app because it has a bigger range of speed values. I'm not sure if it is free. I use a different player that allows me to fast-forward (not many such for android).
I remember doing the pencil trick to save battery for the ones you had to rewind.



I personally do not like audio books because I end up not following the story because I am usually thinking about something else, which is my knock against them in the first place. I also do not like the readers voice inside my head when I prefer my own.
For those of you that talk about multitasking, remember when you multitask, you do not concentrate as hard on the various activities and that is born out by the studies. For those of you that disagree, answer this simple question, do you want your brain surgeon working on your brain and another patients at the same time? :)
So what do you think: Does listening to an audiobook "count" as reading a book?
I would say yes and no.
-yes because it takes so much time and every word goes trough your mind
-no because the mental strain is less [for me]
So what do you think?
Here is a poll about it as well.
http://www.goodreads.com/poll/show/85472