The Sword and Laser discussion
Where do you read?
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Michael
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May 25, 2012 04:02PM

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Audiobooks:
Mostly in the car or at the gym or out on walks. I'm envious of people with long commutes (ok, maybe not, mine is about 10 minutes) for their listening time. I also listen while on airplanes and the like. If the book is really good, I'll listen at home while on the couch or before bed, but I find it's too easy for me to get distracted when I'm at home.
Ebooks/DTEs:
About an hour before bed, I'll read. I'll read while a passenger in the car...really, anywhere I'm not listening, I'm probably reading. In particular, I'll read while at doctor's appointments so I can keep an ear out for them to call me back to the exam room. I won't lie, I've also snuck a few pages in here and there while at work while waiting for my computer to process stuff. ;) I also read physical (ebook/DTE) books when I'm with family, like if we're all in the family room and the TV is on and the nephew is going nuts.
I also like tub reading.
And though I no longer NEED to go to the bathroom to be alone, I developed the habit of reading while in "the library" as the oldest of 3 kids growing up and never let it go.


Until I jacked up my back (fell in the parking lot of the grocery store!), I was a total bed reader.
I loved Bedknobs and Broomsticks. I wonder if it holds up.

It's better to read B&B as a kid, since the mind is different then, more impressionable and imaginative.


Actual physical reading, well to be honest I do the majority of it in the bathroom.

The last time I walked into a local bookstore I saw the prices and walked back out straight away.

I nearly always have a book on hand, and I read a lot in between classes and waiting for the bus. But I guess my prime reading spot is in my bed, where it's comfy and quiet.

For ebooks and DTEs generally in bed or in the living room. Occasionally I'll head to the library by my work if I have a weird block of time that makes it not worth going home before I have to be else where.
I really want a nice place to read outside. My new complex has a nice pool area and a separate courtyard area so that might be nice.


Reading in a bookstore seems strange to me. It's certainly not encouraged in Australia. I imagine it must be nice like reading in a Library.

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I used to LOVE sitting in the bookstore and reading. I used to spend half a day or more doing that, before my kids were born. That cut down on it quite a bit. Still, I'd spend a couple of hours there each week while my wife went shopping (I hate shopping and make her experience miserable, so she would gladly drop me off). But now, with the demise of Borders, one of the highlights of my week is gone. Alas.
Still, I read throughout the day, home and office. I change places all the time to keep myself alert.

I do enjoy a good book sitting under the trees, I get to do that in my yard, sadly I don't have stream next to me.

I used to ride my bike out to the edge of the airport and sit under a tree, watching the planes come in as I did homework or read. 9/11 changed that, as the airport was virtually shut down. It was a bummer, grad school ended up doing most of my studying in our lab.

I also often read on my couch, in bed and during lunch break from work.

I always thought one of the good things about reading in bed was that you can rest big heavy hardbacks on your pillow and don't have to worry about the arm ache of trying to hold them.
Elizabeth wrote: "But the one place I never, ever read is the toilet. Never understood that one. "
I totally agree!
I only read sitting up if I'm on the bus.
Otherwise it's always stretched out on my stomach (couch or bed) with a pillow under my chin to prop up my head and book in front.
I have found that this is the best way to save crumpled pages when I read so late into the night -- early in the morning? -- that I doze off.
Otherwise it's always stretched out on my stomach (couch or bed) with a pillow under my chin to prop up my head and book in front.
I have found that this is the best way to save crumpled pages when I read so late into the night -- early in the morning? -- that I doze off.


eBooks: I sync my tablet and phone so anywhere I can squeeze in 5 minutes or more, lunch break, waiting in line anywhere, while cooking and even bathroom breaks :)
Dead tree books: Usually only at home, on the sofa, chair or bed.
I normally have one of each on the go at the same time.



Mostly I read on the sofa, or on the throne. Audiobooks in the car or while walking. I work at home pretty much to my own schedule, and I have a rule that I must walk into town and back every day just so I (a) see real daylight and (b) don't turn into a slob. That's a 20 minute brisk walk each way (audiobook), with an alluring coffee shop at in the middle (ebook). I treat it as my "lunch hour"!


Sometimes I'll read in our living room if the TV isn't on. I'll sometimes read in the car whilst waiting for my kids to get out of school if NPR doesn't have an interesting topic on at the moment. Also, I'll read in the waiting rooms at doctor's appointments and such.
My comfy chair is the main place I read though.
I prefer dead-tree books (they're more comfortable to doze off under), but I'm quite fond of my NookColor and the Kindle app on my cell phone.

The way a lot of the big bookstore chains in the US are set up, it is more like reading in a coffee shop, with comfortable chairs and tables.
But, at my local Barnes&Noble you see many people come in just to study.

My usual reading spots vary, but when I was working and before I bothered making friends at Tafe I would sit and read during my lunch break, often returning to work ten minutes late because half an hour was never enough.
Also, I second Mel on that it's not encouraged in Australia. The only place I've been comfortable enough to read was at Borders, and that was like Stan said where they actually have a coffee shop in it and there were armchairs scattered through the shop. I used to enjoy reading at the local one when it first came out, until it got too busy, the staff became hopeless and finally it was closed.
My favourite place to read is actually curled up on my computer chair. I don't know why, it isn't comfortable, the lighting in my room sucks, it squeaks with every movement, yet I always really enjoy reading more when curled up on it. Maybe because I'm not distracted or left to drift like what happens when I'm comfortable.
I used to read in bed a lot, and if I have a book that's really got me hooked, it's where I will end up. But I've never been able to find a way to lay comfortably with a book, on my stomach hurts my neck and shoulders, on my back is just awful, and sides always results in numb hands/shoulders.
My plan when I get my own place to live is to have a nook somewhere under a window that gets only just enough sunlight to be bright, but not too much to get hot, and install a great big cushy pillow and backing. For now, I'll stick to my computer chair and walking around shops. ;)

Traditional books- I don't read too much in my bed anymore, save for about a half hour before sleep. I do most of my reading from the couch. I also bring a book with me when I go to the laundry mat. I find it keeps the crazies at bay.
For future reading spaces, a roommate recently moved out and I would really like to turn her small bedroom into a library/geek room. We still have a few items of furniture to get rid of, but once they're gone I'll be able retrieve all of my books and shelves from my parents house and set up a really nice library. I look forward to have a comfy chair that I can read in, surrounded by my books (and my fiancé's action figures).


I totally agree! "
Its the one place in the house where you can shut and lock the door and no one will bother you! Well, unless you have small kids, but if you have small kids, privacy is pretty much futile. :)

I started reading outside at the place I am currently living in when the weather is good and there is a a lot to be said sitting out in the lawn with your feet in the grass, a book in the hand and a bottle of bulmers on the table
