CharleyH
Curioser and curiouser
- Joined
- May 7, 2003
- Posts
- 16,771
I love books. I love the woody smell of them or, depending on the place, that ancient mouldy aroma that teases your nostrils for a passionate moment before fading into the future of new books added to the archive recently. I love the raw feel of leather-bound reference books, the heavy weight of hardcovers and the shiny, polished feel of softcovers. I adore the culture of the bookstore and of the library. The library especially has that grand mix of people from the grit of the homeless lined up at 10am and reading the local news in warmth and comfort by 10:01am to the Versace-clad PhD major lining up at the reference counter at 7pm to get their grubby hands (via latex gloves or microfiche) on something so sacred, like the Collection de l'Enfereven, that it's untouchable without special permissions and precautions.
I've relied on the library since my mother read me the first book that I recall, 'There was an old lady who swallowed a fly...' (I know she didn't really die when she swallowed a fly, but she did at least die when she swallowed a horse!) I relied on books to give me fantasy worlds until the Internet came along (in my personal world, 1995). However, 15 years later, I still can't tear myself away from relying on non-fiction books to give me the research I need. I'm not old school... it's just that for every wiki-fact, internet blog or website with information, I have to research it 10-fold before I get to the actual facts. I love books because I am comfortable and feel confident that when I read them, they are more accurate than anything I find on the Internet.
Your thoughts and ideas about the validity of online research, vs. that of book research?
I've relied on the library since my mother read me the first book that I recall, 'There was an old lady who swallowed a fly...' (I know she didn't really die when she swallowed a fly, but she did at least die when she swallowed a horse!) I relied on books to give me fantasy worlds until the Internet came along (in my personal world, 1995). However, 15 years later, I still can't tear myself away from relying on non-fiction books to give me the research I need. I'm not old school... it's just that for every wiki-fact, internet blog or website with information, I have to research it 10-fold before I get to the actual facts. I love books because I am comfortable and feel confident that when I read them, they are more accurate than anything I find on the Internet.
Your thoughts and ideas about the validity of online research, vs. that of book research?