Amit's latest column is thought-provoking. I agree with the basic
premise (reading is good, getting kids to read is excellent), but have
a fairly major quibble: having effectively infinite choice is more
likely to induce gridlock than exploration. This may not be true for
everyone, of course, but it is something to consider. There are a
couple of ways around this I can think of - but would rather see what
Amit (and others) have to say first.

Thoughts?

Udhay

http://in.news.yahoo.com/columnist/amit_varma/28/kindle-your-children

Kindle Your Children

October 28, 2010

Growing up, I was a lucky kid. My father was an avid reader, and his
collection of books numbered in the thousands. It wasn't a surprise,
then, with books all around me, that I became a keen reader as well.
At an age when other children dream of being astronauts or movie stars
or cricketers, I wanted to be a writer. And I wasn't just reading Enid
Blytons and Hardy Boys -- at age ten, I discovered a book called The
House of the Dead, thought the title indicated a thrilling read, and
embarked on my first foray into serious literature. It happened to be
written by a dude named Dostoevsky, and while it didn't contain the
ghost stories I expected, it got me hooked. Dostoevsky was my first
favourite, and I admit that looking back on it, I find it a bit freaky
that I read all the major Russian novelists at age ten, and all of
Shakespeare as well. (I liked Titus Andronicus more than Macbeth, so
it's fair to say that my tastes weren't all that refined.)

My reading habit ebbed and flowed over the years. From a weird-ass,
serious geeky kid who read a lot, I turned into a rebellious teenager
who wore torn jeans, listened to alternative rock and didn't read all
that much. But one thing didn't change: the desire to be a writer.
After college, I wandered into copywriting, then into writing for
television, then journalism, then blogging, and then after years of
procrastination that I blame on my half-Bengali genes, I finally wrote
my first novel a couple of years back. None of this would have been
possible if my dad hadn't been such a collector of books, and if
serendipity hadn't started at home. Forget the fact that I am a
writer: I'd be an entirely different person if I hadn't been the kind
of reader that I was. My life would have been diminished.

As it happens, I have become a bit of a book collector like my father
was, and while he lived in large, spacious bungalows all his adult
life, I have lived in relatively small apartments in Mumbai for much
of mine, and the thousands of books I own have created a major storage
issue. The bookshelves are overflowing; all the beds with storage
space are filled with books; there are three cupboards filled with
books; the tables and sofas in my living room overflow with them. So
it's a surprise that I held out for so long before buying my first
Kindle.

One reason I didn't buy the Kindle earlier is that I like the feel of
books in my hand. (Not so much the much-touted smell of paper, because
years of sinus issues have ravaged my sense of smell.) Also, I used to
think that I wouldn't like the Kindle because one can't read off a
computer screen for too long. However, on using a friend's Kindle, I
discovered that the E Ink technology that the Kindle uses replicates
the look of print on paper almost exactly, and is easy on the eyes.
(No backlit screens and all that.) Also, the marketplace, which was
once a bit limited, has now expanded, and book prices are quite
affordable: often cheaper than you'd get in a real bookshop, and when
it's not, the premium is worth it in terms of convenience and storage
space. So I've gotten myself a Kindle 3, and I love the machine
already: it's lighter than a paperback, can contain thousands of
books, and the look and feel is just wonderful.

But I'm not writing this column to evangelize the Kindle as a device.
I'm writing, instead, because while browsing the online store, I
remembered my privileged childhood. I bought a handful of books on my
first day with the machine, but the vast majority of the hundreds of
books I downloaded in my first few hours with it were free. Every book
published before 1924 is in the public domain, and therefore free to
download. So there I was, reliving my childhood, downloading
Dostoevsky and Turgenev and Dickens and Shakespeare and Mark Twain and
even some of Agatha Christie and Wodehouse on my Kindle -- for free.
In half a day, I put together a collection of books that must have
taken my father years of perseverance and saving up to compile. To me,
that is a matter of great wonder.

For someone who doesn't like children very much, and chose long ago
not to have any himself, I will now have the audacity to give the
parents reading this piece a word of advice: kindle your children. The
biggest thing you can do for your kids is open up the world to them,
and reading is a great way of doing that. One can't force kids to
read, of course, but merely having books around the house is often
enough. (Most avid readers I know picked up the habit that way.) The
Kindle -- or any other ebook reader that you prefer -- saves you a lot
of trouble and makes it easy to put a world of books at your kids'
disposal. So here's what I suggest: gift your kid a Kindle, load it up
with a library of free classic books, and set up a one-click payment
system through a debit card with a monthly budget so that your kids
can buy a reasonable amount of books themselves, regularly, without
your supervision. Give them the power -- and set them free. There is a
good chance that, 30 years later, they will thank you for it. And,
thanks to the wonders of technology, it will take you far less effort
than it took my dad.

Amit Varma, the winner of the 2007 Bastiat Prize for Journalism, is
the author of the bestselling novel My Friend Sancho. He writes the
popular blog, India Uncut. You can follow him on Twitter here.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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