No, the Internet Has Not Killed the Printed Book. Most People Still Prefer Them:;
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Books line the walls on at Common Grounds, in DeKalb, Ill., in August.Credit
Katie Smith/Daily Chronicle, via Associated Press
Even
with Facebook, Netflix and other digital distractions increasingly
vying for time, Americans’ appetite for reading books — the ones you
actually hold in your hands — has not slowed in recent years, according
to a study by the Pew Research Center.
Sixty-five
percent of adults in the United States said they had read a printed
book in the past year, the same percentage that said so in 2012. When
you add in ebooks and audiobooks, the number that said they had read a
book in printed or electronic format in the past 12 months rose to 73
percent, compared with 74 percent in 2012.
Twenty-eight percent said they had opted for an ebook in the past year, while 14 percent said they had listened to an audiobook.
Lee
Rainie, the director of internet, science and technology research for
Pew Research, said the study demonstrated the staying power of physical
books.
“I
think if you looked back a decade ago, certainly five or six years ago
when ebooks were taking off, there were folks who thought the days of
the printed book were numbered, and it’s just not so in our data,” he
said.
The
28 percent who said they had read an ebook in the past year has
remained relatively steady in the past two years, but the way they are
consuming ebooks is changing.
The
Pew study, based on a telephone survey of 1,520 adults in the country
from March 7 to April 4, reports that people are indeed using tablets
and smartphones to read books. Thirteen percent of adults in the United
States said that they used their cellphones for reading in the past
year, up from 5 percent in 2011. Tablets are a similar story: 15 percent
said that they had used one for books this year, up from 4 percent in
2011.
While
6 percent said they read books only in digital format, 38 percent said
they read books exclusively in print. But 28 percent are reading a
combination of digital and printed books, suggesting that voracious
readers are happy to take their text however they can get it.
“They
want books to be available wherever they are,” Mr. Rainie said.
“They’ll read an ebook on a crowded bus, curl up with a printed book
when they feel like that, and go to bed with a tablet.”
By:DANIEL VICTOR
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