For No Apparent Reason, I Went Camping: Part 3: Digressions About Dead Tree Books

Oh my! You thought I was writing about a camping trip? Me too! We should hang out.

The thing is, I go camping to think. When I think I don’t necessarily think about camping. This trip I was thinking about dead tree books versus electronic media.

You know what this means? It means brace yourself because I’m about to go on a tangent.

Since I’m already going off the rails, within the tangent I’ll hit a sub- tangent! That’s combined primary and secondary tangentialism! (Which is totally a word because I said so.)

You’ve been warned…


I have a theory. E-books and dead tree books are subtly but deeply different. The words, of course are identical. The difference is in how your mind registers what it’s reading.

Many years ago I reluctantly purchased a Kindle. I was impressed and quickly embraced e-books. I wasn’t just saving money (which I did), I was reducing the annual tonnage of bric-a-brac cluttering my household. Every year our house accumulated dozens (perhaps hundreds) of books. It’s always been that way. I hate throwing them out (or selling them for a pittance) and everyone loves big stuffed bookshelves. But at some point it gets out of control. Stacks of books grow from pleasant libraries to warehouse type issues.

The arrival of e-book readers was timed just exactly with the complete and utter collapse of bookstores. It’s not merely a cause, bookstores had it coming! They became useless, got worse, devolved into insufferable, and now most of them are broke.

Book shopping used to be a magical moment. I miss them! I remember walking into into a store and looking at that vast library of knowledge and thinking “this is all for me!” The titles seemed endless and I’d happily peruse for hours. Every few weeks I’d pick one or two titles out of the immensity of options. Those shopping trips were like Christmas to me.

Alas bookstores should be places where introvert readers sell books to other introvert readers… ideally with a cat hanging around somewhere. They became soulless corporate shitholes. Bored, barely literate, temporary flunkies who hadn’t read a book since high school stocked shelves with whatever crap corporate HQ was trying to sledgehammer into the skulls of formerly inquisitive readers. Interested in a discussion of Adam Smith? Fuck you! You’re going to read Hunger Games! Read Hunger Games and really hankering for some 1950’s sci-fi? Fuck you! It’s time for Game of Thrones. You’re going to eat shit and like it! Bookstores became brokers of woke shit and half-literature. Walls of duplicate books about sparkly vampires and bland committee written non-fiction “instructionals”. Everything a mile wide and an inch deep. “Chicken Soup for those Desperately Needing Affirmation” shelved next to “Programming in C++ for the Idiot”. The periodicals declined and information drained out. “Motorcycle Chrome HD Aficionado Photo Magazine” replaced “Chilton’s Guide to Keeping Your Shitty Car Running”. I have a homestead and hissed in response to “Generic Gardening Magazine; sponsored by $50,ooo Kubota mini-tractors”. It’s one thing to grow a tomato, it’s another to use a machine with a six year payment plan to do it.

It was as if a door closed. I didn’t cause it, but I saw it happen.

Without bookstores and indeed lacking in good books, e-books (particularly of whatever old classic thing I haven’t yet read) became a practical refuge.

I don’t have regret but I notice a problem. I didn’t notice it with e-paper but I notice it with the Kindle app on an iPad. (I “wore out” an e-paper Kindle, and then I wore out a standard Kindle Fire, and now I read on a iPad.)

Warning: I’m about to digress within a digression! Yep, prepare as I grenade a reasonable thought process with practicality unrelated to books:

A note about the iPad (which I use as an e-reader). It’s particularly handy when camping/adventuring because I use the Avenza navigation app. To me, navigating with the iPad is superior to a phone not despite but because it’s mildly inconvenient. Avenza is damn good navigation software for certain purposes and I can display it on any number of gadgets. Most people use Avenza on their phone. I don’t.

Here’s why. Having a phone forever in your hand (or clipped to your vehicle’s dash or clamped on ATV handlebars) changes you! It changes your thinking. It changes how you interact with your environment. Spend too much time dicking around with your navigation display and you might as well be a drooling teenager swiping Tik-Tok feeds. You go outside to be fully immersed in the moment. You must turn the screen off and look at the real world. Ever present navigation displays create a dependency of mind. Stare at that screen enough and you’ll forget that the map is not the terrain. You’ll never learn to evaluate a situation and determine which direction to go based solely on what you have physically encountered. One cannot fully navigate reality when engulfed by watching a dot on a database.

Before you reject me as a ranting Curmudgeon, give it some thought. I said any person will miss something (a lot) if you let navigation software lead you around like a dog on a leash. It’s not the gadget it’s the lack of self-reliance.

A person who travels in a group and always lets “the leader” pick the trail is just as unaware as the dipshit with his nose glued to a phone. It’s easy to tromp down the trail behind someone else and lack the slightest fucking idea where you really are. Slavishly follow anything, electronic or not, and you’re just sheep following a shepherd. That goes for an electronic gadget, a paid wilderness guide, or a hiking companion. If you’re not paying attention you’re not really present.

So, my phone (which could run Avenza) goes off and gets stuffed in the bottom of my pack. My SpotX is often off, but usually clipped to me. It has navigation abilities but they’re primitive. It’s pretty much for emergencies only. The larger clunkier iPad, with it’s large screen and superior map view must be fished out of the pack for consultation when necessary but not every step of the way.

In practice that means I navigate on common sense and dead reckoning 99% of the time. I occasionally check Avenza when I get to a “fork in the road” or want to plan the next few hour’s travel. I’ll fish it out, check it, decide my next move, and then turn the thing off and cram it back amid water bottles and spare socks.

Also, I do not allow cell service on my iPad. Avenza can use the iPad’s GPS to locate itself pretty much anywhere on earth but I have to load Avenza maps for the appropriate area before I leave civilization.

This is good! You should always check some sort of map before you go wandering about. Grabbing a handy Avenza file in advance enforces good thinking.

This isn’t a hard challenge and you don’t have to be a dick about it. I’ve often been near the edge of a map and so decided to download the adjacent map while chowing down on a burger at some random bar. All I need is Wi-Fi, not the Library of Congress. By the way, because I don’t have a data plan, I cannot check the weather on the iPad while I’m at camp. Which is OK with me.

What I’m saying is that it’s better to move through nature thinking about what you’re seeing. Following a blinking dot on some remote database is handy but it’ll erode autonomy and common sense.

It doesn’t mean my opinion is popular, most folks follow that dot like a cat with a laser pointer. Having an unpopular opinion doesn’t make it wrong.

Wow! That just came out. It was a rant that wouldn’t stay untyped.

Back to the matter of electronic displays versus “dead tree” books, I believe our brains have been “trained” by various displays. Yes, yours too. Whatever part of your brain “activates” with a screen is subtly different than whatever activates with a plain old “dead tree” book.

We all use screens (whether it’s a phone, tablet, or laptop), often for hours a day. Every screen is always displaying ephemeral crap. I theorize the brain learns that stuff in front of it on a screen is “fleeting” and therefore of lesser importance. Maybe the screen is a spreadsheet at work, maybe it’s some dickhead on social media, maybe it’s the weather report, maybe it’s some airhead spewing “news” about whatever we’re ordered to believe today. The ultimate similarity of all those things is that the stuff you’re seeing will be gone (usually forever!) in hours or even minutes.

I don’t know how it works for folks young enough that they never read “dead tree” books. I shudder to think about the mind of folks that simply don’t read at all. But I’m old enough to associate a bound stack of printed sheets of paper with something that persists and therefore matters on a much longer time scale.


On campouts, I’ve been experimenting with reading dead tree books versus e-books. In my next post I’ll list a half dozen books I’ve read and whether I’ve quantified the dead-tree / e-book divide.

About AdaptiveCurmudgeon

Adaptive Curmudgeon is handsome, brave, and wise.
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11 Responses to For No Apparent Reason, I Went Camping: Part 3: Digressions About Dead Tree Books

  1. Anonymous says:

    I have read a lot of dead tree books but when I became a RV full timer I soon went to eBooks.
    Started with an Amazon Kindle then an Amazon Fire 8 with ReadEra for my reader. The move to ReadEra was very good except for PDF books; not so good. I now have a Kobo Libra 2 that I use to read most of the ePub books but use a Samsung Galaxy A7 Lite with Adobe for the PDFs, ReadEra for some of the ePubs and all the books at archive.org that are only available Online.
    For my life style digital eReaders have been wonderful. I have access to so many more books that would be available to me in the dead tree format.

  2. Anonymous says:

    If it’s important HARD COPY. E-books only work until they fail. Unless you physically destroy a book all you need is sunshine and a peaceful area to read it.

    As you mentioned you’ve killed off a e-reader and a kindle fire already. If it’s in “The Cloud” do you really own it? It can disappear in a moment if the powers that be decide it’s a non-person (book).

    Don’t get me started on the nothing backed but fancy math of Bitcoin. No power, no bitcoin.

    Michael

    • AdaptiveCurmudgeon says:

      I agree that hard copy is better for preservation. Ideally there’d be electronic distribution of the information and then local production of a hard copy. But… it just didn’t happen like that.

      A disappointing but not unexpected fork in the road with technology happened when LCD screens got dirt cheap faster than “book binding robots” were invented. For a while there were many “upcoming” variants of a “print on demand” vending machine type device. One currently existent version of that is the Espresso Book Machine. It’s interesting that 3D printing steadily improves but once Kindles existed a personal level print on demand printer was no longer pursued. I look for them in the used market sometimes and as far as I can tell having my own is not even remotely feasible.

  3. Anonymous says:

    It’s a pity that text is a linear medium. I’ve often written sentences that want to have branches, and I wonder what a natural way to do that would end up looking like. It seems the same way with digressions in essays. Some essays want to have branches too.

    Tree writing of some sort. Hyperlinks maybe, but that gets complicated.

    Time is a linear, and painfully limited, medium too – one of the annoyances of reality as it is constructed.

    – madrocketsci

    • MN Steel says:

      Time is a piece of wax falling on a termite… he’s choking on the splinters.

      I’m a loser that glances at a map, maybe concentrate on a couple turns and some geographical features and go. And remember how to do it the next time too.

      It still amazes me that so many people lack any inner gyroscope, can’t see terrain in their head and plan several routes and detours to the same place in case of stupidity closing a route.

  4. Anonymous says:

    I’ve sort of noticed this a bit myself. I have an e-reader with electronic copies of a lot of my library on it. Engaging with it seems a bit more difficult than engaging with paper books. Also, the form factor is wrong for those huge old 50s era books chock full of (I imagine at the time expensive) diagrams and drawings, like “The Lore of Flight”.

    OTOH, my backpack is a *lot* lighter these days, and it seems like something I need to figure out, rather than letting a fantastic tool go to waste due to developing horrible habits, however they are encouraged. (Thousands of books in your backpack, not just one.) (I do have the horrible digital habits though, in spades, and am trying to figure out how to beat them.)

    -madrocketsci

  5. Anonymous says:

    I take a kindle on week-long backpacking books for weight issues. Studies (“experts” yeah – LOL) seem to show that paper is better for retention, etc.

    FTA:Turns out print is easier to comprehend than digital text.

    “[Print reading] is kind of like meditation — focusing our attention on something still,” says Anne Mangen, a literacy professor at the University of Stavanger in Norway. “And it’s a whole different kind of immersion than responding to [digital] stimuli. I think it’s healthy for us as human beings to sit down with something that doesn’t move, ping, or call on our attention.”

    Print is visually less demanding than digital text. It provides spatial and tactile cues to help readers process words on a page. Mindset may also be a factor. If people associate screen time with casual web-surfing they may rush through without fully absorbing the text.

    https://www.brainfacts.org/neuroscience-in-society/tech-and-the-brain/2020/reading-on-paper-versus-screens-whats-the-difference-072820

  6. Anonymous says:

    …hard to write a comment in the margins in an e-book….

  7. Anonymous says:

    One HUGE advantage to an e-reader is that I can read at night/in darkness without the need to light up a Coleman lantern or some other light source.

    Just my 2 cents 😉

  8. Anonymous says:

    Seldom have I agreed more with something written, both the tangent and the tangent squared. These comments are excellent too.

    There’s a great book called Reader Come Home by Maryanne Wolf. She’s a cognitive neuroscientist and noticed how different the brain works when reading paper versus a screen. There’s a lot of research that shows how our brain tends to scan a screen, but absorbs the printed page.

    On the GPS thing, yep, people get very wrapped up in the directions and forget where they are. The car GPS has advantages* but it has downsides when people don’t actually realize where they’re going. I’ve notice differences in drivers approaches, some like the North up display, and some want the current direction as up so the map rotates as you turn.

    *The scenario where I find it most helpful is the giant interstate exchanges where it isn’t obvious where a particular exit goes. You might be heading west and want to go north, but it could be a left exit a mile ahead of the road you want to be on.

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