Treehugger writer Sami Grover and I were chatting recently. I had just finished reading his new book—“We are all Climate Hypocrites Now”—and asked him if he had read mine. I was surprised by the response where he said he hates reading PDFs, which is what our publisher had sent him, and he was waiting for the real paper book.
Many people hate e-books: Treehugger senior editor Katherine Martinko has written about the old-fashioned habits that she stubbornly clings to, including paper books. She wrote:
Another writer I admire, Ian Bogost, wrote in The Atlantic recently:
And I wondered, what’s wrong with all these people? E-books are wonderful! I read them on my iPad, which Apple says has a lifecycle carbon footprint of 100 kilograms based on three years of life or about 33 kilograms per year. The most detailed study by Naicker and Cohen concluded the average paper book has a footprint of 7.5 kilograms. So that’s 4.4 books a year for the iPad to beat the real book from a carbon point of view.
Pierre-Olivier Roy says it is not so simple:
But the iPad gets greener with each edition, and its numbers just keep getting better.
In fact, Grover’s new book was a real test case. New Society Publishers sent me a PDF which I could read and scale but it doesn’t reformat and I couldn’t mark up easily. Then they sent me a hard copy, but in the end, when I wanted to review it, I actually bought the Kindle version so I could do all the adjustments and the markups more easily.
Now don’t get me wrong, I love books and have lots of them. Just the other day I was discussing Isaac Asimov’s Foundation series, the basis of the new TV show, and noted that I still owned my copies from my teenage years. The pages are as thin as the characters in the story, but I kept them anyway. But today I would not be able to read those paperbacks from the ’60s; the print is too small.
Meanwhile, Bogost goes on about bookiness: “It’s the essence that makes someone feel like they’re using a book.” He notes certain kinds of books lend themselves to print, like those about architecture and design; I agree and still buy those. I have a lot of them.
There is the bookiness of the architecture books my mom bought in the ’60s that inspired me in my choice of career that I still treasure or the old books on Arctic and Antarctic exploration that I love. Much depends on the book.
And as someone who recently had my first book published, I love the bookiness of a pile of them with my name on it. In the end, Bogost says it doesn’t matter. “If you like ebooks, great. Enjoy your dim, gray screen in peace. If you hate them, don’t worry about it. Who says everything must involve a computer?”
And if you are worried about the environmental impact, the greenest choice is in fact neither: It’s the library.