It's rare to see a person with a book or magazine these days; it's like glimpsing a wolf in the forest.
Dwight Garner, The Upstairs Delicatessen
Dwight Garner |
Medical offices and barbershops may still have a few magazines on hand, yet I rarely see anyone looking at them. Instead they are all looking at their phones.
In restaurants, virtually everyone, whether sitting alone or with someone else, is holding a phone in front of them.
I live about a mile from the Gulf of America, but it has been a long time since I have been to the beach, even to see a sunset. Yet I suspect that those reclining in the sun are mostly looking at their phones, not at one of those thick, spicy novels that used to be called "beach books."
I am proud that my granddaughter, like me, packs her books before packing her clothing when taking a trip. She, too, is a rarity in today's world. How many people have books with them on planes, even for long flights? How many take a book with them for a week at a cabin or a resort?
Some people do read e-books, to be sure. I applaud them. Yet somehow it is not quite the same.
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