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> the issue in the US is on the demand side. People here hardly read,

I got back into reading, but its been an effort. Books are big and expensive, my library actually doesn't have stuff available often so I'm always on a wait list. Its hard tough to find time let alone quiet time to focus on a book. So many distractions around, roommates, city noise, neighbors making noise.



The thing is when I read more books, I’d pull out a book if I had a dead 15-30 minutes more or less anywhere. Nowadays it’s easier to default to Facebook, random links, etc. in those sorts of slots.


Most men, at any rate, wore a jacket almost everywhere (as in: suit jacket, sport coat, blazer) in the heyday of pulp fiction, when quite a few could make working-class wages pounding out words on a typewriter.

What do those jackets have? Big hip pockets. What fits perfectly in those, hardly even affecting the drape, with enough room to spare that they can slip in and out effortlessly? Slim little pulp fiction books. Hell, many are even big enough for a volume of Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction to fit OK. Can't cram a glossy in there, but pulps? Yep.

Plus, yes, there were no cell phones, but if you want to carry a book today, where do you put it, if you don't have a bag (and even if you do, that's not convenient, is it?)? Well, on your phone, as an ebook, since that fits in a jeans or trouser pocket, and practically no dead-tree books or e-readers do... oh but look, you have some notifications! And there goes the 15 minutes.

Women often carry purses. And who still reads? It's largely women. I'm sure there are other reasons, but—hmmmm.


I read a lot of books when I wasn’t wearing a jacket so I don’t know.


Yeah, same, it’s about ergonomics and tendencies over a population, though. Hard to make a book as small as a cell phone that is really readable (it’d probably have to be spiral-bound, for one thing, or have ultra-tiny print crammed on the outer 2/3 of the pages), and lots of cell phones already barely fit in a trouser pocket.




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