Despite what I said recently to my mother about there being no page number handling in Kindle, there is a Menu function on Kindle, Go to Page,
that suggests that if you know the paperspace number of a book's page,
you can get there. This has very obvious limited utility and I've never
done it.
It's just that while you're reading, you don't see page numbers and to
figure out what page you're on is probably (I think completely)
impossible. All you have is the percent indication of how far you are
through the text. I have two Kindles myself and when I synchronize the
one to the web, then pick up the other and synchronize to the last page
read, it doesn't say what page or anything.
Perhaps we'll lose our "page number centricity" in favor of percent as electronic media becomes more widespread and dominant.
(Does this not establish "chapter and verse" as a superior system of
organization for books? Perhaps that's a little too stuffy for novels,
eh?)
An aside...
For instance, I noticed that the precursor indications that Asher (in
My Name Is Asher Lev, one of the greatest English novels ever written that I've just read for the third time)
would paint the three-way conflict between his mother, father and
himself came more overtly predicted at 73%, 80% and 87%.
I'll forget these numbers within a few days, I'm sure. Why was I watching for this? Because the dénouement at the end of this book is one of the most poignant in literature.
Even further aside...
And, I'm back in paperspace now as I can't justify spending
money on a book for Kindle I already own in paper. Thus I'm reading (again after having read it 20 years ago when it appeared) the sequel
The Gift of Asher Lev. I've had a couple of paper copies of My Name...,
but the last copy I had, I loaned to someone in a hospital who, when I
later attempted to retrieve it, clearly had the impression that I'd
given it to him so, I made no issue of it.
Back to the farm...
If you think a lack of page numbers is somehow hampering, imaging reading
Atlas Shrugged
which is 1200 pages. On the other hand, maybe I read it (last spring)
precisely because on the Kindle, I had no idea it was anywhere near that
long (although I totally knew it was on the same order as War and Peace which can be in excess of 1400 pages).
Now, I can see that this post has completely deviated from the original subject. Could that be for any other reason than that there's precious little more important than reading? Music and literature: nothing can dethrone these which reign supreme over leisure (and beyond).
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