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Jim—no last name given—wrote this comment in agreement with Senescence, death and e-books: Could an e-library help?, Alex Sanchez’s moving essay that we published earlier today. – D.R.

By Jim

image I myself am a stage 4C cancer patient, and I spent six weeks of my life in daily radiation therapy. Everyday while waiting for treatment, I suffered through boredom reading ancient magazines that people had dropped off. It really would have been nice to have e-book readers available for use. In fact, that is where I saw and touched my first Kindle, in use by a caregiver of a fellow patient who would spend an hour or more a day in the waiting room. Recently I purchased my own Kindle just for cases such as this. The interminable waits for the perpetually late doctors don’t seem as bad with my Kindle. And my days on disability are that much less boring now that I’m out of the workforce for the first time in my life.

I agree that blocking text-to-speech does a great disservice to those with late-stage illness. If I were too weak to hold up my Kindle, it would be great to be still challenged intellectually by a good book without troubling my caregivers to read to me for hours on end and would spare the much higher expense of purchasing audio books that would serve their purpose for a limited time.

Image credit: CC licensed image, from ranran.

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