HARDBACK VS PAPERBACK BOOKS

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  • Опубликовано: 18 июн 2024
  • In this latest entry of me losing my mind, we explore the advantages of disadvantages of hardback books VS paperback books.
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Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @DanielGreeneReviews
    @DanielGreeneReviews  4 года назад +1556

    This is the last super weird video for a while. After this is back to your regularly scheduled reviews and fantasy news/fantasy deep dives.

    • @TheJessMooney
      @TheJessMooney 4 года назад +90

      Awe, but what if we *like* the super weird?

    • @filon738
      @filon738 4 года назад +12

      I got my paperback edition of Metro 2033 at christmas, and it's already weary and rough. But, in the context of the books story, it fits really well. It feels like a lost relic and it actually made my reading experience a bit better

    • @giulioscanferlato9693
      @giulioscanferlato9693 4 года назад +21

      But I like weird Daniel.

    • @stuart1346
      @stuart1346 4 года назад +2

      Paperback every time I have to wait for books to come out in paperback so I can Have the set for a series. There are series I’m waiting to start like lightbringer that I don’t want to start till the last book is out in paperback

    • @arronjameshook
      @arronjameshook 4 года назад +5

      Book Gore...You Unutterable Barbarian, Greene!!!

  • @alxisl
    @alxisl 3 года назад +4191

    I prefer it when hard cover books have the artwork printed in the hard book not in the dust jacket

    • @thomasray
      @thomasray 3 года назад +299

      I like having something different underneath the dust jacket. It makes me feel like I have two books instead of one

    • @justinthillens2853
      @justinthillens2853 3 года назад +205

      If I'm paying extra, then I definitely want the artwork to be actually incorporated into the copy

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 3 года назад +134

      Frankly, I'd prefer the money put in the dust jacket to be put into the actual cover and spine of the hardback and the entire idea of the dust jacket ditched, even if that required simpler art on the actual cover of the hardback.

    • @nadiamillones9979
      @nadiamillones9979 3 года назад +48

      Yes! The dust jacket tends to be really fragile

    • @sergfl7907
      @sergfl7907 3 года назад +1

      I feel like no book has that

  • @noahjohnson5603
    @noahjohnson5603 4 года назад +3821

    Horror Movie: *Shows a man getting disemboweled*
    Me: *sleep*
    Daniel: *Bends a paperback’s spine all the way back*
    Me: *endless SCREAMING*

  • @lior38
    @lior38 3 года назад +2170

    Daniel: "I will make this video as objective as possible"
    Also Daniel few minutes into the video: "I will defend paperback 'till the day I die!!!"

    • @fantasylovemagic
      @fantasylovemagic 2 года назад +15

      Well, honestly, same. That's why I love him 😂♥️

    • @eldamifers
      @eldamifers 2 года назад +5

      Actually I remove it as soon as I start my reading and restore it weeks later to hung it in the shelve jaja

    • @jackhampton4169
      @jackhampton4169 Год назад

      @@eldamifers 8,,

    • @FrankWinchester
      @FrankWinchester Год назад +4

      For ease of use, I read ebooks. However I collect books, so I collect hardbacks generally. Paperbacks don't feature in my life

    • @rogerhuggettjr.7675
      @rogerhuggettjr.7675 Год назад +7

      @@FrankWinchester I don't read e-books for 2 reasons. First, it seems wrong that the most basic of pleasures enjoyed for thousands of years shouldn't require electricity as a sign of progress. Second, with wokeness causing some publishers to censor some books and in some cases actually rewrite hundred-year-old books not to offend modern readers, I don't want my library subject to 1984-like changes in reality. Part of my reading experience with Asimov sci-fi is seeing the future through the eyes of a 1950's man and what he sees as the norms of a reader in that time.

  • @BessmaITube
    @BessmaITube 2 года назад +773

    Conclusion:
    If you want to enjoy the read, get paperback.
    If you want to display your books and look fancy, get hardback.
    BTW, I totally agree.

    • @djokealtena2538
      @djokealtena2538 Год назад +13

      Hence why I have both

    • @nrreno
      @nrreno Год назад +25

      i dont find hardbacks harder to read at all, just open them on a table why would you even hold them?

    • @kukachoo42
      @kukachoo42 Год назад

      EXACTLY

    • @Midalias25
      @Midalias25 Год назад +8

      @@nrreno neck pain?

    • @Alexander-lh3lm
      @Alexander-lh3lm Год назад +9

      @@nrreno You might not have a table.

  • @harmonierainbow7559
    @harmonierainbow7559 4 года назад +4183

    I once fell asleep reading and dropped “Order of the Phoenix” on my face. Haven’t bought a hard cover since. 🤕

    • @LoyaFrostwind
      @LoyaFrostwind 4 года назад +201

      I've dropped my phone and my Kindle on my face too, after dozing off.

    • @avekatumba4794
      @avekatumba4794 4 года назад +107

      I'm sorry but, 😂😂😂😂

    • @mayallyourbaconburn7133
      @mayallyourbaconburn7133 4 года назад +31

      Harmonie Rainbow I don’t doze of for some reason I only fall asleep if I allow it. I can stay awake for 3 days if I allow it. I don’t bc I get sick if I miss a few nights.

    • @downstageright3298
      @downstageright3298 4 года назад +14

      Oh my gosh, that image is so funny

    • @thelaurels13
      @thelaurels13 4 года назад +24

      @Harmonie Rainbow I’m sorry I shouldn’t laugh but that’s the funniest comment I’ve read today. 😂😂😂

  • @jackinthebox1993
    @jackinthebox1993 4 года назад +7431

    Does anybody take the jacket off the hardcover if they're reading for longer than 20 minutes?

    • @keeprockin69
      @keeprockin69 4 года назад +434

      Always!

    • @gokbay3057
      @gokbay3057 4 года назад +266

      No the the jacket is one of the most important parts due to AESTHETICS.

    • @emmanarotzky6565
      @emmanarotzky6565 4 года назад +339

      I used to be a “use the dust jacket flap as a bookmark” person but I’ve never been a “take off the dust jacket entirely” person. That would require not losing the dust jacket while you have the book elsewhere lol

    • @gokbay3057
      @gokbay3057 4 года назад +22

      @@emmanarotzky6565 agreed completely

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 4 года назад +7

      Yes

  • @uhlan30
    @uhlan30 2 года назад +110

    For me the biggest thing that makes hardbacks attractive in terms of readability is that they actually stay open because the hard covers weigh down the pages. With a paperback, especially those tiny "mass market" ones, you can't easily just plop it down open on a table because it's not going to want to stay that way. Idk I guess some people don't care about this but it's a major factor for me.

    • @taserrr
      @taserrr 6 месяцев назад

      Huh, I don't think I've ever read a novel on a table before.
      To each their own of course!

    • @rockstarjoji7988
      @rockstarjoji7988 5 месяцев назад

      YES

    • @little7redify
      @little7redify 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@taserrr I read mine on my desk and it's much easier when it's Hardcover

  • @maiaduffield678
    @maiaduffield678 2 года назад +442

    I personally prefer hardbacks, I live the feel of them, especially the slightly bumpy dust jacket you get on some of them. I love that some of them are so beautiful and designed to have a certain feel about them that I don’t get from paperbacks when reading them. And to be honest I don’t like bending paperbacks, I hate when the lie slightly open and have bend lines on the spine. But that’s my opinion. I like that hardbacks are supported too. But I can understand why someone might want paperback.

    • @ChimPlays
      @ChimPlays 2 года назад +45

      Exactly! I dont want to hurt a book. I get that people like them more worn and stuff, but not me. It feels wrong. Hardbacks all the way for me

    • @CosmicApe
      @CosmicApe 2 года назад +18

      Same. Some people love wearing their books in, I like reading a book and it looks practically as good as new when finished. To each their own! I know some people who buy the cheapest paperback version they can find and, if they love the book, then they'll buy the hardcover version so it saves better and they could read it again later on.

    • @bensmith3006
      @bensmith3006 Год назад +3

      @@CosmicApe That's exactly what I do. For me, reading is about being comfortable and an old used paperback that I'm not afraid of damaging is easily the most comfortable way to read a book. If I really like the book, I'll probably end up investing in a nice hardback to display on my shelf that I can revisit later.

    • @bfish89ryuhayabusa
      @bfish89ryuhayabusa 3 месяца назад

      ​@@bensmith3006"old used paperback I'm not afraid of damaging" paperbacks make me inherently afraid of damaging them, and older ones make me afraid of doing even more damage. I checked out a copy of Sourcery last year and never read it because it was an old paperback, and I was worried about it falling apart from me reading it.

    • @johnbobbryan
      @johnbobbryan 2 месяца назад +2

      Yep, I do everything I can to mitigate spine creasing in my paperbacks, which makes me prefer a hardcover any day. Plus I love that after I get about 20% of the way through, the hardcover will lie open if I set it on a table. I read during lunch at work so this is crucial for me!

  • @derekkarofsky9694
    @derekkarofsky9694 3 года назад +3911

    I was inside a bus when it suddenly tipped over. Right before my face hit the asphalt, I used my hardcover copy of Arcanum Unbounded to cushion me. Literally saved my face. So hardcover if you need something as a shield.

    • @itubeeinhorn
      @itubeeinhorn 3 года назад +128

      Did this really happen? Hope you are fine!

    • @derekkarofsky9694
      @derekkarofsky9694 3 года назад +379

      @@itubeeinhorn yes it did. So my copy has a lot of scratches on it. It has character. Ahaha

    • @itubeeinhorn
      @itubeeinhorn 3 года назад +75

      @@derekkarofsky9694 oh no!!! But you are fine right?

    • @derekkarofsky9694
      @derekkarofsky9694 3 года назад +159

      @@itubeeinhorn yes. I'm just happy I had a book in hand that time.

    • @samelsby-hartman4593
      @samelsby-hartman4593 3 года назад +19

      How would u hit the asphalt if u were in the bus, i call bs 😂

  • @MsAndrej26
    @MsAndrej26 4 года назад +1131

    Dan: If book gore bothers you, you might want to leave
    Me: meh I really don´t care
    Dan: *book gore*
    Me: that...that really hurt me

    • @sakshipandit9666
      @sakshipandit9666 4 года назад +8

      Agreed

    • @tristaaaaaaaaa
      @tristaaaaaaaaa 4 года назад +1

      Draconos same lol

    • @theoriganalxldub
      @theoriganalxldub 4 года назад +2

      Same

    • @bkr_vids
      @bkr_vids 4 года назад +1

      Same here 😂

    • @xandara75
      @xandara75 4 года назад +3

      I was like, meh gore is fine, but then I started to think about how I would destroy books in my head and I felt really uncomfortable.

  • @russellbrownlow4564
    @russellbrownlow4564 3 года назад +306

    Daniel says “manual hurricane”, and then stabs the book😂

    • @pinkopat
      @pinkopat 2 года назад +8

      You've never been stabbed by a hurricane?

  • @allisonh2340
    @allisonh2340 2 года назад +193

    I have a paperback War and Peace that was given to me that the original owner literally ripped in half because it was too thick and annoyed him to hold while he was reading. It's my absolute favorite book I own because it's so beat up. Abused paperbacks are far superior.

    • @kamalhossian8164
      @kamalhossian8164 Год назад

      700 % agree

    • @kukachoo42
      @kukachoo42 Год назад +10

      this made my chest hurt

    • @zephyr6927
      @zephyr6927 Год назад

      i just wanna

    • @wham1984
      @wham1984 4 месяца назад

      Agreed, but I don’t want to be the one to abuse them to get that “abused look”🥲

  • @terragrahamthefirst
    @terragrahamthefirst 3 года назад +1972

    Paperbacks are friendly. Hardcovers look down their noses at you. The way I see it, if you *collect* books, hardcovers are for you; if you *adopt* books, it’s paperbacks all the way.

    • @lev.lately
      @lev.lately 3 года назад +49

      I love this approach!

    • @terragrahamthefirst
      @terragrahamthefirst 3 года назад +7

      @@lev.latelyThanks!

    • @jasdeepsadam6399
      @jasdeepsadam6399 3 года назад +46

      im stealing this line, it explained what i couldn’t so perfectly

    • @terragrahamthefirst
      @terragrahamthefirst 3 года назад +3

      @@jasdeepsadam6399 Go ahead :)

    • @sphenopalatineganglioneuralgia
      @sphenopalatineganglioneuralgia 3 года назад +67

      To me, paperbacks seem very unfriendly because they don't seem to want to be read. Paperbacks fight to close ALL the time. It's a struggle to hold them open if you read for longer than 20 minutes. Just take the jacket off a hardcover, and it stays open SO much better.

  • @ryeguy2256
    @ryeguy2256 3 года назад +1561

    Hardback: $40 for a 600 page Stephen King Book
    Paperback: $5 for a 600 page Stephen King book

    • @OkamiRose
      @OkamiRose 3 года назад +60

      Just don't buy Stephen King new 🤔

    • @SithxRaverxLuis
      @SithxRaverxLuis 3 года назад +56

      Stephen kings stares angrily at you* 😂

    • @wham1984
      @wham1984 2 года назад +7

      It’s true, I bought IT and it wasn’t that much😍

    • @SampsfaN
      @SampsfaN 2 года назад +16

      @@OkamiRose Stephen King new: am I a joke to you?

    • @sertank735
      @sertank735 2 года назад +6

      Kindle is best.

  • @claravian
    @claravian 3 года назад +107

    For me the paperbacks is for comfort, and hardcovers is for aesthetic. I first purchased the books in paperbacks, read them, decide if I like them enough to reread them in the future, and if I do, I'd try to collect the hardcover to display on my bookshelves. If not, then I'm gonna stick with the paperback. Contrary for peoples beliefs, paperback still can last long if you treat it right. For me, i always try to put plastic covers to my newly-purchased paperbacks. So the covers will not soak all that sweats from our destructive hands and make it last longer.

  • @gemgem3280
    @gemgem3280 3 года назад +89

    One good thing (in my preference) about hardbacks is that if it is a bigger book like the hardback version of Rhythm of War, you can just open it and leave it open and don't have to hold it.

  • @MissGraves6
    @MissGraves6 4 года назад +884

    Daniel: there's going to be book gore here
    Me, eyeing that fancy leather cover with gold pages, illustrated Warbreaker edition: don't you dare

    • @MsAndrej26
      @MsAndrej26 4 года назад +55

      I was like palpatine voice "yes, do it"

    • @matteabrown195
      @matteabrown195 4 года назад +5

      SAME

    • @yoavweiss8779
      @yoavweiss8779 4 года назад +2

      Noooooooooooo!!

    • @Hadrian1616
      @Hadrian1616 4 года назад +10

      In my mind...."I am about to call the police"

    • @raylawler13
      @raylawler13 4 года назад +2

      That one looked like one of the Mistborn books

  • @forestthorson7719
    @forestthorson7719 4 года назад +1400

    "you're not gonna casually run into a box cutter"
    You don't know me

    • @Bunndog
      @Bunndog 3 года назад +17

      Happened to me more times than I’m willing to admit when I worked at a bookstore.

    • @LunaLynnLovegood
      @LunaLynnLovegood 3 года назад +12

      Made me think of, "He ran into my knife. He ran into my knife ten times." Maybe a hardback would have saved him.

  • @SuperSara.x
    @SuperSara.x 2 года назад +74

    I personally like paperback but the one thing that bugs me to oblivion is when I read a paperback book and enjoy it very much, find out there is a sequel and having to wait what feels like an eternity for it to come out in paperback. I want consistency in my series and the wait is a cruel way of torture.

    • @JennAvs90
      @JennAvs90 Год назад +5

      I feel this too.

    • @taserrr
      @taserrr 6 месяцев назад

      This feels more of a "fear of missing out" thing rather than anything else.
      There's thousands upon thousands of amazing series that are complete, why not read those instead?
      In fact, there's not enough time in your lifetime to read even a fraction of all the good complete series.

    • @Parmetheus
      @Parmetheus 5 месяцев назад

      @@taserrr Gotta be part of the zeitgeist

  • @jacklemm1518
    @jacklemm1518 3 года назад +27

    I like paperback, but a specifically TYPE a of paperback. I like paperbacks that are floppy, have a smooth feeling cover, and pages that don’t feel like they’ve been smashed together. Those are the paperbacks that I love and don’t mind having. But if they are stiff, have cheap cover material, and feel like the pages have been smashed together than I would go with hardback any day. With hardbacks, I know what I’m getting into, because the majority of hardbacks have the same material and look, but with paperbacks, i don’t know if they’ll be floppy or stiff, cheap cover material or quality material, freely flowing pages or stiff clamped pages. That’s why I’m always hesitant for paperbacks because I like to keep my books nice.

  • @booknerdwithlipstick
    @booknerdwithlipstick 4 года назад +608

    Being a librarian I'm used to seeing book gore. Honestly I'd be curious for a part 2 where you get a library technicien to show the opposite, how to fix these flaws in your books and put them back together.

    • @kseniaprytkova4344
      @kseniaprytkova4344 4 года назад +43

      my budgie chewed a cover of a library book, i managed to restore it with some cardboard. I was very ashamed to bring back a book in worse condition than I took it, but the librarian was actually happy to see the restored version. So I guess librarians actually see a lot of book destruction 📚📚 also thanks to all librarians, you guys are magicians!

    • @ElizaKnows
      @ElizaKnows 4 года назад +10

      as a person with a child who is learning how to take care of his books, thank you for what you do, and I am sorry

    • @booknerdwithlipstick
      @booknerdwithlipstick 4 года назад +36

      Thank you for your sweet comments !
      Now I'll do a real librarian of myself and talk about rules 😂 : If you ever break a book, just come see us and be nice about it, we know all kinds of tricks to restore it 😇 I'd recommend not trying to fix them yourselves because it could makes it worst and be the difference between a minor fee and a book being "totaled" 😁

    • @bar0nger
      @bar0nger 4 года назад

      yes, need help with good repair tips. rather then the paste tape and guess method.

    • @MightyDizzy01
      @MightyDizzy01 4 года назад +1

      And make sure you give them the books you just used in the “hurricane”.

  • @killjoy004
    @killjoy004 4 года назад +930

    I think drunk Daniel has taken over the channel.

    • @dutcherharmon7256
      @dutcherharmon7256 4 года назад +7

      I support drunk Daniel and/or crazy sporadic Daniel

    • @nathyngoss3132
      @nathyngoss3132 4 года назад +3

      @@dutcherharmon7256 I think you mean Daddy Daniel, lol
      I'm not weird btw that's a reference to his drunk WoT covers review

    • @dutcherharmon7256
      @dutcherharmon7256 4 года назад +2

      @@nathyngoss3132 Ah yes Daddy Daniel

  • @basementdwellercosplay
    @basementdwellercosplay 2 года назад +31

    I have several used Stephen king paperbacks, the wear and tear definitely adds to the creepy vibes of the books.

  • @underdogjourney203
    @underdogjourney203 2 года назад +37

    I may be alone in this but I actually prefer the tactile experience of a hardback and I do love the aesthetic of a worn out dog-eared hardback book. That's why I love buying 2nd hand books. However, I do always feel guilty damaging a nice dust jacket, so I'll usually remove that until I've completed the read.

  • @toastybreadbowl
    @toastybreadbowl 4 года назад +516

    Ah yes, we all hear those warnings about hurricanes on the news - that a hurricane throws you around, slams you down into the ground, and then begins stabbing you repeatedly. Classic hurricane threat.😂

    • @amp7980
      @amp7980 4 года назад +26

      To be fair. There have been drinking straws found stabbed into tree trunks after hurricanes. Though i thought a front loading washing machine would have been a better way to test it.

    • @sakshipandit9666
      @sakshipandit9666 4 года назад +7

      Hey remember last time we were in a hurricane.. yaa it stabbed so hard man.

    • @Hadrian1616
      @Hadrian1616 4 года назад +1

      Best comment today🤣🤣🤣

    • @kaizacorp
      @kaizacorp 4 года назад +1

      Hurricane Daniel!

    • @EmonEconomist
      @EmonEconomist 4 года назад +3

      @@amp7980 Came here to suggest this! Both books on a quick spin cycle in a front-loading washing machine would've been a great comparison!

  • @kbg12ila
    @kbg12ila 4 года назад +507

    The lesson I learned from this video is that if youre attacked in a library with a knife, pick up a hardback to defend yourself.

    • @Bookdragon11
      @Bookdragon11 3 года назад +3

      Oh yeah, good point

    • @godricheir
      @godricheir 2 года назад +3

      Parabellum: And I took that seriously

  • @dustymetso
    @dustymetso 5 месяцев назад +6

    I always opt for hardcover if possible.
    1) I don't mistreat my books, so reading hardcovers doesn't wear them out. All my dust jackets are encased in mylar sheets to protect them. This also prevents them from slipping off while reading.
    2) I find reading paperbacks tedious; my wrists ache after reading for longer than 10 minutes, especially if the pages are stiff rather than floppy. (I hate stiff books-floppy gang!)
    3) They simply look nicer and feel more pleasant to hold. You can lay them flat on your lap or on a table. You still need to gently break the spine, like a paperback, but once that's done, there's no need to worry. I've owned hardcovers since the early 2000s that I've reread at least 5 times, and they're in excellent condition. Only one of my books shows notable wear, and that's because I bought it used. It remains in the same condition as the day I got it. For those curious, it's Greg Bear's "Songs of Earth & Power," a tragically underrated fantasy story.

  • @RedSkywalker17
    @RedSkywalker17 3 года назад +18

    I'm surprised nobody has talked about the difference in actual word size which is the deciding factor for me when choosing between the two. I always go paperback unless the words are too small for my preference. (Which happens a lot) Maybe I'm just horrible with distractions but if my brain doesn't get the small "wins" of advancing to the next page fast enough I just get discouraged and usually don't end up finishing the book at all lol. That's why I love Kindle reading so much. You can change the size to be the same for every book.

  • @TheJessMooney
    @TheJessMooney 4 года назад +332

    Obviously we should be judging by the slappability! ^_^

    • @Amin-rj9bj
      @Amin-rj9bj 4 года назад +19

      Lmao u just rendered our boi Daniel's entire comprehensive analysis obselete

    • @hravandil9993
      @hravandil9993 4 года назад +1

      Hell yeah

    • @LukasHatesBuffering
      @LukasHatesBuffering 4 года назад +2

      Davie504 would approve

    • @sinisgood
      @sinisgood 4 года назад +1

      @@LukasHatesBuffering EPIC i slapped like

    • @rolanddeschain6089
      @rolanddeschain6089 4 года назад +3

      It sounds silly but that is partly an essential part of the haptics.
      I love hardcover and paperbacks each in their own way. In my opinion, hardcover look better on the shelf. If you read them or just touch them, they feel like something valuable, a cigar box, a treasure chest.
      In contrast, paperbacks are more slapable. They give this feeling of something extensive, something rich. Like a ham or a thick bundle of cash.
      Of course, the most important thing for me is the content of a book. But I just love physical books. The smell, the cover-art, the haptics.

  • @thriceandonce
    @thriceandonce 3 года назад +874

    As a library assistant, two comments (and, dear god this got long, I do apologize!):
    - re: durability, in my experience paperback vs hardback matters far, far less than the overall quality of the production. Hardbacks *used* to be bound by thread, and they're bloody impossible to tear apart. Modern Hardbooks? Glue binding just like paperbacks. And there's a *huge* variation in glue quality. I sh*t you not, we've had books that fell apart completely before the first reader ever got their hands on them. (That's the kind of publisher that goes on our blacklist.) Ultimately, in normal (library) use, the most common signs of wear are liquid damage, people scribbling in the books, and pages coming lose. Hardback vs paperback makes no difference. (We do still prefer to buy hardbacks *because* they're less bendy, though, which means they look new for longer. People generally have a strong preference for newer(-looking) books here.)
    - your entire section about "don't buy hardcovers if you don't know yet if you'll like it" I was just waiting and *waiting* for you to suggest reading a library book and was deeply disappointed when you didn't. :P for your style of reading (with note taking and everything) it is absolutely unsuitable! But I think for a lot of folks, especially people who read a lot, a library is a very cost-efficient option for finding new things to love.

    • @dig8634
      @dig8634 3 года назад +57

      I am a known figure in my local library. I read almost all my books in the library before I purchase them. That way I can test out books and then support the author for books I like.
      Since I reread books all the time, it's never a waste of money either!
      My local library is tiny though, so they rarely have something I'm interested in, but since I live in Norway, all library books in the entire country (a few exceptions do exist) can be ordered in a couple days. Very convenient and cost-effective

    • @eliscanfield3913
      @eliscanfield3913 3 года назад +11

      I usually go there first if I'm not sure I'll like it or if I can't wait for the paperback (which is my usual budget). Unless it's a sequel to an old friend *and* my birthday ;)

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 3 года назад +3

      I don't buy many physical books (it's the least likely format for me to actually get the chance to read), but this is useful information for when I do. Thank you.

    • @beatamalecka4876
      @beatamalecka4876 3 года назад +3

      @@dig8634
      and, dear god this got long, I do apologize! - ME TOO
      when i was a student i spend a lot of time in library, especially when we go on a trip to town library, i love it - so may books in one place! town library is divided for children and for adult, and as a child i was afraid i will not be able to read all the books for children and sometimes i go to library every day (i was that kid who sit and didnt stant up until the book ends). but when i was transferred to adult section i found out that most of adults books are boring to me (like i could go to sleep reading horror or criminal book) and when i read everything i like in library i had to find another way to read books, and my town library to that day dont have a lot of books i love to read: Peter Brett, Terry Pratchett, Nalini Singh.
      So i start to read ebooks and now my personal library have no limits (i have about 1500 ebooks on kindle), i buy olny the books i love.

    • @SR-nx4er
      @SR-nx4er 3 года назад +3

      Love my local library

  • @thebookviking988
    @thebookviking988 3 года назад +19

    I agree almost entirely with Daniel here. I love paperbacks and hardbacks each for the reasons he listed. Paperbacks are easier to read with ease and enjoyment, especially if it’s a really big book. But hardbacks are beautiful and more collectible. Just depends on which I want more at the time of buying.

  • @sascha7476
    @sascha7476 2 года назад +14

    I usually take the dust jacket of when I'm reading the book. Also I find that a hardback opens a lot smoother. The only paperback I find more comfortable than hardcovers are really floppy paperbacks.

  • @frankm.2850
    @frankm.2850 3 года назад +988

    Alternatively: If its your first time reading a book, THE LIBRARY IS YOUR FRIEND.

    • @carlacristinadas.almeida3395
      @carlacristinadas.almeida3395 3 года назад +66

      I believe there’s nothing wrong with buying books if that’s something that makes you happy, which I believe is the case for most people in this channel. Plus, you support the publishers and the authors, and also don’t have to wait weeks before getting a copy of a coveted new release.

    • @cypher_2259
      @cypher_2259 3 года назад +33

      @@carlacristinadas.almeida3395 for beginners libraries are good

    • @ckl9390
      @ckl9390 3 года назад +6

      If the library is open on the day the bus goes in.

    • @ems9445
      @ems9445 3 года назад +6

      so sad i can't go to the library during lockdown :( now i have to wait and buy books instead

    • @beccag2758
      @beccag2758 3 года назад +17

      Libraries are the best for trying new stuff, but if I have an author I like and the money I’ll buy a book at release

  • @elicichocki4924
    @elicichocki4924 4 года назад +1806

    Daniel: “I feel like hardback books just don’t age as well...”
    *Pulls out my 140 year old hardback copy of the Iliad*

    • @vintagebathroomlover
      @vintagebathroomlover 4 года назад +46

      that's so cool

    • @Slydime917
      @Slydime917 4 года назад +30

      @Lenny P dude upload a video of the book on your channel. I wanna see it

    • @caseyrzeszutko5404
      @caseyrzeszutko5404 4 года назад +51

      Vintage books are definitely awesome and that copy sounds awesome, but if it's that old then it is from a time where paperback was more akin to a magazine than what it is now.

    • @supreethadevarakonda7480
      @supreethadevarakonda7480 3 года назад +21

      @Sooty it's a epic on Greek mythology written by Homer

    • @BatdadIsBestDad
      @BatdadIsBestDad 3 года назад +2

      I NEED IT.

  • @rottenappple3716
    @rottenappple3716 2 года назад +4

    “I have a box cutter”
    Perhaps the greatest threat delivered throughout all of histoey

  • @skybuilder23
    @skybuilder23 3 года назад +5

    One thing from the comic book world that I use for novels too is to never read it with the dust jacket. No matter how scuffed up the hardcover is, if the dust jacket is in good shape it will always look like new on the shelf. I'm a hardcover guy for two other reasons too. One, they lay open easier, and two, It's MUCH harder to damage the spine horribly. Not no mention larger text is easier on the eyes, there the first part of your body to go with age.

  • @toot180
    @toot180 3 года назад +375

    I like hardcover because it opens all the way without the spine creasing

    • @anthony-wo2rg
      @anthony-wo2rg 3 года назад +13

      say that to my copy of under the dome... lol

    • @nattycatty2237
      @nattycatty2237 2 года назад +11

      You can relax your paperbacks (it took me like 20 minutes to do it to a 500-page book tho) so the spine doesn't crack

    • @rebekalapina8005
      @rebekalapina8005 2 года назад

      @@nattycatty2237 yeah i do that to all of my paperbacks.

    • @stefank2842
      @stefank2842 2 года назад +1

      @@rebekalapina8005 how do you do that? im about to read a 600-page-book so im just wondering 😆

    • @rebekalapina8005
      @rebekalapina8005 2 года назад +2

      @@stefank2842 take your book and put it on a table or smt flat so the spine is on the table then slowly take a couple pages from both sides and press them down to the table and do that with all the pages

  • @CallumRickard
    @CallumRickard 4 года назад +470

    Me when you ran the first book under the running water:
    "Oh dear God, Daniel... no... it shoulda been a Terry Goodkind!" 😂 ✌🏻

    • @MeTaLISaWeSoMe95
      @MeTaLISaWeSoMe95 4 года назад +46

      He honestly should have used nothing but Terry Goodkind books for the torture test... Followed by the last test.
      Are paperbacks or hardcovers better at handling burning?!

    • @CallumRickard
      @CallumRickard 4 года назад +34

      @@MeTaLISaWeSoMe95 - for the next test, he should simply use Terry himself, and remove the books entirely!

    • @jorgedasilva7665
      @jorgedasilva7665 4 года назад +3

      That would require buying a Terry Goodkind book and giving him money...

    • @CallumRickard
      @CallumRickard 4 года назад

      @@jorgedasilva7665 - He could buy second-hand off eBay! HAHA

    • @jorgedasilva7665
      @jorgedasilva7665 4 года назад

      @@CallumRickard Oh I know. I jest. But on a more serious note, better to pay money for a book by an author you love and give it honor by allowing it to be the one destroyed.

  • @flare8089
    @flare8089 Год назад +1

    You have made me very glad one of my fav books is an old paperback bc yeah dang it probably wouldn't have still been so readable if it got juice spilt on it as a hardcover. I tend to feel less bad throwing hardcovers into my bag though because it feels like they'll be less damaged/won't get their pages bent so much

  • @hikittykittykitty.
    @hikittykittykitty. 2 года назад +9

    When he was cutting the books with a box cutter I literally felt a pain in my heart.

  • @gymnastoman1
    @gymnastoman1 3 года назад +403

    I always remove the dust jacket before reading hardcovers. They get in the way, plus if you get some damage on the actual cover or whatnot, the dust jacket hides that once I’m done and replace it. That’s just me though.

    • @heathern8043
      @heathern8043 3 года назад +27

      Honestly same I never read hardbacks with the covers

    • @LILLYBRONX
      @LILLYBRONX 3 года назад +16

      Same, I hate reading with/ruining dust jackets

    • @lazynoodle6739
      @lazynoodle6739 3 года назад +8

      I totally do the same thing when I have a hardback (even though I prefer softcovers). Often dust jackets are more visually appealing than the cover underneath which often is smooth one colour-ish so I don't want to damage the actually pretty part and can hide any scratches

    • @iamsofia3782
      @iamsofia3782 3 года назад +3

      My logic is that the dust jacket protects the actual book from getting damaged, so I don't remove it. I actually prefer how most books look without their covers.

  • @mariapazgonzalezlesme
    @mariapazgonzalezlesme 4 года назад +290

    Basically this video is showing us Daniel's obsession with slapping on book's covers.

    • @joshhart2205
      @joshhart2205 4 года назад +3

      I read this comment right as he slapped a books cover 😂😂😂

  • @PenguinjitsuX
    @PenguinjitsuX 9 месяцев назад

    I have just started to order some physical books after only reading e-books for a while, and choosing between the 2 options was the first question I had. You answered my question perfectly, thanks! Will be going with paperback for that optimal reading experience.

  • @alyssanguyen6031
    @alyssanguyen6031 2 года назад +5

    I like hardcovers more. As you mentioned, my biggest peeve about them is the paper cover but it’s an easy fix for me. When I read it or taking it with me I leave the paper at home. Pop it right bad on when it goes to the shelf and looks good as new

  • @bramvandenheuvel4049
    @bramvandenheuvel4049 4 года назад +195

    Mass market paperbacks fit in the pocket of my jacket.
    That's a win.

    • @rymdalkis
      @rymdalkis 4 года назад +18

      *_Happy Loial noices_*

    • @jessicavanrooyen9887
      @jessicavanrooyen9887 4 года назад +19

      It is! But damn, it’s so hard to read mass market paperbacks without breaking a hand keeping it open

    • @kaladin7487
      @kaladin7487 4 года назад +9

      @@jessicavanrooyen9887 I swear I felt like I was gonna get arthritis trying to read my mass market way of kings

    • @ronellestanton3976
      @ronellestanton3976 4 года назад

      Same here

    • @Roy-mk9zl
      @Roy-mk9zl 4 года назад

      Some books are available in that format only.

  • @masonheitner8410
    @masonheitner8410 4 года назад +1201

    This video should be age restricted. Daniel, I cannot believe you showed this kind of violence online. I’m contacting the book police.
    #DanielGreeneIsOverParty

  • @linchen4918
    @linchen4918 2 года назад +15

    Funfact: What I love is that in German (my native language) paperbacks are called ,Taschenbuch‘, which literally means ,bag/pocket book‘ 😅
    Great video btw!

    • @racoon_in_ankhmorpork
      @racoon_in_ankhmorpork 2 года назад +3

      There’s actually a similar thing in Italian! I’m not sure whether it’s the same distinction ‘cause I normally talk about books in other languages, lol, but I believe “Taschenbuch” has an Italian equivalent in “tascabile” (translated: “pocketable”). This is really random but I felt like putting it out there xD

    • @TheTricktracktruck
      @TheTricktracktruck Год назад +2

      Same in Spanish: libro de bolsillo.

  • @darthralin
    @darthralin 3 года назад +5

    I'm reminded of my late uncle's college story about sticking hardcovers under his sweater when he heard sirens and the cops demanded everyone in the campus library he was at surrender because some protesters had fled inside. He'd say that those had saved him quite a few bruises from the nightsticks that were swinging around as they were loaded up and taken to the lockup.
    So, I'm now wondering how paperbacks hold up against nightsticks.

  • @HugoHugoHugoo
    @HugoHugoHugoo 4 года назад +308

    boy take the dust jackets offff, never bring them with your book everywhere! Thats a rule!

    • @Virtuallyjonathan
      @Virtuallyjonathan 3 года назад +42

      This is 100% correct. Dust covers need to stay home safe in a drawer until you're done with the book and only then is it returned to the book itself and shelved.

    • @angelowolk744
      @angelowolk744 3 года назад +19

      Omgg I do the exact same, when I'm reading a hard cover I automatically take the dust jacket off and leave it somewhere safe until I finish the book, and then I put it back on and it gets directly on my shelf

    • @no_i_dont_want_no_slugs
      @no_i_dont_want_no_slugs 3 года назад +9

      YES and invest in a nice cloth book sleeve. That's my advice. He's still young, so he probably hasn't had a book for more than 10-15 years, so he hasn't seen what'll happen. But if you want a book to last, I advise investing in a smyth-sewn book, leave the dust jacket when you travel, and put the book in a nice sleeve if you're going to throw it into your bag.
      But if you don't care about that, that's fine I guess. I just like to treat the things I own with tender care and respect.

  • @sabsdelgado
    @sabsdelgado 3 года назад +781

    I way prefer hardcovers since 90% of my reading happens the first hour of the day w a coffee in hand, so I normally one-hand the book. Hardcovers stay open while I read, and paperback always want to be closed

    • @lillie.3
      @lillie.3 2 года назад +24

      I do that all the time and prefer hardbacks when I eat my breakfast and read or lie on my bed on my front and read as I don’t have to hold it open in a way I do for a new paperback. That’s why I get my books from charity shops because 99.9% of the time the spines are already cracked so I can attempt to keep it open.

    • @thelastcube.
      @thelastcube. 2 года назад +5

      just break the spine

    • @sudutheeng
      @sudutheeng 2 года назад +5

      @@thelastcube. ye i do that makes the book look old and asthetic

    • @Arc_The_King
      @Arc_The_King 2 года назад +1

      Imagine the coffee accidently spilling on the book. And now you have a "mess" instead of a 'book' as demonstrated in the video 🤣🤣

    • @sjajsjsja4523
      @sjajsjsja4523 2 года назад +8

      How bizarre. Being able to one-hand a book is why I prefer mass market paperbacks. Hardcovers are big and heavy... you can't one-hand them.

  • @ashtaylor4107
    @ashtaylor4107 2 года назад +1

    I have a mass paperback version of Enders Game that was my grandmother’s, and, despite definitely seeing better days, I never had any issues reading and enjoying it. It’s the same for several other paperbacks I used as a kid when I was less careful with my possessions. I do still love my hardbacks though, but it is mostly aesthetics. The best paperbacks for me, though, are the ones that flop all the way open and stay that way without you having to press on it. So satisfying and comfortable to read.

  • @jorgeocampo4268
    @jorgeocampo4268 2 года назад

    I'm young, and I've spent my whole life since I was 10 playing video games, I've never picked up a book before unless it was in school during English class. I have recently decided to pick up reading and I'm loving it, but when I was buying my first book on amazon, I was met with two options. a paperback version or a hardcover version for twice the price, I suffer from anxiety so making decisions even the most easy ones is a challenge for me, I need to have both options right in front of me and spend hours deciding which one to choose. so as silly as this video idea may seem to others it was extremely helpful for people such as myself. so thank you. definitely a thumbs up and sub from me.

  • @wolfetom10
    @wolfetom10 4 года назад +1079

    Durability is an issue when a book is decades old. Paperbacks, especially the mass market size, are made with acidic paper that ages badly. It yellows and becomes brittle. Even worse, the spines are glued, and the glue deteriorates with age. I have many old paperbacks that have literally split in half along the spine. Hardcover books have a woven spine that will not disintegrate over time.
    Daniel, you're a young guy. You probably don't have a lot of books that are 40-50 years old. I do. Trust me, if it's a book you care about and want to re-read, a cheap paperback will not last. I've had to replace some of my favorite books that have literally fallen apart.

    • @SheWritesSeaofStars
      @SheWritesSeaofStars 4 года назад +106

      Good point! I’m only 18, but both my 1950s LOTR collection and Narnia collection is definitely too weak to read. It’s not the same with my 1950s hardbacks.

    • @milesbeining
      @milesbeining 4 года назад +123

      I'm younger than Daniel and I have paperbacks from the 50s and 60s. They've aged well. I think it depends both on how well it's cared for and how good the quality is. I do agree that generally hardbacks stand the test of time better though

    • @SheWritesSeaofStars
      @SheWritesSeaofStars 4 года назад +26

      @@milesbeining True... the paperbacks I got were from various garage sales, so I don't know what conditions they were kept in before.

    • @benparrish6157
      @benparrish6157 4 года назад +24

      In my experience pretty much any 50 year old book is too weak to read. I’ve accumulated many old hardbacks from neighbors and used book stores and most of them are just for display

    • @andythepanhead
      @andythepanhead 4 года назад +17

      I didn't realize it till recently, but one of my Viking Histories is over a 100 years old. doesn't look a day over 20. Hardcover.

  • @hravandil9993
    @hravandil9993 4 года назад +154

    Remember to slap the book

    • @hravandil9993
      @hravandil9993 4 года назад +2

      ruclips.net/video/eb2zuegwcwk/видео.html

  • @fanpiresam482
    @fanpiresam482 2 года назад +1

    "wear and tear on the covers" me who rawdogs my hardbacks (: but seriously reading is such an intimate experience, undress that hardcover before you spread its pages and delve into the depths of its plot ;)

  • @martinzubr2113
    @martinzubr2113 3 года назад +6

    Probably gonna get lost, but as for readability, the hardback CAN in certain situations stay open by itself, so you don't have to hold it at all (e.g. lying on the floor and you "reading down" from the edge of the couch) + it usually is bigger, which can result in bigger font - better readability. Just my 0.2.

  • @markcoll5761
    @markcoll5761 4 года назад +202

    Daniel “goes camping with a hurricane forecasted” Greene

  • @tylerowings9829
    @tylerowings9829 4 года назад +217

    Thought I could handle the book gore. Found out fast that his was worse than a horror movie for me.

  • @loripeterson
    @loripeterson 2 года назад +9

    This video was very interesting... the book gore had myself laughing at how extreme Daniel went to demonstrate the book's durability.

  • @kv4648
    @kv4648 3 года назад +10

    This sounds like a subs Vs dubs argument

  • @elfsara91
    @elfsara91 4 года назад +130

    I didn't understand what you meant by "book gore" until you got to it, then I wanted to throw myself out of the window. (I've just discovered your channel and now I'm binge watching everything, greetings from Italy!)

  • @TheNerdyNarrative
    @TheNerdyNarrative 4 года назад +112

    I'm so OCD about creasing my spines even with paperbacks that I hold them in such a way so that doesn't happen. I've got paperbacks that I've had for years and read many times that look brand new. I do agree to read the paperback version first and if it becomes a favorite, I collect the hardback edition. Love this video! Those books look like Pips used them for scratching posts...lol

    • @albinodeer7449
      @albinodeer7449 4 года назад +8

      Same with the paperbacks! I've just finished a 600+ paged mass market one and it still looks almost new
      The sentiment is also a bummer sometimes though, as I recently got a second-hand copy of the Kingkiller books, and though they were cheap, the spines are creased, and it's killing me

    • @TheNerdyNarrative
      @TheNerdyNarrative 4 года назад +5

      @@albinodeer7449 I feel your pain...it's literally almost a physical pain every time my fingers touch a crease in the spine...lol

    • @alanatrevino2424
      @alanatrevino2424 4 года назад

      I FEEL YOU. My favorite paperback is about 630 somewhat-thicc pages, and if I read to like the half-way, the spine bends so much that the front and back covers touch. :(

  • @noidoi1248
    @noidoi1248 3 года назад +2

    Combo for me, read on Kindle, buy the hardcover for collection. Also use hardcovers for the art inside or read, only if at home (depending on the type of book)

  • @musicandloveismylive
    @musicandloveismylive Год назад

    I keep coming back to this video! Absolute favorite!

  • @HarveyGinger
    @HarveyGinger 3 года назад +243

    I like how the concept of removing dust covers never crossed Daniels mind

    • @vilaxvilax
      @vilaxvilax 2 года назад +6

      It is not a easy choice

    • @InsertTheCoin1997
      @InsertTheCoin1997 2 года назад

      Or wrap the dust covers with clear plastic cover

    • @MorriganReads
      @MorriganReads 2 года назад +5

      I honestly think most of the hardbacks I own have had their dust jackets removed. I just think it looks nicer.

  • @herseeingeyedog
    @herseeingeyedog 4 года назад +264

    Daniel: Hardback vs Paperback?
    Me: *Laughs in tablet*

    • @amp7980
      @amp7980 4 года назад +5

      I really enjoyed my nook until it decided to just stop charging. And then the last WOT book got released and it wasn't immediately available on it. So i ran to barns n noble n got it begrudgingly on hardback.

    • @herseeingeyedog
      @herseeingeyedog 4 года назад +3

      @@amp7980 Same on the nook. I loved that thing. Then I moved to Amazon Fire. Then to a Samsung tablet. All three of these were awesome in their own ways and I love that I can carry every book I own no matter where I go. And if I forget my tablet, I can use the app on my phone as well.

    • @mr.teekanee9750
      @mr.teekanee9750 4 года назад

      It's all right to read from tablet but it actually tired your eyes more quickly.

    • @emeltser
      @emeltser 4 года назад +6

      I switched over to reading books on tablets because I have dry eyes and tablets make it easy to zoom in on text and therefore easier to read. Yes, I’m old. Get off my lawn.

    • @tristaaaaaaaaa
      @tristaaaaaaaaa 4 года назад +1

      Yeesss! Me too! I have a bookshelf. I just buy the ecopies too. My books are mint and the book read.

  • @vajs6312
    @vajs6312 3 года назад +2

    I have been slaving away with a 3-volume paperback of The Gulag Archipelago and can't wait to transition to Terry Pratchett's City Watch sub-series

  • @forn8473
    @forn8473 2 года назад +6

    I feel there is one thing you didn't account for in terms of durability. Yes, hardbacks are stiff, while paperbacks are bendy. But that bendiness also means the spine gets so much more to endure the more you read it. I have a few paperbacks that just fell apart and required tape to hold it together, while my most-read hardback is still doing fine _because_ it's impossible to bend it, protecting the spine.

  • @Irku13
    @Irku13 3 года назад +115

    Oh man, this reminds me of something I did in middle school. I had a really worn paperback and it was so comfortable in my hands. When the sequel came out, it was only available in hardcover... so I tried to manually wear it down to make it more comfortable like the paperback was. I'm not proud of what I did to that book...

  • @ancientroses6954
    @ancientroses6954 3 года назад +325

    "We're going to have book gore"
    Booklovers everywhere: 😱😨😲😰😪😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭💀

    • @whateverworksmate.721
      @whateverworksmate.721 2 года назад +4

      Yeah, i was deeply disturbed

    • @blakxhart
      @blakxhart 2 года назад

      I literally looked everywhere for the unfettered books. I thought they were limited, and you can’t buy them anymore. I was begging for that to not be the one he chose to destroy 😭

  • @nerdanalog1707
    @nerdanalog1707 3 года назад +4

    I choose an e-reader and e-books. They are cheaper, and I'm not afraid to hurt the book. Furthermore, very light-weight, no back breaking, no weird position, and reading in the dark is now possible. If I do want the physical copy of a book I loved, I will get a hardback because of durability (yep I have hardbacks that over 100 years old).
    Edit: for hardbacks, the way the book is bound will determine how it can sustain wear and tear. Case bound books (or books bound by glue) won't resist as well as oversewn books or Smyth Sewn bound books.

  • @dantesworld7980
    @dantesworld7980 2 года назад

    This is my favorite video you did I keep coming back to it

  • @kateg9437
    @kateg9437 3 года назад +183

    I'd say that in a bag, with other items being added and removed, paperbacks are far more likely to be damaged. I've had many have front/back covers and early pages bend up, and even tear. Hard backs are protected by being rigid. Dusk jackets are a liability though, but I always remove them while reading a book

    • @nicolearaujo3466
      @nicolearaujo3466 2 года назад +6

      exactly! my paperbacks get bent so fucking easily, i rather spend more money on hardcovers that i can simply take the jacket off when i take them out, and put it back when i am at home. simple.

    • @Fredsinator
      @Fredsinator 2 года назад +7

      @@nicolearaujo3466 No, you take off the dust jacket when you read a hardcover (if came with one) no matter where you are (even at home) and then put it back on when you put your book back on your self.

    • @Aethelhadas
      @Aethelhadas 2 года назад +8

      I hate dust jackets, most of them are so ugly. I prefer the clean and vintage look of a hardbook without its jacket.

    • @Tam00393
      @Tam00393 2 года назад +2

      When I get a bent paperback, I just place it flat on a surface and pile a bunch of other heavy books on top of it and leave it for a few days, that usually straightens them back out. I ordered a hardback the other day that was horribly bent and I could not do anything to straighten it back out.

  • @mollybarrington8170
    @mollybarrington8170 4 года назад +168

    I'm dyslexic so reading is utter hell and for years I hadn't read a single book (apart from school and even then j wouldn't finish them) I was horrifically slow and it was nearly painful and don't even get me started on reading aloud EESHH like felt such a fool stuttering some ciptic language. Reading was embarrassment and I hated how it made my feel so dum. Anyways I recently this year found audible AND IM IN LOVE I've listened to 34 books now and just wanted to say thank you for recommending light bringer I'm on the third book now ...SO GOOD!! It's such a wonderful experience finding such joy in something that I used to dread and hate 😁😁

    • @KartyMcFarty
      @KartyMcFarty 3 года назад +10

      Ive personally never used audible but i'm really glad you get to enjoy these stories with everyone else. I was thinking of instead of doing a reread of Wheel of Time trying audible for that, but each book is like 30 hours long LMAO.

    • @TheAnnaK74
      @TheAnnaK74 3 года назад +1

      As I was reading this comment I was thinking of suggesting Audile but you already have it congrats on finding the wonder of books

    • @aggies1233
      @aggies1233 3 года назад +4

      I’m dyslexic as well and I recently discovered using audible too! It is a game changer! I’m sure you do but listening at a faster speed help us pay attention better! Also not sure if you do this but I LOVE to grab the physical copy and read along with the audio! Although I could never read a book on my own coherently, have the audio revolutionizes my ability to follow along. There is such a sense of accomplishment when something that seems so daunting and impossible before and is now an attainable goal. Sorry I know this is long and I’m sure you know both of these things just want to throw those out there! Just so very thankful to live in a time now of technology allowing people like you and me to enjoy books in ways that would be impossible without!!

    • @beccag2758
      @beccag2758 3 года назад

      I don’t have audible, but I’ve been listening almost non stop since I discovered my library has downloadable audiobooks (Libby and RBDigital) they’re perfect for when I walk my dog or cook or paint💙

  • @blunderswish7121
    @blunderswish7121 Год назад +1

    I still have 6 paperbacks with half of a cover/half of the binding gone. Narnia's cover disintegrated in my hands and had to be reforged with cardboard and duct tape.
    It's like a war on books and my bags/hands were winning. So I threw a skill point into Hardback so my books could survive.
    I do agree paperbacks are more comfortable in the hand.

  • @thethriftyfawn
    @thethriftyfawn Год назад +1

    I enjoy both! Sometimes if the hardcover is on sale cheaper than the paperback, I'll go with that. Or if only one or the other format is the only format currently available and I don't want to wait, I'll go ahead and get it.
    Also, I buy my books secondhand at a local pre-owned bookstore or thrift store, or receive some for free from loved ones or acquaintances or from out local "little library" boxes, so in those cases you get what you get, and it doesn't bother me either way.
    I will say for VINTAGE books, I absolutely LOVE hardcovers though! They are SO BEAUTIFUL! 😊

  • @Jharling12
    @Jharling12 4 года назад +177

    Who in their right mind reads a hardcover with the jacket still on it?

    • @damp2269
      @damp2269 4 года назад +17

      i thought nobody but it seems i was wrong.

    • @KRSorba
      @KRSorba 4 года назад +1

      If you put a protective sleeve over the jacket it's fine

    • @damp2269
      @damp2269 4 года назад +29

      @Nerdish for me is not just about taking care of the jacket is also the book sliding on the jacket and making it uncomfortable.

    • @amybooksit7818
      @amybooksit7818 4 года назад +10

      It freaks me out that people take the jackets off. My brain is convinced the jacket will get ruined or lost if it isn't physically ON the book at all times lol

    • @damp2269
      @damp2269 4 года назад +2

      @@amybooksit7818 lol, i just put it on the book case, i got a space where the jacket for the book im currently reading goes.

  • @nicholaswhitman4620
    @nicholaswhitman4620 3 года назад +402

    I agree that damage on a paperback has a lot of character and some charm

    • @bigmanmccheez5342
      @bigmanmccheez5342 Год назад +28

      My grandad had a massive book collection that he kept displayed in his office. It was one wall of books, but you could clearly tell that some of them had been there for 50+years. The bumped edges and bent spines tell people that you have the books because you like reading books, not because they look aesthetic on the shelf. My grandad had books that were covered in tea stains and little scraps of paper that he used as marks. It's nice to be able to look through these worn books and be reminded of him.

    • @Larry-tl6vw
      @Larry-tl6vw Год назад +6

      If i see a lot of wear on a paperback it must be a good story, I agree it shows character ….

  • @B-...
    @B-... Год назад

    Of all the necessary videos out there, this was a video... absolutely love it.

  • @noelhann5262
    @noelhann5262 2 года назад +1

    14:08 the scariest thing about hurricanes is how they can stab you with a box cutter

  • @leahpearl7114
    @leahpearl7114 4 года назад +417

    People who use dust covers as bookmarks make me extremely uncomfortable.

    • @currangill430
      @currangill430 3 года назад +7

      Sorry esse

    • @Luka1180
      @Luka1180 3 года назад +29

      And people who bend front or back covers of paperback books when reading the other page. Or when they bend it too much in the middle of the back. UGHHHGHGHHGHGHGH.

    • @ultraprincesskenny6790
      @ultraprincesskenny6790 3 года назад +2

      @@Luka1180 I know someone who reads books by folding the cover entirely to the back so there's only 1 page you can see

    • @dig8634
      @dig8634 3 года назад +1

      My sister folds the corner of the page when she closes it. I absolutely hate it. How can you defile those perfect pages with a foldline?!

    • @hiigghhggg9150
      @hiigghhggg9150 3 года назад +3

      Agreed. People who read with the dust jacket on in general are evil. Also people who crack the spine should be put to death 🤣😂

  • @cyanic3148
    @cyanic3148 3 года назад +45

    Daniel: *implies he's gonna put a book in a similar situation as a hurricane*
    me: "ah, probably chuck it into a washing machine and let it do its thing"
    Daniel: *_manual hurricane_*

    • @whiterabbit75
      @whiterabbit75 3 года назад +3

      Honestly, he could have gotten more accurate results if he had run the tap over the book for a minute, then tossed them in the dryer.

  • @KaleidoRose
    @KaleidoRose 2 года назад +1

    Hmm, I like the convenience and cheapness of paperbacks, I can own more and carry more, but for the books that I like a lot and am attached to, I like the fanciness of the hardcover, it looks better on the shelf. Also like how underneath the dust jacket there is often a more simple cover with like, a symbol or motif, which feels really cool to me.

  • @silverwolf28
    @silverwolf28 3 года назад +1

    my philosophy is ebook for convenience and physical books to keep and collect, so I'm of course inclined to go for hardcovers. Also, for cases of books like Priory of the Orange Tree, I don't really think it's possible to have a paperback of it that won't disintegrate in months lol. I don't know, paperbacks just have this delicate feeling to them when I have it in my hand and I constantly worry about damaging the edges. Sure it might stand up to a storm better, but if I'm reading in a situation where a storm would actually affect it, I'll be holding a Kindle anyway.

  • @Firearrow5235
    @Firearrow5235 4 года назад +63

    I really have no dog in this fight. I feel that, in the long run, hardbacks always look better, even the ones that get read heavily. If the dust jacket gets worn and/or torn I just remove the dust jacket and TA-DA I have a new book (and I personally often like the look of un-jacketed books better on the shelf).
    And speaking of removing the dust jacket, that's where we come to my real reason for commenting. First and foremost, when I'm reading a hardback copy the first thing I do is remove the dust jacket and leave it at home. The damn things are always slipping around or (like you yourself said) getting torn. Secondly, the most comfortable way I've found to read hardbacks (and the way I read most books) is to lay on my stomach in bed with a pillow or two under my chest and the book lying flat on the bed before me. There's no weird contortions, no digging, no hefting, and physics is on your side. In this setting I actually find it's easier to read a hardback as most of the time they lie open of their own accord. That, of course, would solve your problem in only one of the many settings you read books, so don't take any of this as an argument against... well anything. It's all bloody subjective anyway!
    That all being said... I buy paperbacks because we're both cheap. If I pick up a hardback, it's because it had an exclusive cover on release or it was on some stupid sale.

  • @kalafinwe5498
    @kalafinwe5498 3 года назад +121

    ''When I handle a hardback I feel like I am devaluating the book''. This is so true, I am a Tolkienist collector and I am telling you that I handle my hardbacks with gloves and with such care it is chirurgical.

    • @angrymoose3383
      @angrymoose3383 Год назад

      I bought Mass Market Paperbacks of The Hobbit, The Fellowship Of The Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return Of The King at a used book sale that was selling donated used books to fund the maintenance/slight restoration of a 250 year old historic mill in my small Canadian town and they were COOKED. The spines are deformed beyond logic, there are creased pages (not dog eared, literally creased in all sorts of weird places.) the cover of The Hobbit and Two Towers are f***ed, they open in weird ways, but they are still readable despite the fact that they were probably through their fifth used-book-buying owner by the time they reached me

    • @pathik_25
      @pathik_25 Год назад

      @@angrymoose3383 Damm save money for new paperback and never buy Mass paperback

  • @skeller61
    @skeller61 8 месяцев назад +1

    I hate holding 1000+ page books, whether they’re hardcover or paperback. Besides being heavy and bulky, the font is generally too small and the line spacing too tight for a comfortable read. Why do I have to hold all of Edgar Alan Poe’s collected works in my hand, when I’m just trying to read a short story?
    I want to get into physical books, as I’ve been doing all my reading on an iPad Kindle app. Before I continue, I would like to mention a few benefits of e-books:
    1. It’s nice to have your whole library with you wherever you go, with the page where you left off ready to go with a couple of taps.
    2. By changing the screen brightness, you can read in daylight, all the way to pitch black, without straining your eyes.
    3. You can read War and Peace without getting a hernia (even with the paperback!).
    4. You can change the font and font size to suit you. With physical books, you have to beware, as some publishers with small fonts and tight line spacing torture you.
    5. You can get book reviews on the iPad (RUclips, NY Times, etc.) and if you have picked the next book you want to read, you can have it downloaded and ready to read before you finish your tea (or scotch)…you also don’t have to drive to the bookstore after drinking the scotch 😊.
    6. You can highlight unfamiliar words you come across and get the definition, rather than soldiering on with context as your only guide, or get a dictionary (yeah, right).
    7. Speaking of highlighting, I don’t do it, but you can certainly markup the ebook if you want to, without having those marks permanent if you want to remove them later.
    8. Most of the old classics can be had in well formatted versions (most free ones are not well formatted) for a buck or two, which saves money and space.
    Anyway, there are a lot of positives about ebooks that don’t get mentioned by many booktubers.
    That being said, I’m getting close to retirement and have decided to re-enter the physical book community (why I’m watching your video). I’ve looked at the various classic editions by many publishers through people sharing their collections on RUclips, and then looked at my own collection and realized that having a more readable book (font, font size, and line spacing) will be important to me, as well as the enjoyment from a thoughtfully designed and crafted book.
    So, my plan is to get hardcover and cloth bound editions that I will enjoy. It’s true that you can’t judge a book by its cover; however if you know you’ll like the content, having a beautiful edition can’t hurt! I have a couple of gizmos that can keep the book open while I’m reading, in case I get the hand fatigue you speak of. Then, for larger books (like War and Peace), I’ll just save the physical hassle and read them on the Kindle app.
    Thanks for your video and sorry for the novella length comment.

  • @bartosztrz451
    @bartosztrz451 3 года назад

    Durability test was a regular snuff film, thanks for speeding it up ;) Wholeheartedly agree though, the only hardcover I bought was Jordan Peterson's "12 rules for life". The new one will definitely be bought in paperback, thanks for a fun and educational video :)

  • @CocoRegardless
    @CocoRegardless 4 года назад +57

    🤣🤣
    This debate seems so meanigless now. I didn't realize how silly it was until this video came on my notifications

  • @lakibjornson281
    @lakibjornson281 4 года назад +107

    Hurricane: soaks book with water and blows pages slightly.
    Daniel: stab. Stabystabstab. Yeet. Tap water.
    Daniels dad: give me the launch keys Daniel.
    Daniel: I shall bathe them in nuclear fire.

  • @Z533xxx
    @Z533xxx 3 года назад +12

    I lost all respect when you revealed you order lattes with no foam. Why don’t you go microwave some milk at home if that’s how you want it? So uncivilized

  • @thesleepyreader
    @thesleepyreader 2 года назад

    6:01
    Agree
    8:11
    Yeah, I was buying a Sherlock Holmes book and there was a lot of expensive and pretty hard cover but for my first time reading i felt it unnecessary to pay more then double when just a bit away was a thicker, smaller paperback with triple the amount of stories.

  • @Chrfenne
    @Chrfenne 4 года назад +284

    E-reader for everyday reading, and hardbacks for the shelf ;D I like being able to bring 120 books with me everywhere i go!

    • @Luka1180
      @Luka1180 3 года назад +4

      You must be rich lol.

    • @Chrfenne
      @Chrfenne 3 года назад +46

      @@Luka1180 Nah. Prioritizing ebooks, which are usually less than half the price, really sorts through a lot of books I would have previously bought. Now I almost only own books I know I love.

    • @benjarec5039
      @benjarec5039 3 года назад +39

      @@Luka1180 Nah, a kindle is not that expensive and after that you can download all your books illegally

    • @saige6442
      @saige6442 3 года назад +12

      I like to read a lot of old books because the copyright has usually expired and you can download them for free. Also there's usually plenty of offers and sales for ebooks which bring the cost way down if you buy them at the right time.
      Also: second hand books. Buy your books second hand! It's way cheaper and more eco-friendly. I live in London so there are a lot of second hand markets and stores to buy at. (Although with covid that's slowed down a lot)

    • @judycarrasco74
      @judycarrasco74 3 года назад +2

      This is my approach too!

  • @mashedpatatas5857
    @mashedpatatas5857 2 года назад

    I mostly purchased paper back books pre-covid because they were cheaper of course, and in my country not much of the hard bound editions could be found at our local bookstores. Although I realized now during lockdown that my paper back books were kinda rotting already and the covers were getting chewed up. Thanks to online shopping there are more hard bound options, but very pricey as well. Can't wait for a sale. 😅🥲

  • @sziph_burlap
    @sziph_burlap 2 года назад +3

    Big floppy paperbacks are easily the best kind of book to read

  • @FoenyxFeather
    @FoenyxFeather 4 года назад +108

    This actually made me feel better about being to broke to afford hardbacks for most of my books lol.

  • @gabrieltoscano8480
    @gabrieltoscano8480 4 года назад +90

    To read: Paperback, for sure. Specifically since I stopped bothering about damaging it
    To have on the shelf: Hardbacks for sure.
    The perfect world would be to, when you finish a paperback, you could just change for the hardback to have on your shelf after

    • @AndrewWatsonChangingWay
      @AndrewWatsonChangingWay 4 года назад +21

      A ship in harbor is safe, but that is not what ships are built for. John Augustus Shedd (1859 - 1928)

    • @emmanarotzky6565
      @emmanarotzky6565 4 года назад +2

      Hardcovers take up so much extra shelf space though! The covers are thicker, the paper is thicker, the font size is larger and the lines are spaced wider, pretty much everything about them makes them take up more space

    • @ryuukake
      @ryuukake 4 года назад +3

      Solution, get a little crafty, print the cover and spine past onto cardboard and make a sleeve for your paper back that is worth the effort, When your reading the book it's place is held by the cardboard sleeve

    • @damp2269
      @damp2269 4 года назад

      @@ryuukake i'm too lazy to do this but i gotta say is a great idea.

    • @onawal931
      @onawal931 4 года назад

      Read it first in paperback. If you love it with all your heart, buy the hardback. If you really, really love it, rescue all copies of it from used books stores like they're stray kittens.

  • @jeffreyschneider8028
    @jeffreyschneider8028 3 года назад

    I am solidly I n the mass market paperback camp. I love the damage they can take and I am oddly weird about how I love creasing the spines on chapter breaks as close to every hundred pages as possible for ease of holding while reading...
    that being said, I am super hopeful for some massively prestige hardback re-release of the WoT series now that the show is in the works

  • @t_j2231
    @t_j2231 Год назад +4

    I’m the opposite 😭 I hate when paper backs gets old, I don’t like the character it comes with. I love hardcover and I physically am disgusted when a book doesn’t have a hardcover version. And I only read at home in the bed so I really love how the hardcover feels. I feel official lol