Why Are Mp3 Audio Books So Popular?
Blame it on Apple the creators of iPod or the makers of its predecessor the MP3 player or old Mr. Jim Harris, a computer programmer in Memphis, who landed on the pages of New York Times who was able to read rather than listen to about 54 unabridged audio books. Guys, he only read four books, but calls himself a lifelong bookworm. So what have really made people get hooked to MP3 audio books? Let us try to review first the concept of reading. Is it in any way superior to listening? That’s not right; think again. The modern world just discovered that there’s an easy way for a book to get along with the “cool” concept. It made itself not just hip with its sleek design device; it made itself more portable. Oh come on, would you rather bring a hardbound Harry Potter Volume 6 than your iPod where you can actually hear great Dumbledore as he reigns over Hogwarts? It might be why the National Endowment for the Arts said that fewer Americans are reading than a decade ago. A third of them they s