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Does listening to an audiobook count as reading?
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Feb 12, 2023 07:09AM
Hi, I just wanted to know everyone's thoughts on if an audiobook counts as reading... thanks!
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Why can't we change the verbiage a bit?
Instead of saying "I read the book XYZ" when really they mean they listened to the audiobook and never actually turned a page, why can't it be "I listened to book XYZ ."
It drives me bonkers**screams internally** lol

Why can't we change the verbiage a bit?
Instead of saying "I read the book XYZ" when really they mea..."
Those of us who are tired /unwell rely on audiobooks when we do not have the strength to turn the pages.

People have different motives for reading, and if someone else counts audiobooks as reading it doesn’t bother me.



I was thinking, braille books are also read through a sense other than sight, but I've yet to see anyone question whether they should count. Audio readers consume the same materials as other readers -- same story, dialog, author's notes, etc. They are not changed like a TV, movie, or theatre adaptation, so I don't know why there's even a question. 🤷🏻♀️
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EDIT: By the way, audio publishers sometimes provide a PDF file of additional material with photos, glossary, resources, character list, timeline, etc.

Side question (not sure if it’s ok to ask here, if not please point me in the right direction. Thank you):
1. If I borrow a book in English and read that version then borrow a book in a different language does the author get paid for both versions that I read?
2. Then on top of that, if there is a graphic novel of a book I already read does the author make any money if I read the graphic novel as well?

1. If I borrow a book in English and read that version then borrow a book in a different language does the author get paid for both versions that I read?
2. Then on top of that, if there is a graphic novel of a book I already read does the author make any money if I read the graphic novel as well?"
I don't know how authors are paid for various versions of their work, but there may be an authors group on Goodreads that could answer your question.


Some people get a lot more from listening; when my son had to read novels in high school I'd get the audiobook out. He'd read it, but also listen separately (doing them together didn't work for him). Too bad there aren't audiobooks for college texts!


But some people really love them, & some people even rely on them because the circumstances of their lives make listening more accessible than reading in the traditional way. I love books too much to get up on a high horse & tell those people they aren't really reading. I read a large-print book for the first time recently & I gotta say, it was a gamechanger. I never thought of myself as a person who "needed" large-print (& I don't NEED it), but it made the reading experience so much more frictionless. There are blind people in my extended family, my boyfriend is seriously hearing impaired, I don't know. I don't want to condemn these different formats that enable people with assorted disabilities to access books, you know?

I love them if they are well done and I am driving somewhere or doing something where I can also concentrate on it. I can't stand just sitting and listening to them because they are slow. If I'm sitting still I have to be reading print books.


With saying that though I enjoy audiobooks when I can't read, and it counts as far as getting the story... I don't count it as reading exactly. I am trying to include them on my reading challenge this year though I do feel somewhat guilty lol.


What I have found myself doing, especially with romantasies and books that I don’t want to DNF, is playing the audiobook in the background and reading its physical copy counterpart alongside it. At the right speed you can finish the book quicker and still find out how everything ends. 🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♀️.