TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
October 28th, 2009

Kindle a godsend for cancer patient: Wants text-to-speech for those too weak to hold e-readers

By a TeleRead Contributor

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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4 Responses to “Kindle a godsend for cancer patient: Wants text-to-speech for those too weak to hold e-readers”

  1. I am honored to hear from someone as brave as Jim. Our society should do more to help those of us facing tough times. Over the years I have been easily angered by people who put their own objectives over the general well being of others. I am not climbing up on the proverbial soap box and calling for radical social changes but merely saying that there are things that we all can do. Often times simply bringing a issue to the forefront can spur action. Because today it may be the neighbor’s house thats burning but tommorow it may be our very own.

  2. Speaking as a patient of MD Anderson Cancer Ctr in Houston I totally agree with the text to speech option for kindle. For my wife, a Breast Cancer Patient, the ability to listen to a favorite book while hooked up to the chemo tree would be outstanding…

  3. That Jim that commented on Alex Sanchez’s essay was me. I did not include my last name in my post as I prefer the anonymity that the Internet affords, especially as it relates to private health information. And I’m glad that Alex and Jim Mackrell agree with me. The Kindle has been the best $259 that I’ve spent in a long time.

  4. Thank you Jim for your guest post. It is very moving, and at the same time, you make an excellent case for Text-to-Speech technology. I use the Sony Reader Pocket Edition myself, so I can understand how the Kindle can give you a lot of joy, entertainment and intellectual stimulation as you fight your disease.

    I hope those publishers who are against TTS functionality on the Kindle read this post.

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