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urged me to make a second date with my e reader, but offered to buy it off me if the romance fails to click.Michelle Bentt was one of several readers who wrote in to clap me on the back in congratulations, and proclaim their own undying reverence for the printed word."Call me old fashioned but I too prefer an actual book in my hands, the scent of the paper and ink, and the ability to turn the pages as I read them. Salute to Herr Gutenberg for his invention," Bentt said.Myrna Reeves supposes she might be a bit of a Luddite, but if so, she's an unrepentant one."My phone stays home when I go out, and my e reader was returned to the store before the 15 days ran out. You got it right it didn't smell right!" Reeves wrote."I have an observation: although many people rave over their e readers, I have only seen two people actually reading something on them. She makes her own compelling case for the print and paper book.Dennis has just finished reading In the Suicide's Library by Edmonton's Tim Bowling. (Gasperau published Johanna Skibsrud's Scotiabank Giller Prize winning novel, The Sentimentalists, two years back.)"The physicality of (Bowling's) book is beautiful: words printed on birch (textured) paper, pages cut evenly and with care, a cover design that reminds me of what good books used to look like," Dennis said.PAGEBREAKAnd it was through Bowling's book, a sort of bibliophile's detective story, that Dennis learned the existence of the Advanced Book Exchange, an online marketplace for books, many of them rare or out of print,"I went on their website and, be still my rapidly