Book cafes: The new place for reading in China
September 23rd, 2010 - 12:11 pm ICT by IANSBeijing, Sep 23 (IANS) More and more people in urban China, with a lack of proper places to read, are now turning to book cafes to enjoy a bit of solitary time.
The China Youth Daily recently conducted a survey with 2,160 people and found out that when people were asked about their favourite places to read, 86 percent selected the internet, 61 percent chose bookstores, while 54 percent chose libraries and 21 percent chose book cafes.
In recent years, book cafes offering books, magazines, food and drinks and internet have started opening in major cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Nanjing.
On being asked “why you love to read in book cafes”, 77 percent of people said they “love its comfortable and cosy environment”, 52 percent said they “love to read together with some congenial people”, while 51 percent gave the reason as “books are updated more regularly in book cafes”.
On a question “why book cafes have become popular in Chinese cities”, 85 percent of respondents said book cafes provide a new option for urban Chinese during their leisure time, while 49 percent said public libraries could not fully satisfy the needs of the public.
A female respondent named Wang, working for a medicine company, wished her community could open a book cafe.
“It takes me 40 minutes to get to the nearest library. And I always feel uncomfortable if I only read but do not buy in a bookstore,” Wang was quoted as saying by Xinhua.
She also suggested more services, such as photocopying, to be offered in book cafes.
“Book cafes are a good complement to libraries,” she said.
- Majority of Chinese dumping print medium for digital reading - Apr 23, 2011
- Online reading increasing among Chinese - Apr 24, 2012
- Indian books on spirituality a big draw (Lead) - May 12, 2012
- People question government spending in Chinese province - Aug 02, 2011
- Nearly half of China's millionaires consider emigration - Nov 01, 2011
- One card for over 100 Beijing libraries - Mar 12, 2012
- Indian books on spirituality a big draw, says NBT chief - May 12, 2012
- Chinese library has device to read books to blind - Jun 29, 2011
- e-book boom in China: Survey - Apr 22, 2011
- Grief in China as girl who was run over dies - Oct 21, 2011
- Chinese search giant Baidu in spot over copyright theft - Mar 16, 2011
- Beijing gets first 'human library' - Dec 27, 2011
- Inflation affecting living standards in China - Dec 22, 2011
- 70 percent Chinese feel happy in 2011 - Dec 24, 2011
- China's online population rises to 450 mn - Dec 30, 2010
Tags: bookstores, cafes, china beijing, china youth, chinese cities, complement, cosy environment, leisure time, major cities, medicine company, nanjing, new option, offering books, public libraries, respondent, respondents, shanghai, solitary time, urban china, xinhua