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Neil: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Neil.
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Alice: and I'm Alice. Sorry, wait a minute Neil. I'm just finishing this book.
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Neil: OK.
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Alice: Last page ─ nearly there ─ ohh! fantastic book!
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Neil: Well I'm glad you enjoyed that. I'm glad you finished your book there Alice!
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We're talking about books in today's programme. What was it you were reading there?
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Alice: No, never mind Neil. It's not your kind of book. You wouldn't like it.
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Neil: How do you know?
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Alice: Well, I just think you might read something a little more intellectual.
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Neil: Oh I see... Well we are talking about the kinds of books people read and what they
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say about them today.
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Alice: Yes. Perhaps you read the works of a famous writer
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the classics ─ Charles Dickens, Shakespeare.
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Neil: People will think you are an intellectual. You can show off by reading these books the classics.
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Alice: Or perhaps you read popular novels or romantic fiction ─ a light easy read.
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Neil: When you go on holiday ─ maybe to the beach ─ what kind of books do you read?
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And what do you read when you're going to work?
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Alice: We're going to hear part of a BBC interview with David Adshead from the Commuter Book
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Club. A commuter travels to work by bus, train or here in London, The Tube, a train that
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goes all over the city, mostly underground.
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Neil: And Alice as usual, we have a quiz question. Are you ready?
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Alice: Yes, absolutely.
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Neil: OK. It's about classic book sales. So these days are people buying...
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a) more classic books?
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b) the same number of classic books?
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c) fewer classic books than they used to?
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Alice: Oh that's an interesting one. Tricky to guess but I'm going to say c) fewer classic books.
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Neil: OK, well, let's find out the answer at the end of the programme.
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But now, here is David Adshead from the Commuter Club.
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What kind of book does he say people usually take with them to the beach?
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David Adshead: People often think that, you know, traditionally you take a light easy
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read for the beach and on the train, um, you maybe read something very different.
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Interviewer: if only to show off.
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David Adshead: Exactly, to appear to others to be more intellectual. But actually, what
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we find in this is that it really comes down to the individual... what they like to read
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and actually we've seen this summer a lot of the book sales - summer reads is generally
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lighter books, easier to get on with, to take away on holiday - but the big retailers have
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seen a shift actually - people moving sort of slightly higher brow, taking away more
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classic books. Sales in that way have increased.
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Neil: David Adshead from the Commuter Book Club there. He says that people usually ─ traditionally
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take a light, easy read to the beach or on the train.
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Alice: Yes. He says these books are easier to get on with.
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David says that it really comes down to the individual - each person is different.
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But he says that there has been a shift ─ a change ─ in what people read.
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Neil: Yes, he says that the shops that sell books ─ that's the retailers ─ say the
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books people are buying are more highbrow... the classics, as we were talking about.
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Alice: Absolutely. Highbrow books are read by intellectuals or perhaps the people who
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read these books are just showing off.
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Neil: Yes, maybe they are. Well I wonder if these people have read any books by Fiona Harper.
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She writes romantic novels ─ that's stories about love.
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Alice: Light reading ─ not highbrow. She was also at this interview about the Commuter Book Club.
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Neil: Now, do commuters read her romantic novels on the Tube?
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Alice: Well here is novelist Fiona Harper talking about how she writes her romantic novels.
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She wants people to not stop reading her stories once they start
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she wants them to be hooked.
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Author Fiona Harper: I think what it comes down to most of the time is you just want
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to write a really good story because if you write a good story then hopefully people are
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hooked, they'll keep turning the pages and...
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Interviewer: And do you wonder whether they are reading them on holiday? I mean presumably,
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they're more likely to read your stuff on holiday than when they're sitting on the Tube
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being looked at by lots of other people. I don't know.
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Author Fiona Harper: Possibly, although with the advent of e-readers, you can read anything you like
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and no one knows ─ or on your phone ─ no one knows what you're reading.
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Interviewer: And that's an important point.
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Neil: That's the author Fiona Harper talking about romantic novels.
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So do commuters read her books on the Tube?
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Alice: Well perhaps you don't want others to see you reading that stuff. It can be a
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bit embarrassing. It shouldn't be, but Fiona says you can also use an e-reader.
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Neil: An e-reader ─ that's an electronic book. Instead of pages, you read off a screen.
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Alice: Well if you use an e-reader or tablet, no one knows what you're reading.
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Neil: So perhaps they are reading a romantic novel ─ no one knows.
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OK. Let's take a moment to look at some of today's words. Alice.
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Alice: Here they are:
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intellectual
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show off
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the classics
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romantic fiction
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light read
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heavy read
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retailers
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highbrow
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shift
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hooked
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advent
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e-reader
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Neil: And before we go, the answer to today's quiz question. I asked about classic books.
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Are people these days buying...
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a) more classic books?
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b) the same number of classic books?
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Or c) fewer classic books than they used to?
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Alice: Yes. And I said c) fewer classic books.
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Neil: Well I'm afraid to say Alice that you're wrong.
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Alice: Oh no.
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Neil: I know. They're reading more classic books!
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Alice: Oh excellent!
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Neil: Sales of these books are apparently increasing.
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Alice: Well that's good to hear.
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Neil: And that's the end of today's 6 Minute English. Please do join us again soon.
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Alice: And keep reading books... in English. Highbrow classics or a light read
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it doesn't matter.
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Neil: It doesn't matter at all.
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Both: Bye.