and please don't say "I don't read ebooks because i prefer to smell paper and ink XDXDXD" cause that's retarded, mental illness.
The fulfillment of sensation is not mental illness. I prefer the tactile sensation of a book, the smell of the page, how it feels in my hands, the weight it holds. Added to that, if I drop my book, will it break, shatter, etc? No, usually not, and I am proficient in book-binding, but I do not think I could reassemble a kindle in the same way that I could a paperback.
There is also the allure of the history of the thing. If it is used, how old is it? Who might have owned it before I? Where was it published? How far has it perhaps traveled since then? Have any left their own marks and underlines behind within it? What trees fell to become the paper? How long did they live, how tall did they rise? More questions and wonderment come to mind, only some of which are translatable to the e-book format.
My preference is in the physical copy, though I of course understand the advantages of an e-book, not least of all the saving of trees from the saw-blade.