What should I read over the summer?
Hello, this is my first thread here (and second post, but first of any substantial length)!
I think I might have a little bit of free time over the summer (hopefully I'll be able to get some kind of research position to fill up some of it, though), so I was just looking for some book suggestions.
I'm not very well read, and I've always been somewhat discouraged from reading a lot, since I've been such a slow reader all my life (I read about 20-30 pages of standard "novel" text--about 50-65 characters per line and 35-40 lines per pag--in an hour, and don't have "the option" to read any faster, even for so-called "light reading"; I understand most my peers read at least 2-3 times faster than me). However, I recently finished Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 (loved it), and am halfway through Nabokov's Lolita (it's been quite an experience so far, will probably end up being a favorite of mine). I also enrolled in a Science Fiction class this term, where we've read (so far) Walter J. Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz, Daniel Keyes' Flowers for Algernon (the novel version), and Thomas Disch's Camp Concentration, none of which blew me away, though all were somewhat thought-provoking (I'm looking forward to reading Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, which we will cover later in the course). Reading the two aforementioned books and taking this course have somehow renewed my interest in literature (well I've been intersted in literature for the past few years, but let's just say they've renewed my optimism for actively reading literature).
So far, I've come up with this reading list:
- Pale Fire (Vladimir Nabokov)
- V. (Thomas Pynchon)
- Midnight's Children (Salman Rushdie)
- *maybe* Cat's Cradle (Kurt Vonnegut)
The first two seem natural given my two recent reads, and the concept of Pale Fire seemed so intriguing--almost Borges-like (and I do like some Borges occasionally). I optimistically intend that reading V. will be practice, that will eventually enable me to tackle Gravity's Rainbow and Against the Day; in reality, reading V. will probably be an attempt that will help me figure out if I even want be near those other two books. The Rushdie novel was recommended to me by a few friends now, and I'll decide if I want to read Cat's Cradle after rading Slaughterhouse-Five for my class.
At any rate, I'm looking for recommendations along these lines, and my interests seem to lean toward modern/postmodern (maybe magical realism) and wordplay is always nice. One of my favorite novels is Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose if that helps. Let's try to stick with the newer stuff (crica Conrad or newer), but I'm not totally closed to older classics. Oh and shorter novels (150-250 pages) are especially welcome given that I read slowly, just so I can fit in more than a couple. And one last thing, if anyone knows if there are any good ways to improve my reading speed (I think the problem is that I subvocalize everything and don't realy know how to *not* subvocalize when I read) I'm welcome to suggestions or courses that I could take to remedy this problem.
Thanks in advance (and I apologize for the numerous parenthetics).
Try scanning and skimming
The best science fiction author, to my mind, is Isaac Asimov. Not too heavy stuff, but well written and it gives you something to think about.
Concerning your problem of slow reading try practising the techniques of scanning and skimming texts. The most important thing will be to get rid of 'subvocalising'. These techniques may help you.
1. Choose a word that occurs very often, e.g. 'the'. Take any text and scan it for that word as quickly as possible. Count how often it appears - but don't move your lips. If you have some practise doing that, stop counting, just scan. Take other words and texts, too.
2. If you think that went quite well, try skimming a text. Take a newspaper article (not too long, about three paragraphs), let your eyes glide over it very quickly, taking in the key words only. Then write down in two or three sentences what the article is about. Try to reduce the time for skimming with every new article of about the same length. If you do that you simply won't have time to subvocalise. Take longer texts now, and then have a go at a novel.
Hope my tips will help you. Good luck!:D