A wise woman once said don't wait for the light at the end of the tunnel. Walk down there with a box of matches and light it yourself.
A wise woman once said don't wait for the light at the end of the tunnel. Walk down there with a box of matches and light it yourself.
I say take a seat halfway through the tunnel and know that you can approach the light, but only approach it when your ready and until then go to sleep.
So how long do you guys read at a time when you sit down to read a novel?
I have and always will read untill i finish the book.
Some christmas's and birthdays have been a blur because i have asked for books.
they wont buy them for me anymore hehe.
brownhair, I am sorry to hear that you find Tolstoy uninteresting, because he was my favourite writer when I was your age!
but, ontopic - in my opinion, it is not important how many hours you spend reading, or how many books you read during the year. what's more important is that you understand what you read and have fun while doing it.
even though reading is my favourite activity ever, I find joy in other things too. so I wake up early in the morning and spend an hour with the books before work. and an hour in the evening. and doing so, I read between 50 and 100 books a year, which I consider a lot, having in mind that I have full time job.
you shouldn't worry about hours spent over the book, it's individual anyway. all you should do is find your way to make opinions about what you read.
that's all.
I think it all depends on how much the writer "captures you" and how entertaining the lecture itself is.
I couldnt read Homer for more than 20 minutes .
I cant stand Herman Hesse's Steppenwolf longer than an hour.
But I can read Perez-Reverte or non-stop till I fall asleep in my bed, same with many fantasy writers.
I read for like 15 minutes at a time--half an hour max. I have a gaggle of children and it's all I can squeeze in. Still, I can read some big books, and some heavy hitting authors. I try to cycle through and read shorter and less demanding stuff in between. It keeps me from burning out. Different sorts of reads require different amounts of my soul to read.
I think learning to read something bigger and weightier takes some "training"...but at some point you have to just jump. I have found when I am trying something new or something that feels a little out of my depth, it helps me to find a few other people (in real life or online) to read along with me.
I also didn't really read much until I was 15 or 16....and now I think I am pretty well read, at least compared with the "average" person. Just keep reading, and choose great books working through the canon, working through lists of "bests", Pulitzers, National Book Awards, Booker Award winners, Nobel winners....
good afternoon fellow literary purveyors. The key is to think. I am a sociology and psychology student going into third. My humble advice is all I can give and this template has worked simply marvelously 4 me. Read a book for an hour then for the next few hours no matter what your indulging in sex, tv etc think about the topic identifying all perspectives of the texts this is the key to all enlightenment especially the more complexed works like Byron, Joyce, Pope and Shakespeare.
Oh, the girlfriend would love that.
As we bask in afterglow, she asks, "What were you thinking about, honey?"
"I was pondering the Tolstoyan relationship between "free will" and "necessity" as it applies to War and Peace. How about you?"
"I was thinking about how much I love being with you. You a**hole."
"Well, ah, obviously I was mostly thinking about you, I just, um...."
I read and then fall asleep. The rest of the time (in between working) I try to compose something that might twang a heartstring of somebody on lit-net.
You see I've noticed there are very many well educated folk on this forum and can quote you from Descartes to Shakespeare and add an analysis of the whys and the wherefores about the colour tights they wore for a particular scene to what does two simple words actually mean. but they don't write.
I'm the opposite and I guess we're all made differently. Some know how a car is put together, others just hop into one and drive it.
This might not make sense because I've taken an overdose of a benzodiazipine with a glass of cabernet. There's a forum for that too but those members would know more about wine than me.
Is cabernet the suicide drink of choice out of interest?