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Thread: I think I've lost my interest in books.. help?

  1. #1
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    I think I've lost my interest in books.. help?

    I don't know what it is, but I can't find anything to read to hold my interest.
    Give me a book that will make me like reading again. =(
    I think trying to read stuff like Faulkner and Pynchon has just destroyed me. While I loved The Sound and the Fury I just can't take it, I want something simple.. maybe some nice short stories. Something classic though, back to the basics. I don't want anything "experimental".. just nice pretty prose. Maybe something similar to J.D. Salinger's Franny and Zooey/Nine Stories or Bradbury's Martian Chronicles.
    Thanks.

  2. #2
    'sunflower' Tournesol's Avatar
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    Sir Jazz, let me just say that I understand completely how you feel.

    A few months ago, I scanned bookshops for something, anything, that would catch my interest!

    Eventually I took a chance at Travel literature. I read 'Zaatar Days, Henna Nihgts' by Maliha Masood. Now, obviously you might want to choose Travel literature to your liking...lol.

    I also read some Modern Fiction, like 'For One More Day' by Mitch Albom. His writing is invigorating, I could not put down the book!

    The key, I think, is to take a chance on types of literature that you may not have tried before. Also, stay clear of the lenghty ones. You want to feel a sense of accomplishment sooner rather than later...lol.

    I hope you get something to stimulate your appetite for reading again!
    "My warm hands have made the paper limp,
    So that its feel reminds me of slept-in sheets: comfortable and safe"


    "All these things I say... I say them because I want you to know, I don't ever want to regret afterwards that I didn't say enough, I would rather say too much." ~ Samuel Selvon

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    Home Remarkable's Avatar
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    You might try reding some of Rushdie's work,but evit the long ones.They are pretty impegnative but the language is so wonderful and the storytelling so fanastic and fluent that you won't understand how you read the book that fast.
    Try reading "Shame".
    You forget that the kingdom of heaven suffers violence: and the kingdom of heaven is like a woman.
    James Joyce

    It is a fatal miscarriage, so ill to order affairs, as to pass for a fool in one company, when in another you might be treated as a philosopher. Jonathan Swift

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    holy fool _Shannon_'s Avatar
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    When I start to feel that way I reach for something like Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler or Jim Thompson.....or go on a non-fiction spree. I can unequivocably recommend Tracy Kidder's Home Town http://www.amazon.com/Home-Town-Trac...0077368&sr=8-2. It's non fiction--but is so well written--it's absolutely. gripping.

    Other great non-ficition choices are Rocket Boys by Homer Hickam (it's the basis for the movie October Sky), Friday Night Lights, Gang Leader For a Day by Sudhir Vanketesh.

    I find well written non-fiction to be a great bridge for the gaps when I am booked out.

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    Registered User mickitaz's Avatar
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    Trust me.. I have been there as well. As sad as it sounds, after reading the last Harry Potter book, I could not bring myself to read. It was almost like I was betraying a friend who had died.

    I tried devouring Milton...a task my cousin had taken me up on with online weekly discussions. But alas, he has a new love in his life, and Milton with out assistance is difficult.

    I came here..searching to regain my soul. And it seems that I have rekindled that lost spirit. One way that I did it... think of a movie you really liked, and research it.. Most movies are based on a book. Try to find out what book it is, and pick it up. You might find a path you never went down before.
    Silence is golden. But in the absence of silence, classical music is the avenue which chaos is turned into harmonious order.

    Yes... I am THIS weird

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    Registered User DapperDrake's Avatar
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    George Eliot - Silas Marner

    Short and brilliant, if that doesn't rekindle your passion for literature then a break might well be in order.

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    How about Chekhov short stories? Or Dick Francis mysteries.

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    Registered User Joreads's Avatar
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    I think that we have all been there at least once. I find the best thing is not to force yourself, it will come back to you when you are ready.
    1984 and Animal Farm worked for me but remember we are all different

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    Registered User aeroport's Avatar
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    Hemingway?

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    Sorry but Tough Love is the only solution here - Cold Turkey.

    Read Nothing.

    Do Not Touch A Book, Magazine, Cereal Packet, Printed Matter of Any Kind.





    Seriously though - you may just need a rest. Don't read anything for a while, give your mind a rest. The urge to read will come back, I promise (been there, done that) and you may find that by giving yourself a break you will open your mind to types of books you had not considered before.

  11. #11
    [...] Erichtho's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by kasie View Post
    Seriously though - you may just need a rest. Don't read anything for a while, give your mind a rest. The urge to read will come back, I promise (been there, done that) and you may find that by giving yourself a break you will open your mind to types of books you had not considered before.
    I second that. Don't ever force yourelf to read something, read only when you feel an urge to read. Everyone has such phases. Sooner or later, you will read again, and with pleasure.

    Maybe you can re-read then an old favourite of yours that you hadn't touched for years. Such books don't need to be of great literary quality, but because they have a special place in our hearts they can work wonders that the great classics never could.
    Čłowjek je dwójny, tež sam sebi. Tysacy słowow sym kaž paćerki stykał na swoje lĕta a na kóncu spóznał, zo ani jednoho słowa njeje, kotrež by jeho w ćĕle a duši we wšej wĕrnosći wĕrnje pomjenowało.

  12. #12
    Heretic, Heathen, Sinner Rakthor's Avatar
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    This happens to me sometimes. Maybe you could read some of the Horatio Hornblower stories by C.S. Forester. They're fairly easy to read, yet they're fun and enjoyable. I recently picked up one of the Hornblower novels, and I am greatly enjoying it.
    On the other hand, I do agree with rest. Sometimes the best cure is just time.
    it's been a tough fight worth fighting
    as we all drive along
    betting on another day. - Charles Bukowski

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    I *asked* for my account to be "deleted"
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    i think Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg Ohio fits well to what you need, if you haven't read it yet.

  14. #14
    Papel-CRAZE! Tersely's Avatar
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    What I did when I fell into a slump was to go to my local bookstore and just visually browse. No knowing what I might buy, no planning...I just picked up a couple of contemporary books that looked interesting and went from there. I was burnt out from reading classic after classic to the point of where I didn't feel like I had any interest anymore. So in going around to the store not knowing what I would pick up--but knowing that it would be something I'm interested in---helped a lot. You never know what you'll find.
    "Get thee to a nunnery."

  15. #15
    Bibliophile JBI's Avatar
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    Try poetry. It is a new gate for anyone into literature to open.

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