Reavers ain't men. Or they forgot how to be. Now they're just nothing. They got out to the edge of the galaxy, to that place of nothing, and that's what they became.

Mal ,'Bushwhacked'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


Jessica - Jul 08, 2004 10:27:14 am PDT #4825 of 10002
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

One of my sisters is not a reader. (She's also the only blonde in the family, and feels at more at home in SoCal than on the East Coast. We think she may be a pod person.)


Nutty - Jul 08, 2004 10:27:37 am PDT #4826 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

My mother is the original Book Queen, but she still complains about my books. I think it is just a mother thing, in some ways.

The other thing to remember is the changes in demographics over the last ten years. There's a boomlet of people just getting out of college now, and their grandparents are dying off -- so, people for whom reading was a default entertainment are dying. And as for fresh-from-college? I didn't read an awful lot of novels those first 3 years out of college. Some of that was graduate school, but not all of it -- the rest is accounted for by a very large consumption of fanfic (which I bet does not count).

But yeah -- I probably didn't read a new-to-me novel but once every 6 months during that period. I just wasn't up to it then, although I am now.


billytea - Jul 08, 2004 10:27:57 am PDT #4827 of 10002
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

I'm not really stunned by it. More options on TV, ookier hours and commutes, more people willing to answer honestly...

My commute actually helps me find time to read, being on the train. There's not much else to do. (Driving, obviously, would be a bit trickier, but I'm willing to give it a shot.)


Wolfram - Jul 08, 2004 10:28:24 am PDT #4828 of 10002
Visilurking

My mom keeps telling me to leave some of my books at home, as I keep on accumulating more and they become somewhat of a hassle to pack up and move, but I've refused.

That's funny, my mom threatened to line the driveway with my books if I didn't come over, pronto, and remove them from her house. Can I have your mom?


msbelle - Jul 08, 2004 10:28:33 am PDT #4829 of 10002
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

more books for us!

that is my new standard response for people who don't enjoy what I enjoy. more for me!

I didn;t read a book for my own enjoyment for probably 4-5 years from junior year highschool to junior year college. The summer after my junior year, I lived without a TV and I read 11 books and I was AMAZED with myself. Now I read 3-4 a month, but that is more than most of my friends.


msbelle - Jul 08, 2004 10:31:10 am PDT #4830 of 10002
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

and their grandparents are dying off -- so, people for whom reading was a default entertainment are dying.

in my family, my generation is the most active readers. Neither of my grandmothers read novels at all. One doesn't read anything except the newspaper, and she was a teacher.


Polter-Cow - Jul 08, 2004 10:33:57 am PDT #4831 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Can I have your mom?

Dude, take her.


Katerina Bee - Jul 08, 2004 10:35:23 am PDT #4832 of 10002
Herding cats for fun

P-C, I'd be happy to let your mom store some of my books if it would make her feel better. Not my favorites, obviously, because I find, like you, that having them close is a tactile pleasure. She could have some of the klunky ones I've hung on to since the Seventies that are shelved behind the couch. I might possibly consider getting rid of them if I move to a place with lots of stairs, but otherwise, hah!


sarameg - Jul 08, 2004 10:39:19 am PDT #4833 of 10002

When I'm in the mood, I tend to plow through close to 200 pages a day, minimum. Fiction, nonfiction, all depending on mood.

However, I know that's largely my wiring. I get more pleasure from reading than I do tv, film or music. I prefer my information in that form. My brother doesn't read (outside of school stuff) anywhere near the volume of books my parents and I churn through. He gets more from hands on activities, like his car(s) and remote controlled engines and such. Me? I'll change a lightbulb because I resent paying someone for it, and have dissassembled my stereo to fix it, but there isn't so much an ooh fun! reaction as it feels like necessity.

And I'm a real freak in that I don't actually attempt to see movies. The 12 year old where I was staying last week made it his mission to get me to watch Spiderman, and considered it a great accomplishment. He's not far from wrong.


Susan W. - Jul 08, 2004 10:40:28 am PDT #4834 of 10002
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

I just started tracking my reading habits in my LiveJournal, partly because the recent kerfluffle here and a discussion on All About Romance made me curious to figure out just how much and what I actually read. So far I've finished four books in July, three of them fiction, though two of those were very quick reads. And, so far having a baby hasn't cut into my reading time that much--in some ways it increases it, since there are times when I have Annabel in my lap and can't really do anything requiring two hands, but she likes it if I read to her. I'll usually start with one of her board books, but then I'll just move on to whatever I'm reading myself.

But, I've definitely gone through phases where I've read much less than I do now.

I emailed the link to DH, who made the same comments about different learning styles. He's a visual learner while I'm verbal/auditory, and while he reads a fair amount and, like me, was an early and self-taught reader, he doesn't read anywhere near as fast as I do, which makes me suspect it's not quite as relaxing and effortless for him. Anyway, he made the following comment that intrigued me:

With me and books, I don't remember where in the plot something happened, I remember where in the book it is. The ORIGINAL book I read it in.