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Reading books not in your first language
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message 51:
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Sarah
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Feb 05, 2014 05:30AM

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Now you know why I was freaking out when December started and I still had my Z book (Zafon) to read. It does take forever at first, but it gets easier. I read in English as fast as in French and my speed is Spanish is getting better and better.
Hang in there, you can do it. I am sure that by the middle of the book you will be at 10 minutes per page.

I can do no better than repeat what Esther has said. You're doing everything right, the dictionary etc. Things will get better with every page, as you get used to the author's style you will need the dictionary less and less to grasp the meaning.
It's not a book I would read but thank goodness we all have different tastes.
Un saludo de España.

But a lot of Latin authors have books in Spanish and English, and they really don't change a lot. Gabriel Garcia Marquez is one of my favorites, and I have read both versions... So maybe you can start there!!!


By now I read English and Portuguese as fast as Spanish, my first language. I think the secret is just read. I'm not sure how is the difficulty of La Brujula Dorada, but the best thing is just read, don't stop at every word you don't now, just try to pick the idea. It's better to reread the whole chapter once you know what is it about than stop for the dictionary at every word. You'll be amazed at the difference between the first and the last chapter! Good luck!


There were other books I picked up at school - a short version of 'The Thirty Nine Steps','The adventures of Tom Sawyer' etc. Later there was more interest in the school's library by the students and eventually it 'grew' and there was much more to choose from. I borrowed 'the Count of Monte Cristo' which was the first book I've ever read with so much pleasure! Honestly, the story was so involving that not for a minute was I bothered the book wasn't in Bulgarian. No doubt these books helped me improve my lingual skills,but they also gave me reading habits and culture. At school it may seem books are only 'things' you have to go through in order to gain certain grades or whatever, but truly they are there to help us get to know ourselves better and to make us open up for everything surrounding us which we sometimes forget; books are there to remind us never to stop questioning and to be curious,they help us forge our interests and to expand our knowledge.
P.S. Fun fact (not so fun to other Bulgarians) is that I've read the most notorious Bulgarian historical novel 'Under the Yoke'by Ivan Vazov in English. I strongly recommend this book to you guys too!
P.S.2 Must sound really strange to hear someone talking about learning to read in the most widely spoken language on Earth :D
Best wishes!

Thanks for the book rec. Under the Yoke just checking that's the one. Sounds like a great story, and I shall at it to my Around the World reading list that some of us do in another group. Hope you enjoy yourself here, and that you get some good book recommendations back in return. :D


1) I majored in English, but my MA is a Hungarian language one (Theatre), and I feel I need to keep up and maintain my knowledge
2) There are loads of books that I'm interested in but not available in Hungarian
3) Sometimes the Hungarian translations are awful. (I mean, I am quite prificient in English, and sometimes I can pinpoint what is mistranslated)
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