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How many books open at one time?
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message 51:
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Joshua
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Jan 04, 2014 08:28PM

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Reminds me of "box of chocolates" from Forest Gump!
And, decent analogy, books and chocolate.
Love both.
Currently have 6 books in various states of being read.
One will finish today, but, think I'll start to diminish
the number down a bit.

Right now I got 14 as currently reading but actually only actively reading 3 or so.
I noticed that reading Mieville and VanderMeer at the same time was impossible though. They kinda bled into each other.




I'm slowly making my way through both Patrick Rothfuss's series and Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn. I'm not a huge fan of Epic Fantasy, so those are slow going.
Also been on a Tom Perrotta kick -- bout halfway through The Leftovers.
Reading 2 Holly Black novels -- Tithe and Coldest Girl in Coldtown -- I dig her prose.
Continuing my Dresden Files catching up -- Currently halfway through 8.
I also have a Vince Flynn thriller in hardback that I take with me places and read whenever I don't have my computer/tablet. So that kinda goes down in chunks.
I'm sure I'm missing something.
Believe it or not, but I prefer to read one book at a time.

Have you read many of his books? How do you like them? I've read the first few of that series and really want to like them but something always seems off. Not sure what to make of it, would love your opinion on them
I started trying to do the 2 at once, 1 on the kindle and one actual book, but I've already picked one I want to stay with till the end. I find myself having troubles staying immersed in one story if I'm also thinking about another one I have open.

I used to have 2 going at a time: one for home and one I carried around to read at lunch or over coffee.
But now I'm writing more, I don't have time for two. And I get through books a lot slower. When it comes to a choice of consume or create, I tend to go for the latter.

I dig 'em. They move pretty fast. Short chapters. Easy to read on the fly and pick up and put down.
But I know what you mean--
I think it is because he writes 3rd person omniscient. But it's not really obvious until you get into scenes that don't have Mitch Rapp in them.
KILL SHOT starts off by going back and forth between chapters of Rapp and the badguy. It wasn't until he went to scenes with the cronies in Langley that I realized he was writing 3rd omniscient. (So like 50 pages into the book lol).
Most people who write 3rd omniscient generally have a strong(ish) voice -- so the narrator ends up throwing in a viewpoint as well. Flynn's prose is pretty much totally devoid of any personality, which makes it weird and a little flat.
He also gives us pretty much what everyone is thinking at any time, which can get annoying.
But his books aren't about the prose. They're more about punching people in the face, and shootin' baddies, while being a spy who loves to terrify terrorist.
They're fun. :)


Book 1 - A physical non-fiction book that I usually just read at home (unless I really get into it and I take it everywhere).
Book 2 - A physical non-fiction book for home, a change of pace book that usually takes a bit longer to read.
Book 3 - An e-book that I take almost everywhere.
Book 4 - An audio book that I listen to when driving back and forth from work.
Book 5 - A book that I am reading concurrently with my boys (recently the Percy Jackson's first series)
Book 6 - My just in case book that stays in the wife's car. This is for when I get stuck somewhere (like at a quilting store) and need something to pass the time. This started before e-books when we had infants. We would go out to the car to feed the little ones, or just did not want to wake them up, so I would need something to read while I waited.
That is usually about it....

Now, that I can relate to! Even my wife got a chuckle out of it.
And, it's one of the reasons I want an e-reader. But, she says a computer for her comes first. Which I agree with, but, hey...




Once in a while I’ll also listen to an audiobook while commuting or exercising or doing something else that engages my body and my eyes but not my brain. But again, I don’t really count that as "reading time". It's just a way to fill “mindless activity time” during which I could never have been reading a regular book anyway. I never just sit and listen to an audiobook without doing something else at the same time.
But when it comes to the time I actually spend reading a book by choice, for pleasure, I focus exclusively on one book at a time. I don’t think I would necessarily have trouble keeping the different storylines straight. I just like to fully immerse myself in one story. If I’m reading more than one story, there will inevitably be one that I like better and I won’t appreciate the other one as much. I’ll end up just wanting to read the one I like best anyway. Also, I feel like I lose some of the momentum and/or investment in the story and characters if I’m not fully engaged with them from the beginning to the end. Even with a single book, if it’s during times when I’m extremely busy and can’t read much each day, I start to lose interest because I lose the momentum.
I’m actually similar with TV shows. When I used to keep up with a few different shows weekly, I was constantly falling behind even on the shows I really liked because, by the time a week had passed, I had lost that emotional investment in the story and had trouble getting in the mood to watch the next episode. These days, I just pick one show at a time and watch it all at once. (Over the course of several days/weeks, of course!) I enjoy them a lot more that way even though it means longer waits between seasons and even though it means I’m usually at least a year behind whatever is current. It also saves me the trouble of investing in a show that might get canceled after its first year.
With books, I tend to even take it a step further – I’ll usually only read one series at a time. Meaning, if I like a book that’s part of a series, I’ll most likely read all the books in that series before I start something new.


I guess there are some exceptions though - I am currently working my way through a collection of Roald Dahl's short stories, and I typically read a few of those whenever the mood strikes me, so if it is something like that, I will read multiple books at once.



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