The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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Anyone on here speed read?
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Michael
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Jan 24, 2014 12:22PM

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--Woody Allen

And no, if you have already mastered your own language, simply reading more does not make you faster at it.



What was the original question? Do I read? Or was there something about reading on speed???
:}

That's not speed reading; that's a skimming technique. The most popular method for speed reading is the one I explained, wherein you eliminate subvocalization.

That's exactly what speed reading is. You must have learned to do it instinctively.
Speed-reading is the only way I read. :)






The entire Percy Jackson/Heroes of Olympus series I busted out in 2 weeks. But one A Song of Ice and Fire at the quickest took 3 weeks.



People who read quickly typically take in large chunks of text at one time and their eyes are always scanning ahead. I basically read about a half a line at one glance (depending on the type and how it is spaced).


Correct. Skimming involves skipping over text. Block reading is just a more efficient way of reading text.

I am now 65 years. As a teenager and a young man I used to be able to do this, not only in my maternal swedish language but also in english. It worked better with non-fiction, but even with fiction it could be useful; I think I went on and off alternating with more attentive reading. Then about 30 years old I moved to France, learnt a new first language, lived there for a bit more than 20 years. The ability to blockread transferred itself to french but to a lesser degree. Then I went back to Sweden and have lived here almost 15 years. Now, I do not block read at all in any language, even if I (off course) am fully fluent in french, english and swedish. I also read much less than I did as a young man...
To sum up : the ability to blockread is discovered by the individual, not consciously sought. Is is dependent though on massive reading and a strong familiarity with alphabets/languages. It can be lost and the confusion of changing languages as an adult can have something to do with that.
Comments? I could be quite wrong but this is my conclusion for now.



I will try this, thanks.

I think I read the same way. I average a book every two to three days and can read something I'm really looking forward to in one sitting. For this reason I try not to read a series until it's completed or if I am really looking forward to a book I will set it aside and wait for the perfect time to devour it. I also have to set time limits on my bedtime reading (alarm clock and all) or I'll look up from my book and find the sun coming up.

Exactly! I never start a series until I have all of them and I don't read at bedtime because I would look up from my book to see the sun coming up and then wonder how I could have lost all track of time.

As I read fiction for pleasure and wish to savour the nuances pertaining thereto, I read every word, and that works out at about 400wpm.
I must admit that if I've invested the time to read half a fiction book and I've lost the hook I might start only reading the high points. I could just read the last chapter, but that's cheating.





This works very well for visual readers. Auditory readers have a more difficult time because they have to hear the words in their head and that takes longer. I read very fast and I read in chunks of words. I see every word, but I do not READ every word (does this make sense?). It is similar to recognizing a single word. If you see a word enough, the individual letters disappear and you see the word as a picture. The same thing for chunks of words. You see them as a snapshot of a group of words.


Same here bro. Or sis.




Absorbing impact an d emotions can't possibly be done while Speed Reading.

The good thing about smoking is there's no bookshelves of books leftover, only ash which can be put into the compost :/
Funny, though!


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