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How long do you read each day
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Ed
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Apr 21, 2017 08:40PM

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And then there are the odd evenings or weekends that I will just sit on the sofa and read for a few hours straight.




As to how long I read each day, it's hard to calculate because I'll grab a few minutes here and there - taking a break from whatever I'm doing, while I'm eating, while I'm answering the call of nature - but I'd guess it would add up to about 3 hours daily.



Now I usually try to read for about minutes in the morning on a love seat in the living room. For a while I was trying to devote an hour to reading in a chair in my reading room, but I haven't been doing that lately. And, usually read on my kindle in the bedroom.

I read when I'm watching TV at night and take a book with me whenever I'm going somewhere I think I might have to wait - like Docs' offices or car appointments.










So far I've read 64 books this year (my Reading Challenge is 180 books in 2022). I think I can make it. :)

I prefer hardcover books, don't like e-books (they don't have most of the older novels).
Our white German shepherd is jealous of me reading so much and always sniffs at my books. :)

A few years ago an eye doctor falsely diagnosed me with glaucoma, so I bought 50+ of my favorite novels on audio books, so I can listen to them once my vision would be gone.
Fortunately it turned out not to be glaucoma and I can still read 4+ hours a day (I'm retired).
But I'm sad about the fact that most of my favorite novels are not available as audio books. They only focus on new books. :(

When the previous US president was elected in 2016 whom I disliked, I ignored him on the news whenever they had a short feature on him. Instead I read a book. I got a lot of books done that way between 2016 and 2020. :)

I'm finding that they have more and more of the older books. There is however, a gap between 1980-2000 where a lot of books have no yet been released in digital format. Gutenberg is excellent for old, old books
Plus I can't imagine carrying around hardcover books of the 4 books I'm currently reading (probably break my back/shoulder)
That said, I read at least two hours a day in various places: bed, car, bathroom (have an ancient Kindle I use in there), waiting on my husband to get out of class, doctor's appointment or emergency room visit.


I'm finding that they have more and more of the older books. There is however, a gap bet..."
I have a hardcover book in my car in case I get stuck in a traffic jam. I carry another hardcover book in my purse on those days when I have doc appointments. Next week I'll bring a hardcover book onto the plane to Europe.
O.k., I admit that I'm old-fashioned. :)
I don't like to surround myself with electronics if I can avoid it. For centuries people read hardcover books and in my generation we are supposed to change to e-book? I simply refuse!


unless the trip was overnight, that would never be enough to hold me for a European trip. I'm 70 years old and made the transition to electric books (except for cookbooks) easily
but to each their own
Oh, great question!! We're in the midst of redoing our entire house (just finishing downstairs) so reading time has been very very short. Normally I take noon to like 4:30 for reading if nothing else is going on, but that's not been the case for a while. 7 to about 11 pm is dinner & tv, So it's late nights for reading for me, like 12 to 2 or 3 a.m. However, on vacation I can read all day unless we're doing something planned (rare). Also, if there's a thunderstorm at home, it's take out dinner because it's my favorite reading time.

E-books became a real option for me when arthritis came to call on my hands. But I do have a vast amount of paperbacks and hardcovers taking up space throughout the house.

I read at least 2 hours a day, sometimes more, although some days I get busy & don't get much reading done. From 6:00 - 8:00 pm, I sit in my wing chair in the living room & read. I read at least another hour at night, after I get in bed.
And when I can, I sit on the patio and read; in springtime & fall, that's in the afternoon. In summer, it's early in the morning before the heat gets too bad.

unless the trip was overnight, that would never be enough to hold me for a European trip. I'm 70 years old and ma..."
It's overnight and I'll take a sleeping pill. But even on our many day flights to London I couldn't read all 400 pages of a Peter Robinson DCI Banks novel. I'm a slow reader.

We have about 2.000 books spread all over the house in 24 large book cases (but 9 of those bookcases are filled with our DVD collection).
I immigrated with 1.500 books to the US in 2002, but as I buy on an average 30 to 40 books per year, it must be over 2.000 by now.
Of course I sort out books from time to time. I only keep those that I want to re-read again as I've noticed that over the past 10 to 15 years less and less good novels have been published.



Me too Keli -- a paperback fits nicely in my purse. And if I ever ran out of paperbacks (highly unlikely!) I could tote my Kindle. Never a moment without reading!

unless the trip was overnight, that would never be enough to hold me for a European trip. I'm 70 years old and ma..."
2 - 3 hours a day for me. Also near that age and although still own around 2000 physical books, seldom pick them up. Audio while walking the dog and working out, ebook the rest of the time. Ebooks on any trips also as can load up several and much easier to carry.

unless the trip was overnight, that would never be enough to hold me for a European trip. I'm..."
I cannot find my favorite authors in e-books. :(

From my husband reading his Kindle, I got the impression that they offer 95% new unknown authors (who really don't interest me) and maybe 5% classics like Thackeray, Brontë and Charles Dickens who equally don't entice me.
And for those few books that I like that they might offer on e-book, it's really not worth changing from hardcovers to e-books.
