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Do You Re-Read?
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Also, if I read a book for free online and then buy the physical edition once it's published, I'll reread it once I have the physical edition.


i love your explanation. i call them comfort reads. I also have re read Feist series, but also lie the empire one. Enders game is great, shame about the film, but who wrote Old man"s war, sounds like i would like it


I reread Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy throughout grad school to help keep me sane.
I currently am rereading the whole Murderbot Diairies, as well as Witch King also by Martha Wells, while I undergo treatment for cancer. These have been my comfort reads.
There have been a few books I loved so much that I immediately reread them after finishing them the first time. Aside from Murderbot, recent ones have been Homeland by RA Salvatore and This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

CJ I too find that some books bring comfort and put you in a good place. I find myself rereading because I just cannot get enough of the book or sometimes so I can understand it or figure out what i missed if the plot is particularly intricate.

Same thing here! I am actually rereading the first installment of the Dune series for weeks now, and I found myself surprised that even some of the major events of the book I have already forgotten. I also found comfort in them knowing that I already had the gist of the whole series, so diving into them was more like paying more attention to details and intricacies.

Because what’s the point? You’ve read the book. You know everything that will happen. I would only reread something if I wanted to become a nerd on the subject. Whic..."
I often re-read (I probably already said that in this thread) books when a new book in a series comes out to refresh my memory of the characters and events leading up to the current book

Okay, fair point. God, I might actually need to do that with the fifth Percy Jackson book so I can read the sixth and seventh ones that apparently exist. Or maybe not. I’ll probably j..."
I will have to re-read George R.R. Martin's Game of Thrones books and Patrick Rothfuss' Kingkiller Chronicles books when, and if, the next book in those series comes out. It's been far too long since I've read those books.
However, for more prolific writers who produce at book every 12-18 months I usually don't need to re-red them


Exceptions are when I need to refresh my memory for a new addition to a series (looking at you, Robert Jordan) and absolute favourites that I haven't read for years and find myself missing.
Someone recommended taking December each year for rereads and I actually quite like that idea. But with 123 books on my *physical* TBR right now, I will have to argue hard to justify it 😅

That isn't true for every book - but I think books that really dive into what it means to be human - those may be the ones that goose you into noticing that you've changed. In fact, maybe you wouldn't have realized how much you've changed until you re-read the book.
I haven't done it yet, but I'd also re-read a book that was just so much damn fun that I want to get on the ride again.
All that said, I still suffer from FOMO that I'll miss a great book (no time to waste!) so I don't re-read a lot, but every time I do, I realize that the experience was worth 10 new-to-me books that were ok to decent, but not really good or great.

My point is, there is a point to rereading books, for just the reasons others have mentioned.

Let's see, if a new book comes out say a year or two after the last book I read in a series, I might re-read the entire series. Another one, a series is written with spin-off series I will read all the books again in the order they are meant to be read rather than the order of release because you might catch something you might have missed.
I also read books again if I like them.

Characters become old friends, and sometimes, when I need to relax, and undemanding old read is really comforting.




Now i have a kindle i am trying to get some of my fav series but it is an expensive thing.
And I am also spending a lot of time checking to see if the author whose series i have been following has another book out

Now i ha..."
If you sign up at fantasticfiction.com, (it's free), they'll email you when one of your favorite authors publishes a new book. It's much easier!

There's always a downside 😂

do they let you know when one of the back catalog of an author's books is released in digital version? I'm waiting on Louise Cooper's Indigo series and several Charles de Lint's books to be released in digital format.


on Amazon and Goodreads the publication date of a digital edition is not the same as the original publication date of a book as show here:
704 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 1, 2002
Original title
City of Saints and Madmen
Series
Ambergris (#1)
This edition
Format
704 pages, Kindle Edition
Published
May 8, 2014 by Tor

we'll see. I find the 70s-90s paperback books often don't have digital equivalents


I use that (US) all the time and have over 200 books waiting there

Your statements about these characters are exactly the same as mine. But strangely enough, my impressions were the same when I first read the books, and they haven't changed much since then. The funny thing is that I was 13 myself (i.e. a teenager) when I first read A Game of Thrones.
Nevertheless, and this is what I appreciate most about fantasy books, George Martin has managed to create a well-constructed imaginary world and describe it very vividly.

HA! Honestly, I'm with you. It bored me to tears. Sorry to Hobbit fans :)

HA! Honestly, I'm with you. It bored me to tears. Sorry to Hobbit fans :)"
book was OK, movie was too much

HA! Honestly, I'm with you. It bored me to tears. Sorry to Hobbit fans :)"
book was OK, movie was too much"
The book was a different genre from The Lord of the Rings. Trying to make it both into LOTR AND a movie was too much.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Lord of the Rings (other topics)Old Man's War (other topics)
Casino Royale (other topics)
Orlando (other topics)
Underworld (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Marlon James (other topics)Jennifer Roberson (other topics)
Adrian Tchaikovsky (other topics)
George R.R. Martin (other topics)
Philip K. Dick (other topics)
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If I recall correctly, I've re-read . . . maybe 6 books."
So, in 2015 I mentioned having re-read maybe 6 books. As of today, I've reread 105 books. 10 of them I've reread twice (as in I've read the book 3 times), and 2 of them I've reread three times (or thrice; as in I've read the book 4 times). Then, of course, there's The Raven and Princess Bride, mentioned in the 2015 post, as works I've reread many many times.
Hmm. That number count is from shelves. Not sure it is completely accurate.
In terms of Science Fiction/Fantasy: I've read each book in one series three times each. The 5 book Past Imperfect series. A fanfiction series based on Star Trek Voyager.