Language Learners and Polyglots discussion
Our 2022 Foreign Language Reading Challenge Group Status Chat

Reading Agatha Christie in another language is a good way to go"
I really recommend Tintin as well. His stories have been translated into a zillion and one lang..."
P.S. They were originally written in French and I know that they have been translated into English, Spanish, and German at least. I would be shocked if there weren't some available in Italian, Swedish and even Icelandic.

It's probably easier to read target language translations of books that were originally written..."
That's what I always recommend, too. Read a novel from your own culture in that language until you've got a fairly good vocab.
I do pretty well with the modern mysteries in Swedish that I've been able to get my hands on. I ADORE the Martin Beck series from Sjöwall/Wahlöö. Absolute magic in the original Swedish.
With French, in my experience, it's not the standard vocab you need to worry about, but the slang! French is a word-poor* language (in comparison to other langs) but they make up for it in the different types of slang, esp "criminal" slang or Parisian "street" slang that can render entire chapters unintelligible.
* don't take offence at that, it's what linguists say. Word-poor here means that many French words are made up of word combinations instead of a single word. Like "le X de Y". That significantly cuts down the actual words and ups the "circumlocations" or descriptive phrases for things.


That's probably the key. Are you forgiving of the plot and flaws if it helps you learn?


It was a good challenge for me. I ended up needing to look up a fair amount of words and phrases.
It was a little disappointing in that the story was less than half the book. The remainder was review of the grammar used in the book. Even though the grammar review was good, I was looking forward to more of the story, lol.
Now I need to look for another A2 level Spanish reader. That's about the right level for me right now.


YAY!!! Congratulations! 👏 Wooooooooo!!! Knew you could do it.
Good questions from Rod: what was the story about and are you going to learn new words before going on?

Congrats!!!

I looked up the words as I went and then reviewed them again in the grammar summary at the end. I should review them again every now and then.

That sounds like an actual story and not a learner text. Esp with the end like that. Cool!

One of my GR friends added my free-to-read bronzepunk novella to GR. This means you can read something of mine (short) and get GR reading credit! (And leave a rating/review if you feel like it)
Bronzepunk is a genre of historical light sci-fi set during the Bronze Age, normally in Egypt.
The title is: Distantly Falling Stars
Blurb: "Seti, a humble civil servant at the Office of Information, is selected for an important mission to retrieve a cluster of 'fallen stars' with very special, and very secret, properties.
But why has he -- ambitionless and without influence as he is -- been chosen? And just who wants these particular stars at all costs?
As Seti becomes more and more involved in the machinations of shadowy figures, he realises he has his own personal mission to fulfil, and it has nothing to do with the one he was selected for. "
Here's the link: https://www.wattpad.com/story/1734484...
If it doesn't work for you, I can send you a google doc.

I'm a bit late to the party, but there are still 10 months and 20 days left, so I guess it's still worth it if you let me join :-) I love this challenge!
I'm Czech, but I read in English most of the time (I should set myself a separate challenge to read a few books in Czech, actually).
This year I want to focus more on Spanish, so the goal is to read 6 books in Spanish, and 1 book in the other languages I speak or study, German, French and Japanese. I will award myself extra credit if I read something in Russian (any tips, anyone?)

Ahoj Lenka! Welcome to the group! I've put you on the members list so feel free to jump in and let us know where you are with your goal reading and how you're enjoying your books as you read them.
This is an pretty active chat thread, so if you set it to "notify" you'll be able to keep up with posts.
Peter is really the only one doing Russian in the group. He'd be the one to ask if you are interested in Russian writers.

Ahoj Lenka! Welcome to the group! I've put you on the members list so feel free to jump in and let us know where you are with your goal reading and how you're enjoy..."
Thanks for the welcome! I hope I won't disappoint you, or myself :-)

Welcome to the club. You have some pretty interesting languages to choose from.
Rod"
Hi Rod,
Thanks! Languages are a passion for me and they are ALL interesting :-)

One of my GR friends added my free-to-read bronzepunk novella to GR. This means you can read something of mine (..."
Do you have to create an account to read or will the document open?

This does seem like a very interesting read.

I think you have to create a free account, but I can send you a google doc with the story if you'd rather not do that.


Don't hold back on my account, Sportyrod. I'm moving along like a snail in molasses because I've been focusing on my French novel (and my English novel, of course). It might be as much as 3 more weeks before I get to the end. And, when push comes to shove, a spoiler or two isn't going to make any difference to the book's teaching ability in Spanish.

Go ahead and post your review, Rod. I'm almost finished with the 2nd to last story, but I've hit that wall of knowledge and the level is over my head now and I'm going very slowly. As Paul says, spoilers won't matter at this point. :-)

Congrats!!

I think you have to create a free account, but I can send you a google doc with the..."
Please send the google doc, when you get a chance. Thanks

Did I learn more words? Definately.
Did I learn most new words? Uh uh. When I read the vocab list at the end, I didn’t get them all. I guess that means I am learning as I go and have the abililty to make sense of new words in context but not ready to use them all for myself.
How did I deal with the increasing difficulty? At first it was a breeeze. I read as instructed without translating. As words got harder, I had a few sneak peeks and in the last two chapters I went straight to the lexicon as there were uncommon words.
Side note: I have been listening to the Swedish auditions competition to qualify for Eurovision and have enjoyed following-ish the commentary in Swedish.
Thanks for the encouragement for my first challenge book.

Hi Calla,
Here's the link.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1l...
Since we're not following each other I can't send it to you PM. :-)

Did I learn more words? Definately.
Did I learn most new words? Uh uh. When I..."
Do you happen to know if Olly Richard's prepared books in our various languages that followed in sequence (and, of course, in increasing difficulty) from the one that we read here?

For Spanish, yes he has a few others, but not for Swedish / Icelandic...or at least they aren't listed on Amazon or here. So, we couldn't go on to another one.
But for you...
Spanish Short Stories For Beginners Volume 2: 8 More Unconventional Short Stories to Grow Your Vocabulary and Learn Spanish the Fun Way!
and then he's got one in Intermediate (B1- B2) that's very similar.
Then he's also got a "Topics that Matter" series which is for non-fic and at the intermediate level. The ones available in Spanish are about WW2 and climate change. Then he's got a Social Media conversations in Spanish.
Nothing there for Swedish or Icelandic, though. Not enough call for them, I'd imagine.

For Spanish, yes he has a few others, but not fo..."
Thanks very much!


Good thing it has short chapters! :-) It took me two months to read a almost 500 page novel in Italian last year, so I know what you're up against.

Rod, did you also have the impression that the last story (something like "Capsule") in Olly's book was easier to read than the one before it, "Lara the Invisible Woman?


Almost there! I'll add a comment when I'm finished as well. You've both piqued my interest now to see what's coming.

Here's an example. In Olly Richard's short story, Tierras Desconocidas, he writes the sentence, "El Gran Salón era un edificio de madera muy grande." In English, "The Great Hall was a very large wooden building." The Spanish word for "wood", "madera" had been used on a good number of occasions in previous stories in the collection and when I read it this time, I understood the word without even a moment's second thought or difficulty.
BUT it occurred to me that I would likely have had considerable difficulty thinking of the word if I had been talking with a Spaniard and wanted to SAY something in Spanish about "wood".
Does anyone else experience this distinction? Any thoughts or suggestions?

That's totally natural. It's the difference between passive and active vocabulary. Your passive vocab -- the words you recognise when you read/hear them -- will always be much bigger than your active vocabulary. (Consider people with foreign parents who understand their parents native language perfectly, but can't say more than 2 words in it.)
This is why Olly's claim of "just read and you'll learn the words!" is not *exactly* true. What you will do is learn to RECOGNISE the words. That's great, because it contributes to your ability in the passive skills (reading/listening), but that doesn't not enable you to independently use them (or only a few) in the active skills of speaking/writing.
To move new words from passive to active (or simply to retain them in passive), you have to do one of two things:
1. actually use them in conversation
2. actively repeat them with an app like Memrise until when you think "wood in Spanish" your brain automatically spits out "madera".
This process takes a much longer time and a lot of repetition. It's normally why spending 15-30 minutes every day reviewing vocabulary is universally recommended.
The motto applies here: if you don't use it, you lose it!


Way to go.


This is also what happens to me with Spanish. I read very little in my own language, although I am currently reading one. I had also been thinking of adding 12 to my challenge.

This is very interesting about French, Berengaria. Several comments on this:
I guess this is the result of the Académie (similar in Spanish too).
The joining of two words with a "de" - isn't that equivalent to the German sticking them together?
A good writer to read is Racine - whose vocabulary was limited (I think around 2k words) but whose plays are so very powerful.
French is still, so far, my preferred language.

I am thinking of La femme qui attendait
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Reading Agatha Christie in another language is a good way to go"
I really recommend Tintin as well. His stories have been translated into a zillion and one languages. They're are wonderfully entertaining, contain some great idiomatic structures, and the pictures are absolutely wonderful in helping figure out what the words are saying so you don't have to constantly refer to a dictionary.