THE JAMES MASON COMMUNITY BOOK CLUB discussion
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ARE YOU A ONE BOOK AT A TIME READER?
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Vanessa
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Dec 28, 2010 08:42PM

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Susan wrote: "I always have an audiobook for my commute & to listen to as I fall asleep, and a real book. Sometimes with either I will switch to another book if the book is not fitting my mood. Of course, some..."
I am still trying to get into audiobooks! just love the feel of the traditional paper books
I am still trying to get into audiobooks! just love the feel of the traditional paper books




what a wonderful voice James Mason would have had for Audio Books- especially the British Classics!!!

Mmmm hmmm, that would be wonderful.



Susan wrote: "The worst narrator I ever heard was Blair Brown reading The Good Husband by Gail Godwin. Just because someone is a good actor does mean that they will be a good narrator (so how woul..."
I feel James Mason's classical stage training and wide variety of roles would have made him an excellant reader!
I feel James Mason's classical stage training and wide variety of roles would have made him an excellant reader!

And this man just has an incredible voice, I could listen to him all day LOL.

I agree 100%!! His voice was wonderful. Richard Thomas did a great job on Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer. I always listen to a sample before purchasing books from audible.com now.

I have almost 1,000 on my Nook. I kind of went through it and maybe a 100 are duplicates, so about 950 different books.
Shay wrote: "Eugenia wrote: "Chris wrote: "Glad I'm not alone with the multiple book thing. I have several on the go, anywhere between 4 and 8 usually. I'm so fickle, and I get excited when I get a new book, I ..."
haha- sounds like me and my Kindle! though most are free classics downloads!
haha- sounds like me and my Kindle! though most are free classics downloads!

Mine, too. If someone mentions a classic that sounds remotely interesting, I download it immediately. It's in the public domain, so it's free and I figure why not have it in my Nook?
Shay wrote: "Rick wrote: "Shay wrote: "Eugenia wrote: "Chris wrote: "Glad I'm not alone with the multiple book thing. I have several on the go, anywhere between 4 and 8 usually. I'm so fickle, and I get excited..."
exactly- and also for about 4-5 dollars you can have the Complete Dickens, Collins, Hardy ect..tho- still hard for me to give up the loads of books I have- just nice knowing I have them all electronically too!
exactly- and also for about 4-5 dollars you can have the Complete Dickens, Collins, Hardy ect..tho- still hard for me to give up the loads of books I have- just nice knowing I have them all electronically too!

Love the free classic downloads, I'm overwhelmed with Jane Austen. I love it.




A friend of mine reads 3 books at a time and I am fascinated by how he can keep them all straight in his head, I would be completely lost and probably have to re-read each book each time I picked it up to get myself back in to each one.

Robin wrote: "I guess it depends on the book itself, Kay. If it is a snorer, one that begs to be tossed aside, I will do just that. If I bought a book, and I don't like it, I will do the same, but if it is req..."
Kay wrote: "Interesting thread. I am definitely a one at a time reader. In all other things I have the attention span of a hyperactive frog, jumping from one thing to another constantly. With reading howeve..."
I really enjoy multi-reading- as long as the genres are completely different- I am always reading James Mason Member books as well as current thrillers, classics and sci-fi/fantasy- that way it is very difficult to mix up a 2010 News Reporter with a 1875 Victorian Dandy!
Kay wrote: "Interesting thread. I am definitely a one at a time reader. In all other things I have the attention span of a hyperactive frog, jumping from one thing to another constantly. With reading howeve..."
I really enjoy multi-reading- as long as the genres are completely different- I am always reading James Mason Member books as well as current thrillers, classics and sci-fi/fantasy- that way it is very difficult to mix up a 2010 News Reporter with a 1875 Victorian Dandy!

I tend to be reading 2 books at any given time: Something "heavy", which to me means most non-fiction and many classics, and something "light", like an easy novel. Or to put it another way, one book that I want to read, because it's fun, and another book that I want to have read, because it's important. I usually get through several light books for each heavy book.
Mark wrote: "If by "books in progress" you mean any book that I've started but haven't yet finished, I think I'm reading about 837 books right now.
I tend to be reading 2 books at any given time: Something "he..."
well put Mark!
I tend to be reading 2 books at any given time: Something "he..."
well put Mark!

I tend to be reading 2 books at any given time: Something "he..."
This has pretty much been my pattern for many years. Although 2 to 3 fluffy reads vs. 1 "real" literature books would be optimistic, in my case. This year, I'm trying for at least a 50/50 mix.



Mind you, I can't even scratch my ear and talk at the same time (sighs audibly).






Same here!"
Wow: I came to this site prepared to make the shameful confession that I'm usually reading ...6-10!
When I near the end of a novel, if I'm loving it, that will drop to maybe just the 1 or a couple more, until I'm finished. But if that takes more than a couple of days, I'm back up to my usual addicted levels.
I like 2 balance 2-3 fiction, 1-2 non-fiction,& 1-2 poetry. That way, no matter how much time I have (for example, waiting on line) I have something that'll work.
That's my minimum but sadly I often go over it.

I tend to be reading 2 books at any given time: Something "he..."
That's true for me. I was only counting the books I read consistently every day-2 days. If I count the others-well, I'm certainly around your number. And the thing is, I usually get around to finishing them all. Although it's been known to take 9 or 10 years.
Still, neither the book nor I are going anywhere soon. I hope.





George wrote: "I frequently read 2 books at a time, one that is escapist and a quick read, and another that is more serious fiction (or non-fiction)where I'm reading more slowly to appreciate the author's style. ..."
what a combo! Parker and Updike!! can't ask for anything more!
what a combo! Parker and Updike!! can't ask for anything more!
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