Chicks On Lit discussion
How many books do you read in week/month/year?
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SarahSaysRead
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Dec 30, 2010 08:36AM

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A whole week's worth of meals here, at least!

Marialyce, I so agree. I pity those who don't read. Look what they are missing in life!!

I read a lot of fluff too and the way I've always justified it is that it's better to read it than watch it on TV. I also read a lot because I watch almost no TV, maybe a few hours a month. My "reconsidering" the amount of fluff I read is because I'm getting older and realizing that I have a backlog of books (like War and Peace which I just finished this year) that I've never read that seem more "worthy" of being read than my normal cozy mysteries.


Or you relate to it in a different way, sympathize with different characters.





Christine, I do the same thing, flip back and forth between serious, intellectual reads and light, fun reads. But I tend to read more of the light books as I can plow right through them and the classics or intellectual books take me a little longer. So it is probably more like 2-3 light books: 1 serious book. Of the course I seem to enjoy and get more out of the serious ones, but sometimes I need the light and fluffy. What can one do...?


Yep. Life dictates what I can and cannot read most days. It's all about balance.. whatever that is.. :)

Reading two books a week is about my speed. I'm lucky to have a job where I can read at work most days, sometimes for extended periods. Since setting my 2011 goal, I've started allowing myself to read some lighter novels and especially quick mysteries in order to meet my challenge. Ordinarily I trend towards classics and contemporary literary fiction, but it's a lot of fun to trade off "serious" books with Inspector Lynley mysteries and the like.
I know I'm reading too much when I find myself scanning the page and realize I've read several pages without really knowing what happened. Then I'll slow myself down and take a break for a couple days.


I've tracked all my books on a spreadsheet since 1993, and 2010 was my highest record with 62 - many chunky, but also a mix of some "business books" that are an hour.
My stated goal for 2011 is 52 since I know work and life happen - but I'd love to get to 70.
It amazes me people who do not read at all - It has brought so much pleasure, texture, learning and appreciation of other people, places and things. Our lives would be so much poorer without books!


I'm working on him - telling him about the worlds I know about and experiences I've lived (again vicariously) that I could not possibly get from non-fiction.
Granted - I read non-fiction too, and when written well, it feels like a novel - but so many characters that we've been able to see the world through their eyes! It is such a gift.
I'll keep working on him -

And he has seen worlds you haven't. I don't see what difference it makes what you read, as long as you read.

Have you tried to get him interested in historical fiction? It's the closest to a best of both worlds (fiction and non-fiction) if the book is well researched. Like James A. Michener? He could read the historical fiction along with an actual history book- I sometimes do that because the novel motivates me to continue to read the non-fiction book. Although he would probably be the reverse.