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On dating a non-reader
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I find this website slightly misguided if well-intentioned:
http://www.guysread.com/
I don't think boys want only to read about trucks and baseball or whatever.

I've always been a reader, while my husband reads only occasionally and almost exclusively in the fantasy and sci-fi genres, with special emphasis on things like Star Wars and Doctor Who. I won't deny that I think being a reader sets you up to be more demanding of yourself and your partner, your life, your ambitions, not necessarily because of some misguided Madame Bovary fantasy, but because extensive reading reveals extensive possibilities. The desire to analyze (sometimes over-analyze) your own life can be correlated to the long-time examination of other lives through books.
I love the idea that a knowledge of syntax has a direct effect on a relationship.




I think Warnke was being at least partially sarcastic.

Maybe, but there are single guys out there that think along those lines, certainly. Maybe they don't equate those beliefs with reading, probably because they're not smart enough to, but they're there.



I also agree with Llosa: ""We would be worse than we are without the good books we have read, more conformist, not as restless, more submissive, and the critical spirit, the engine of progress, would not even exist. Like writing, reading is a protest against the insufficiencies of life. When we look in fiction for what is missing in life, we are saying, with no need to say it or even to know it, that life as it is does not satisfy our thirst for the absolute – the foundation of the human condition – and should be better. We invent fictions in order to live somehow the many lives we would like to lead when we barely have one at our disposal."

And it's true - I've known non-readers who are analytical and can figure things out, but not very many.


This can be quite true. My husband reads every once in a while, but he tends to prefer non-fiction and informational books (although I can bully him into reading a fiction book every so often), so he doesn't completely get why I can find books more entertaining story-wise than t.v. a lot of the time.
I do also think that non-readers have a hard time understanding why you may not hear them if you're in the middle of a good part in your book, and it can be frustrating to them if they think they're being ignored. I'm not sure if anyone else has experienced this, but sometimes I'll get to that one moment in a book where a major plot point happens like a death or revelation of something and I'm so absorbed in the "what is going on here!?!" moment that I tend to tune others out. Of course, it never fails that this is also the moment when someone wants to engage in a conversation.
I'm not sure what a "reader" is that we're talking about. Everyone seems to be thinking that a reader is someone who reads books. But what if someone only reads magazines and newspapers? My brother and one of my sisters fall into this category. They'll pick up a book every once in awhile, but 97% of what they read is magazines (for a literate readership, like The New Yorker or the Atlantic or Harpers) and the New York Times, and online magazines, and blogs. It's not like they never read novels; they read Dostoyevsky, Flaubert, Joyce, Faulkner, etc. etc. in high school and college. Then life became extremely busy for them, and it was a lot easier to pick up a magazine and read an 8 page article, than pick up Thomas Pynchon. I myself, back when I was only reading 10-20 books a year, was reading mostly magazines. I was so proud of myself when I read 24 books one year. Two books per month felt like a huge accomplishment.

My husband doesn't read books. He will read a magazine that is outdoors/hunting related, but rarely. He doesn't begrudge me my reading time because then I don't argue about what's on the television.
We were going out for supper the other night and I was engrossed in a novel. "Let's go!" he called. I ignored him. A few minutes later, he peered over my shoulder and noticed the end of the chapter, "Ahh, I get it." He sat down and patiently waited for me to finish the chapter.
He has learned a few tricks over the years.

My boyfriend and I fall into that stereotype. I LOVE to read, and he can't stand it. I ttried to get him to read a CHILDREN'S book, and he wouldn't do it.

that I want to be able to discuss and talk about.
Not necessarily on a "high intellectual level", not at all, but some of the boyfriends I've had before, who weren't readers/ and weren't interested in culture/philosophy/psychology just couldn't relate to that or be bothered to think about such issues.
My husband doesn't read more than a few books a year, but he does read graphic novels/comics, he plays roleplaying games like I do, and he'll watch weird French movies with me from time to time.
AND he'll listen and talk about various stuff I've got on my mind :-)

I tried to switch tactics and get mine to listen to an audiobook since he commutes, and he still hasn't. Although, I do love me some music in the car, so I kind of understand.

I had the same thing. I tried to get her to read The Wizard of Oz - with me - and she wasn't interested. (Based on how we eventually ended maybe it was the "with me" part that she didn't like!) She liked scary movies so I gave her Night Chills and she did read it but it took her three months to finally finish. I don't care if it's Going Rogue: An American Life, the next woman I connect with is going to be a reader.

It makes a difference when your partner resents the fact that you'd rather read then watch a movie with her, or that you'd rather spend five hours reading on Saturday and/or Sunday than going to visit friends or go to the lake/mall or drive 50 miles (one way) to buy corn, or - the unholiest of unholies - go to garage sales.

For me, in this discussion, it's a book reader. Not that newspaper and magazine readers aren't readers, they are, but book reading is a different type of commitment, both in time and personal involvement.


I read shampoo bottles in the shower.

I have, but there's nothing else to read in the shower - except the other bottles hanging out there.


I’m surrounded by non-readers, I guess I’m used to it.


And both of those articles are fooking depressing. :(

LOL...I agree with that, Jammies.

But, we share so many other things in common and I'd rather have time spent sharing a movie or going for a drive or sitting across the table from each other in a nice restaurant than spending time discussing a book.
Okay, well if we've narrowed it down to books, and magazines and newspapers are irrelevant here, then no, it's not necessary to date a reader. I tend to agree with Gabby.
There are lots of couples who are so busy with work and kids that when they finally do get time alone together, they'd rather talk, or take a walk or a hike, or do some hobby, than each sit separately reading a book. I see nothing wrong with this.
Again: the amount of time we have for reading, the inclination to read, fluctuates throughout life. It's possible that some people's reading days are mostly behind them. Maybe they'll find more time to read in retirement.
There are lots of couples who are so busy with work and kids that when they finally do get time alone together, they'd rather talk, or take a walk or a hike, or do some hobby, than each sit separately reading a book. I see nothing wrong with this.
Again: the amount of time we have for reading, the inclination to read, fluctuates throughout life. It's possible that some people's reading days are mostly behind them. Maybe they'll find more time to read in retirement.


I tried to switch tactics and get mine to listen to an audiobook since he commutes, and he still hasn't. Alt..."
I doubt he'd even do that. I was proud, he started to read a book about Amanda Knox, but disappointed me when he gave up halfway through. You can lead a horse to water...

He reads more fiction than he used to. He used to like to read books about mobsters. When I read The Gold Coast byNelson DeMille, I thought that it would be a perfect book for my husband. He loved it and has read several more books by Nelson DeMille. He's a bus driver and likes to read between runs. He gets a little aggravated because I read ALL THE TIME.
When I read while we are watching TV he will say to me,"What did he say?" Usually I know. I can listen to the TV and read at the same time. Sometimes I think he does it to try to catch me not watching TV. I look forward to when he works at his Traffic Reporter job. Then I can read uninterrupted.
My son and daughters are all readers. My son reads sports books and classics. My 23 year old daughter is like me and reads a variety of genres except she doesn't like romance books. My 20 year old daughter strictly reads classics. Once in a while I can get her to read a contemporary book like The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini.

But our reading tastes are different anyway. He likes biographies of famous people, books about any war in history, and sci-fi. I'm horror and fantasy, dark history, and virtually anything else that takes me away from the real world. I don't think we've ever read the same book but we do listen to each other talk about what we're reading.
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Kite Runner (other topics)Gold Coast (other topics)
Going Rogue: An American Life (other topics)
Night Chills (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Khaled Hosseini (other topics)Nelson DeMille (other topics)
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jason-p...