Book Buying Addicts Anonymous discussion
Just for Fun
>
Does reading small print books make you get tired faster?
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Tee27
(new)
Dec 11, 2011 10:25AM

reply
|
flag






Two years or so in the past I thought maybe age was catching up. It was; finally getting the right prescription update made all the difference.
*%$(&$ -ed presbyopia combined with my life long astigmatism and myopia really had played tricks.
A book that I find hard to read because of the overall layout, bad type selection and design is The Irish Civil War by Tim Pat Coogan. Great information and photographs. There are portions of the book it hurts my eyes to read it for even 5 minutes! Technically I know exactly what is wrong, but that doesn't help!


While smaller text does make me feel like I'm moving more slowly, I had no problem reading through my copy of Ender's Game, whereas I'm having to almost force myself through Les Miserables. Both books use about the same size font (looks to be about 10 pt), but one is a bit more action-packed than the other.


I wonder if not having to turn the pages often when you have tiny text has an effect on drowsiness too in that there's a longer period of time between the little kicks of stimulus when you have to move to flip the page? It's a minor thing but in a regular print size book it could be enough to keep jogging the brain out of sleep mode.