The Sword and Laser discussion
Reading more than one book...

I guess if you're too busy or if you are reading very dense or attention demanding books it can get messy, but as a voracious reader I often feel like one book is not enough.
I don't listen to audiobooks so I can't answer to the other part of your question.
PS: Your English is fine.

I usually have one audio and one written book going together (I don't discriminate between ebook and dead tree from that standpoint). Currently I'm reading the Magicians in Kindle format, and GoT in audio.
Other than that I have Total Film and Mad Magazines going in app format.

I just realized that I also associate the audiobook exclusively with my walks and the other one usually after lunch, so that might be a common solution to "trick" the brain?
And I agree it also depends in how demanding the book is, cause I mix in my comics and magazines with no problem at all.
Seems like 2 books, is the magic number for everyone. I wonder if there are any adventurers that go beyond that? eheh
André

I could probably do one fiction and one nonfiction book simultaneously, but I would still prefer to just finish one to completion.
If a book isn't holding my interest, then I usually just give it up and move on to the next one.


Then during the time I'm reading these I'll also add in my comics that I'm currently reading which is about 5 or 6 monthly comics.
Overall it works out well but I know if I start more than 2 novels I start to feel overwhelmed..Which is why 2 of my books I have marked as 'currently reading' aren't actually being read- One due to it's length and the other has terrible page layout when it went to the kindle which has since been fixed.


For myself, I usually have two going at once. I could probably do 3, but I really don't have enough time. For me, one is audio and one is some form of print (usually ebook but sometimes dead tree edition). I've found that it's hard for me to read 2 books of the same genre simultaneously...so I can't read two epic fantasy novels, for example. Right now, I'm reading two: listening to Earthseed and reading The Magicians on my Kindle/Kindle apps. If I had a third going, it would be a nonfiction book. Alas, right now, with work going 16 hours a day and a DVR backlog that is out of control... :)

I see that the new formats really help when reading more than 1 book and that people have no problem mixing in "lighter" reads, although most prefer not to mix genres.
Also clear that many, associate reading a specific book with a daily moment or task.
Thanks for sharing!
André

Frankly, I've never been able to get the search function to work in groups.
I usually have 2-4 books going at once. There's always a current audiobook, something on my Nook, and something in paper. When it comes to books in text, I usually have one that I read at work during lunch and one I read at home. Every once in a while, I book will drag me in enough that I set aside my other books to finish it.

I will switch between them all the time. Generally have a couple I'm reading on my Kindle and a copy hardcopy books as well.

I mainly read 5-6 because something new and shiney grabs my attention but i always end up finishing my books.
(all of this has lead to my one book per Chapters visit. even if the "buy 3 books, get the fourth free" deal is on i must abstain or never get anything read).


I seem to be in the minority in this group in that I've never had much luck with audio books. I always wind up losing the storyline somewhere and having to backtrack. It's better for me to just skip the hassle.


I find that I don't often have two fiction books at the same time -- I commit wholly to those stories. With history and science I feel like I'm learning something, but need the occasional break into fiction.


Before ereaders I would only ever have one on the go at once.
The logic for me is: if I like the book I'm reading, why would I want to start another rather than finding out what happens - unless I'm really not into the story, and in that case why am I reading it in the first place?
The same with video games - I tend to play one until I'm finished rather than chop and change between different games.
Guess its a bad personality trait - either I'm really into something in which case I want to do/read it all the time or not in which case I won't bother at all - there isn't much of a middle ground.....
I also haven't really got into audio books, more because the pace is 10x slower than reading myself, and I don't have enough time in the car/walking the dog etc that would leave me enough dead time to be doing something so relatively inefficient


I ended up cutting back on my podcast subscriptions to accommodate listening to more books. My commute is 5 miles each way (so about 10-15 minutes, depending on how I hit the traffic lights), so I don't listen to audiobooks while driving to/from work. I listen to podcasts during that time, and listen to podcasts as "talk radio" while I'm doing easier tasks at work, tasks that don't require my full attention so I can divert some attention to the 'casts. :)
But if I'm driving long distances (>30 minutes), when I'm at the gym, taking walks, traveling (plane/train), that's when I have audiobooks on. I also listen while doing household chores and SOMETIMES, if I'm really into a book, I'll listen while just sitting around (especially if there are sports on TV, when I can mute the commentators).
In regards to my reading I like to read one book at a time. Just something about reading that makes me want to focus all my attention on one book.

However, I'll occasionally read two at the same time if they're two different genres like murder/mystery & epic fantasy. I also have a hard time with same genres/simliar plotlines back to back since my memory of them blurs a bit.


I can relate with many things that were said, specially about wanting to focus my attention on one book and if they're too similar my memory might start acting up - I'm currently listening to my first audiobook along with my regular book and so far my brain is ok with it.
Now that I think about it, I guess I would also have no problem reading a book in english, along with other in my native language.
Being a fan of tv shows and cinema, I understand the point made about watching multiple series but I feel that it's a different kind of experience, watching tv and reading a book, since the first one is easier to take in, due to the visual factor.
André

Really? I've always found it much easier to get into a book than movies or TV shows. Books nearly always hold my interest, whereas my attention will often wander during a movie or a show (unless I'm really involved in the plot).
Regarding the original question, I don't see any noticeable difference when I'm reading just one book or five at the same time. I usually read at least two books and I have no problems either in following the plot or feeling for the characters (if the books are good, natch).


But it's also a test regarding the writer's work, if you remember it or not. Maybe it's really dull, which is why you don't remember reading it, or caused you to try out another book instead.

I am about to switch to an ereader in the next month or so - It will be interesting to see how it changes when I don't need to think about how much space/weight a book is going to take up in my bag or whether I can stomach being seen on the bus/at work with certain covers (Vaginal Fantasy picks for example).
I don't have problems keeping track to be honest but I can see that it might come down to how good the author's writing is just as Charles said. They also tend to be quite different from each other - one of the reasons I have so many on the go is so that there is something to suit my mood :)

I agree. I listen to podcasts all the time so one would think audioboooks are similar. They aren't. Maybe I just have selective hearing but audiobooks require at MINIMUM double the attention as reading words off of a screen or printed page. I love podcasts, S&L, giantbombcast, even skeptics guide to the universe but audiobooks are nonsense. I can't get on board that train quite yet.
but typically I read 1 book at a time, I can on occasion read a novel and a short stories collection as long as both can hold my attention.



I agree. I never used to read more than one at a time, but my Kindle fire just makes it to easy.
That said, if a book is a "can't-put-down" type, it will get all my focus.
Re: Audiobooks - great for car trips or walking the dog.


So, some say that sometimes they start reading another book and find it more interesting, pausing the first one. Thinking about that, I wonder if you can still consider you're reading a book, when you have it bookmarked but haven't actually read it for one month or so?
Do you think it's all a question of memory? If you still remember where you stopped in all 3 books you have bookmarked in your shelf, after 1 year, are you still reading them?
André


If it is an ok book I will pause somewhere in it and switch to another ok book and then do the same to about three to five books.
If it is a book I am not interested in but want to get through it anyway I pause often to go watch or listen or do something else.
If it is a horrible book I will skip to the end chapter read that so I know what is the conclusion and move on. I will give horrible books another chance after a year or more to see if it was just a bad time for me to start reading it or if it was really a horrible book.


Someone mentioned memory as a problem, but I've never found that to be the case; as soon as I start reading again, the part of my head that holds my.... call it "session state" gets loaded into my head. If it's a book I've to the side for a while, well, I can always review the previous pages. A quick skim is aways enough.

I listen to audiobooks after I read a book usually, though I don't listen to many books. I like to listen to podcasts while I work and music while I read, and that doesn't leave a lot of time for audiobook listening.

Fiction is quite different and I prefer to stay with a story - I read extremely quickly so it's more like the attention required for a film. If I'm excited about something then everything falls away for a few days til the next thrill comes along!




Biochem/Neuroscience/German postgrad here. Lots of different subject within that. My first year alone was multiple topics in Biochem plus two types of Chemistry plus Maths plus German. I don't think it's that in my case, though - I've always been able to have multiple books going on since I was a child, and my 6yo daughter is the same.

That's part of what differentiates recreational reading for me. For whatever time I have available, I can sit down and focus on the one book, one world, one set of characters, and come back next time and continue. The persistence and continuity is a refreshing change for me.

There's a scene in the first season of The Gilmore Girls in which Rory is packing her bag for school and on top of all of her school books she has three or four books for personal reading. I related to that scene so well because I used to be the same way - I'd pack my bag and I'd then cram in whatever books I'd be reading at the time. At one point, on top of all of my school books I had Lord of the Rings (one of those collected editions that has all three books in one), Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and a huge hardback copy of Michael Crichton's Jurassic Park. (On a sad note, the bag got stolen from me before I could finish Jurassic Park)
That all changed when I started doing the IB (International Baccalaureate, for those who have never suffered the horrors) and I ended up having to read 8 books at once for my english class. This was mostly due to staffing shortages (We had to cram 2 years worth of reading into two thirds of the second year) and that really took the enjoyment out of reading for me for a long time.
Now, I generally have a "to do" list of books and I will plan ahead which books I'm going to read and what order I'm going to read them in but I'll generally only pick up and read one at a time.
I used to enjoy reading a bunch of different books at once purely because I would have something on the go that would fit pretty much whatever mood I was in or just was in whatever particular style I felt like reading and I could just slip into and out of these worlds as and when I felt like it and I didn't feel any rush to finish a book or that I had to finish a book before I started on the next.

Incidentally, this torrent of information, and the consequential pace of life also means that authors need to unlearn a lot of the habits they pick up banging out hasty emails and relearn the art of good writing.
A
Books mentioned in this topic
A Game of Thrones (other topics)The Unbearable Lightness of Being (other topics)
Hundre år (other topics)
Earthseed (other topics)
The Magicians (other topics)
I see that lots of people read more than one book at the same time and I'm curious to know, if you feel you're able to fully enjoy the stories and all the details?
Don't you feel a certain rush, knowing you have other books to read, that might make you not pay as much attention as if you were reading a single book, specially if you don't have enough free time to read?
I mean, I can read a book and listen to another in audiobook format but that's about it, otherwise I think I wouldn't be able to enjoy them as much.
I guess what I'm asking is if you feel that as you increase the quantity of books, helped by the different formats, you lose reading quality?
André
P.S. - Hope this makes sense, in my "Engrish" ;)