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August 23, 2006

In Process

When I surf around the Internet, I’m always amazed at the books other literary bloggers manage to read. Although I pick up a book every day, I often feel inadequate because I don’t get through enough books and my choices aren’t always “quality” literature. As examples, Patrick of Litblog has finished 29 books so far in 2006, and his list makes me feel like a real dummy since I only recognize a handful of the titles. Mental multivitamin’s most recent “on the nightstand” post features eight books currently in process around the house. And I’d never be able to converse books with Conversational Reading since I haven’t read a one from his massive list of 41 recently read titles.

So far in 2006, I’ve finished 30 books. A decent number, but 13 of them were children’s books, including the last seven from A Series of Unfortunate Events, and didn’t require a whole lot of mental processing. The rest of them weren’t very highbrow, although I did manage to get through A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce and was reminded why I never finished it in high school. I suppose I should just get over it. But I think you can tell a lot about a person by what they read, so I wonder what assumptions some might make about me from my book list.

I wandered around the house this morning and found the four books I currently have in process:

Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem was sitting on my dining room table. I already read it once this year with the intention of using it for June’s abandoned discussion. During that reading, I dogeared a bunch of pages to reference in questions and by now I can’t remember what I originally wanted to point out. My plan is to read it again and see if the dogears trigger any ideas. I haven’t been doing so well since I’m only on page 2.

How to Grow More Vegetables by John Jeavons has found a home on the coffee table. It was a gift from a friend who thought it would give me some gardening ideas, so I’ve been kicking around a plan to begin composting.

The South Beach Diet by Arthur Agatston went from storage to kitchen counter after a particularly harsh encounter with the bathroom scale. When I tried the diet the first time, I didn’t lose any weight but didn’t gain any either. I did like the focus on vegetables and eliminating most pound-packing carbs, so I thought I’d give it a go again. However, this morning’s breakfast of Vegetable Quiche Cups to Go wasn’t very filling and I’m already thinking about what else is in the fridge.

The Life of Elizabeth I by Alison Weir was in bed. I don’t have a nightstand, so whatever I do before sleep turns into a bedmate. Other bedmates often include eyeglasses, TV remote, magazines, newspapers, and catalogs. This book was acquired with several others from Kate’s mom, and it fits well into the non-fiction trend I’ve been on recently. Sadly, I’m confused as hell. The narrative is more topical than chronological and I’ve bogged myself down with trying to figure out what happened when. Having to go back and reread is making it last forever, so I may need to sacrifice some understanding in the interest of time.

Hmm.



comments

I often feel that way about my reading. I try to slip in the odd literary work or two just so I can say "look I read smart books too!" when I share my reading list. But realistically I find they take too much time and thought to read very often. I'd rather immerse myself in a really good book that I am going to enjoy reading, and also that I will actually finish! I tend to read in snippets whenever I get a spare 10 minutes to do so, and literary works don't fit into that for me.

Good to know it isn't only me. I also throw in "smart" books every once in a while but the in-betweens are pretty fluffy. For me, reading is mostly a form of entertainment and should be enjoyable. Having to use a lot of brain power all the time can feel like work.

I'm a librarian by profession and though I handle dozens of books a day and skim several, i only mannage to really sit down and read about 30 a year.

Makes me wonder just what sort of books The president who apparently has read 60 books in only eight months, is reading.

I often have three or four books that I am reading at the same time. I have found that I read fully about 30 precent of those I start. Part of it is lack of discipline, but it is generally because I do not want to waste my time reading books I do not enjoy or learn from (sometimes the same thing). I will try both 'highbrow' and popular books, or I will often judge a book by its cover. I have given up reading to impress.

I almost don't know what reading a book means anymore. It seems like eons since I read one front to back, all the way through in something like under a week. Only happens with stories, mysteries mostly, but I mainly read non-fiction. The partially read litter my entire house, in stacks everywhere. The great unread include the really good ones -- that I am saving for later because I can't bear to be disappointed again. The ones that I know are really good but somehow I never got a real hook into. The ones I consult from time to time, looking up particular topics. And then a somewhat mediocre book may come along and I'll read it straight through and I don't even know why. As an author myself I know my books meet the same fate and it pains me, but how can I cast a stone? By the end of the year I've probably read at least 200 books, cracked them open and cast eyes on them to some extent, that is. I tell myself that buying books, at least, counts for something. Doesn't it?

Although I've tried reading more than one book at a time, I just can't do it. Of the 4 books listed in the post, none of them are still in process and none of them were finished. (Well, Motherless Brooklyn was a reattempt for September's discussion since I had already read it earlier in the year, but the reread failed.) I'm now back to reading one book and one book alone.

 

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