I've been looking back on some of my favorite posts from prior years tonight, and I thought this one was still kind of fun. It was originally posted in November 2011, and my personal situation has changed a bit: no 40-hour a week job, the grandkids are driving themselves around (the oldest is even a senior at Texas A&M now), things like that. So I have more time to read - but for some reason still read about the same number of books a year that I've always read. Anyway, I thought some of you might enjoy seeing it, and might even have some new tips to add to the end. Let me know, if so.
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My friends tell me I’m weird, that I don’t have a life. I’m pretty sure they would say that about anyone who averages 125 books read per year, though, so I don’t take it personally. Consider, too, that 125 books is a relatively low count when compared to the 250, 300, or 1,000 books that are read every year by some people I’ve met on the Internet (I suppose that means some people are just exceptionally weird). And, honestly, if you push me hard enough, I’ll tell you how weird I think people are who don’t read more than five or six books a year…or (shudder) even read none.
Now let me tell you about my other life –
the one that happens when I’m not reading – the one that takes up most of my
time. I work slightly more than forty
hours per week on the job that pays for the books on my shelves. I am an avid sports fan (Houston Texans
season ticket holder) who attends professional sporting events on a regular
basis. I have three very active
grandchildren whom I help cart around all over town to their own activities,
activities that often have me in the viewing audience: dance classes and
recitals, pee wee league football games, little league baseball games, and the
like…and I’m still happily married to the woman who loves to help me decide how
we are going to spend our spare time.
So how does anyone read a large number of
books per year? Well, it’s pretty easy,
actually. These tips are guaranteed to
up your reading count. Pick the ones you
feel comfortable with, and let me know if they work for you or not. If you
want to add to the list, please let me know and I’ll credit you guys with
numbers 55 forward.
- Read during your lunch hour, something especially easy to do if you eat at your desk each day
- Read the first thing every morning - get up 15 minutes early and begin your day by reading a few pages
- Turn off the television set - or, better yet, don't turn it on (See number 4, below)
- Use your DVR to record the television you really want to see - quit channel surfing your evenings away
- Don't get lost inside Facebook or Twitter for hours and hours of your precious spare time - it's easy to catch up when you log back in
- Read while brushing your teeth - especially easy if you use an electric toothbrush with a built in timer
- Read when stuck in lines at banks, government offices, etc.
- Read while stuck behind long lines of traffic at slow stop lights
- Listen to recorded books while commuting
- Stay excited and informed about new books being published
- Browse bookstores and grab whatever catches your eye - first impressions are important
- Find two or three authors whose work you love - and read everything they've written
- Change your reading pattern/rut - alternate fiction with nonfiction, biographies with travel books, etc.
- Have reading apps on your smart phone - use them when you are trapped in a boring place all alone
- Set reading goals and speak of them publicly
- Keep a running list of what you read
- Join a book club
- Visit your local library regularly, especially the "new books section"
- Read the classics from your favorite genre - books by the early masters of scifi, mystery, thriller, horror, etc.
- Read from a list of winners and nominees: Pulitzer Prize, National Book Award, Man Booker
- Read translated novels and painlessly learn what makes other cultures tick
- Specialize in authors from particular countries or geographical regions
- Read local authors
- Re-read books that excited you as a young reader
- Read the classics - guaranteed to be better than you remember them from high school or college
- Find a bookstore specializing in what you enjoy reading most
- Find a reading buddy or two whose taste and recommendations you can trust
- Be a reading mentor to a child or young adult
- Use your credit card points to add to your book budget - the Barnes & Noble credit card is perfect for book lovers
- Read lots of book blogs, both individual and corporately sponsored ones
- Become aware of your activities that do nothing but pointlessly kill time; pick up a book instead
- When watching television alone, read during those endless commercial breaks
- Always have more than one book in progress
- Always know what your next book is going to be
- Trade books with friends and family members
- Buy used books to stretch your book budget
- Become a book collector specializing in an author, genre, publisher, decade, etc.
- Attend book signings at local bookstores
- Attend public readings at local colleges and universities
- Volunteer to read to struggling readers at local elementary schools
- Volunteer to read to the elderly with failing eyesight
- Read books about books - about bookstores, collectors, fakers, mysteries, libraries
- Attend state book festivals - they draw large numbers of authors to one site
- Treasure hunt in used book bookstores
- Watch movies made from books and compare the two versions (books always win)
- Collect signed books
- Read debut novels from fresh voices
- Participate in web-based book exchanges
- Browse the shelves of friends and relatives; you might learn something new about them and yourself
- Shop at Friends of the Library book sales
- Always carry a spare book in your car - you never know when you're going to need it
- Keep an e-book reader in your coat pocket
- Take advantage of all the free, or very cheap, e-book offers out there
- Read on your monitor screen when all else fails
- Read while your small children are napping (courtesy of Jeanne)
- Read while nursing your baby (courtesy of Jeanne)
- Add valuable reading hours to your week by using public transportation for commuting (courtesy of Ted)
- Download audio books to your iPod and listen to them while working out or doing chores around the house (courtesy of Sally)
- Keep book of favorite quotes found while reading (courtesy of Susan Sanders)
- Read while fishing (courtesy of Susan Sanders)
- Read while monitoring kids in bath (courtesy of Susan Sanders)
- Read books mentioned in other books you are reading (courtesy of Santosh)
- Read while fishing - during those downtimes when the fish aren't cooperating (courtesy of Jenclair)
I used to read while fishing. Or rather, when they weren't biting, I'd read while my husband kept fishing. :)
ReplyDeleteI like it, Jenclair...and it is soon to be number 63. Thanks.
DeleteWow, this is a great list! I do a lot of these. Not watching t.v. is probably the thing that gives me the most reading time during the day. Some people I know are amazed that I read around 200 books a year -- I'm amazed at how much crap t.v. they watch day in and day out! I'd rather read any day.
ReplyDeleteSusan, I can't imagine 200 books a year at the speed at which I read. I'm quicker with fiction than nonfiction, but speed is definitely what determines how many books I'll get through in a year. The most I've ever read is 150 or so, but that was a few years ago. I don't watch much TV anymore other than baseball games and a few of the news shows. My big time consumer is Netflix when I get hooked on a several-season series; then I tend to binge-watch for a week or two while feeling guilty about wasting so much time.
ReplyDelete