One more simple lesson that I learned only in my early twenties.
You don’t need to finish every book.
This is a simple but powerful lesson. It reduces the mental burden of starting a new book to near zero. I’m now comfortable putting a book down 200 pages in. And that makes it much easier to start the next 600 page novel.
High school english classes teach us the wrong way to read books. It took me a long time to unlearn what I was taught.
Have this compulsive need to complete the entire book.
Afraid, that not devoting enough effort I will shortchange my reading effort. That I'd be withdrawing from a challenging but fruitful experience (if the text is difficult, or the author's style is boring or has a level of incomprehensibility).
I resolved this dilemma by at least making it half way through a book, or at least first two chapters for those dreadful cases. Or not at all, as of late, have realized that there is just so much to read, that no need to waste on uninteresting/uninspired.
The difficulty with this advice is that many great books start slow, particularly since they were written in times where people had plenty of time spare for reading, or they were published in serial form where the author was paid by the word, and so stretched out as far as possible.
This doesn't make them any less great, but it does mean that if you filter them because "I'm a little bored 100 pages in", you're losing out on some of the best stuff.
One more simple lesson that I learned only in my early twenties.
You don’t need to finish every book.
This is a simple but powerful lesson. It reduces the mental burden of starting a new book to near zero. I’m now comfortable putting a book down 200 pages in. And that makes it much easier to start the next 600 page novel.
High school english classes teach us the wrong way to read books. It took me a long time to unlearn what I was taught.