Anonymous wrote:Reading is a gateway drug. I don't care if Colleen Hoover got someone hooked if it brings them into the world of books. And I cannot stand CH books myself. There are phases of life for everything. I have read many great pieces of literature but I've really enjoyed going down the Sarah J Maas rabbit hole this year. I'm a middle aged woman democrat with three small kids, ESCAPISM its not a dirty word!
Anonymous wrote:Its great people are celebrating reading but why did Fourth Wing need to happen???? 21 hours of audio that I will never get back - book club pick
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t subscribe to the ‘any reading is good’ belief. Most people can read. There’s nothing inherently virtuous about it. Reading terrible, cliche books does nothing for one’s intellect or anything. If you want reading to be a past-time like Marvel movies or trashy tv, that’s fine, but don’t expect people to run to you for opinions on what is and isn’t good and definitely don’t expect people to think of you differently because you’re a “reader.”
Popular books like James Patterson and Brandon Sanderson are like candy. Fun in small doses, unhealthy if it’s all you consume.
How are they unhealthy?
Agreed. It's an elitist take that probably has the PP missing a lot of fantastic books.
Not saying I read James Patterson (not my genre), but I feel a kinship with every bookworm in this forum, regardless of what they read. It's a little sad to see some kinds of readers as less then because they engage with books you don't enjoy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t subscribe to the ‘any reading is good’ belief. Most people can read. There’s nothing inherently virtuous about it. Reading terrible, cliche books does nothing for one’s intellect or anything. If you want reading to be a past-time like Marvel movies or trashy tv, that’s fine, but don’t expect people to run to you for opinions on what is and isn’t good and definitely don’t expect people to think of you differently because you’re a “reader.”
Popular books like James Patterson and Brandon Sanderson are like candy. Fun in small doses, unhealthy if it’s all you consume.
How are they unhealthy?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t subscribe to the ‘any reading is good’ belief. Most people can read. There’s nothing inherently virtuous about it. Reading terrible, cliche books does nothing for one’s intellect or anything. If you want reading to be a past-time like Marvel movies or trashy tv, that’s fine, but don’t expect people to run to you for opinions on what is and isn’t good and definitely don’t expect people to think of you differently because you’re a “reader.”
Popular books like James Patterson and Brandon Sanderson are like candy. Fun in small doses, unhealthy if it’s all you consume.
Anonymous wrote:Anything that gets more people to read is a positive in my book!
People who seek out “quality books,” however they define that, will do so with our without BookTok etc.
But so many people who otherwise would not be reading these days are picking up a book or two because of BookTok. So I see it as adding overall readers, which is great!!
I see it in with my teenage daughter and her friends. They’re all smart, academic kids who used to read A LOT until middle school (and their phones …) But they're back into it now - squeezing in some “fun” / recreational reading in between Macbeth for school and sports practices etc. It’s great!! (It also got DD back into going to B&N and the library, where she’s also come out with “better” books, in addition to the latest Emily Henry book or novel with a pretty cover and “Summer” in the title. 😂)
Anonymous wrote:Reading is better than not reading. Full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading is better than not reading. Full stop.
Someone who uses full stop is probably better off doing something else. The reading is promoting mindless cliches for you to parrot.