Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was surprised to go to Costco today, after many years, and not see a single book. I was so excited to see the book section. That caught me off guard, and frankly, made me worry about trends.
I read a lot, usually 50 books a year, though this year I'll probably only hit 40-42 due to watching more TV.
I hope that is just due to the rise in using Kindles. But that’s probably too pollyannaish.
Anonymous wrote:I was surprised to go to Costco today, after many years, and not see a single book. I was so excited to see the book section. That caught me off guard, and frankly, made me worry about trends.
I read a lot, usually 50 books a year, though this year I'll probably only hit 40-42 due to watching more TV.
how do you have time?Anonymous wrote:I am 45 and almost all of my friends read. My circle of "mom friends" all read, but yes mainly chick lit, mysteries, and best sellers.
A good percentage of my work colleagues read as well (ranging in age from 25-60). I wonder if the fact that we're in an arts field correlates to producing readers? This circle reads more widely - lots of nonfiction and classics, also books in translation.
I read about 80 books a year - a mix of contemporary award winners (Women's Prize for Fiction, Booker, International Booker, National Book Award, etc.), classics (I read all of Proust last year as an example), nonfiction on historical biographies/exploration/etc., and lighter fare like mysteries and historical fiction.
Both of my kids read (they are boys 14 and 12)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
She wrote my favorite book! About the “reading brain” in the digital age. I highly highly recommend it. Reading her prose alone was unexpectedly satisfying. Her language is deliberate and concise with specific, concrete word use. I could feel my brain growing joyously as I read it. Sounds ridiculous, but it’s a must read. It’s fascinating to boot.
You what I did? No lie - I went to her website to see if she had a twitter I could follow. Then I realized what I was doing. Doh.
Anonymous wrote:I started listening to audiobooks a few years ago and it’s been a game changer. I have so much more time to listen to a book than I do to sit and read (walking the dog, washing dishes, folding laundry). I don’t know how many books I listen to in a year, but I’m always listening to a book, and I love it.
Anonymous wrote:We’re all reading here instead? Lol
Anonymous wrote:We have a more educated population yet there's been a reduction in the reading level that seems to line up with the rise of social media.
Some Tech guru (Dorsey?) said something about how we don't "need" War and Peace anymore, we can do it briefly with the new advances.
In his day, Charles Dickens was massively popular among factory workers, but in today's much more educated population people say "it's too intellectual, 600 pages is too long" etc. Apparently we don't need great literature anymore because there's Twitter, Tiktok and ChatGPT.
It's a strange phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People didn't read the original Dickens or Dumas all at once. They were installments in magazines and paid by the page.
This. It was like watching a TV show or multi-part video. Also it was *about* them / relevant to their lives in a way it isn't relevant to ours. Still great stories, I love Dickens, but you need to understand the context.
I'm a voracious reader -- I read easily 50 books a year -- but OP would probably scoff at my choices. Sci fi, romance, YA, maybe a little comedic non-fiction. I'm an escapist reader, I have no interest in heavy drama.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you?Anonymous wrote:I read books everyday. I read entertaining fluff books and deep thoughtful books, current books, older books and classics, fiction and nonfiction. I also listen to audio books daily, when I exercise or am driving, and have a book on my phone Kindle app always available for times when I do not have my actual book available. It's by Upton Sinclair, second in a series, about 1000 pages.
Both of my adult kids read more than I do and recommend books to me. I live in a community where almost all my friends read and share books. I go to a monthly book discussion group where 8+ people discuss what they are reading and whether they recommend or not. There is a well stocked library in our clubhouse building in addition to nearby public libraries.
I don't know who you are hanging out with but clearly my experience, now and all of my life, is vastly different from yours regarding reading.
Late 60s. I have plenty of time to read but I do lots of other things too. My kids work full time and lead busy lives but yet they read a whole lot.
It’s your age. All of my baby boomer/silent gen family members do though. I think other things consume the time of Millennials. Their “reading” also comes in other avenues like podcasts.
From a SM perspective, GenZ is really trying to make reading more popular with all the book tokers.