Anonymous wrote:People's capacity to read books has absolutely declined. There's no question about it. A 400 page novel used to be easy reading for any reasonably intelligent adult. But these days if you pop into a bookstore everything seems to be novellas if we can call it that. But now we as a society struggle with anything longer than a short magazine article.
I must admit I was once a voracious reader and now in my 40s I barely read a full book in a year. I'm embarrassed by it. But I also notice that when I go into a bookstore to browse the new books, the quality of current fiction seems to have also declined. And the stories themselves? It's either best selling authors from 25 years ago tiredly churning out another version of the same book, or the new young writers all writing the same story, just changing the skin colors or ethnicity, but it's effectively still the same woke story. It's rare for a new book to truly grab me.
Anonymous wrote:I think what's most important is that you're reading. I want to enjoy what I'm reading instead of trying to pretend that I'm some sort of "elevated", highly intellectual person interested in deep philosophical conversations. I've never been that person, never will be that person. I'm good with that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of the popular YA series are 400-600 pages each and have 2-6 installments.
I’m reading a historical fiction series that on book 18 and each book is 350-400 pages.
There are new books that are destined to be classics.
Also, Charles Dickens was a horrible person and I can’t separate his art from who he was, so I’m fine leaving him behind. Bah humbug.
How exactly was Dickens a horrible person? I'm looking at his wiki biography and don't see anything "horrible" by any stretch of the imagination. His marriage clearly was not fulfilling but that's not tantamount to being horrible. But you make it sound like he hired child labor and was cruel to the women of the slums.
His wife was pregnant almost non-stop for ten years. He was also carrying on affairs and she only found out when he accidentally sent a gift for a mistress to his wife.
Then they separated and he decided he would keep four kids and she would figure out the other six.
There’s more to it, but this is common knowledge among British people. It’s a little strange that Americans don’t know and get mad about it if you tell them.
I’m going to guess the wiki for his wife talks about this.
There are definitely things about Charles Dickens’s life that reveal a flawed character. But you need to take into consideration both the many and awful traumas of his childhood, and the norms of the society in which he lived. Having a dozen children was a normative thing in Victorian England and would still be today had we not figured out reliable birth control - just look at the norm in societies where women don’t have access to education and birth control.
I am probably the angriest feminist on this board, who endlessly fumes about the inequality in our society and reading this board I am daily disgusted by the realities of most marriages - I’m sure at one time or another I’ve clucked with sympathy at your marriage, poster, and how you are used and mistreated by your husband.
That said, I can still recognize the genius of Charles Dickens - and forgive him for being a flawed human being because he was able to convey the frailty of humanity including the terrible flaws of character in so many of his novels depicted in both males and females who abused and mistreated the people they loved. That’s life. Dickens is life, in all its glorious ugliness.
Anonymous wrote: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:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of the popular YA series are 400-600 pages each and have 2-6 installments.
I’m reading a historical fiction series that on book 18 and each book is 350-400 pages.
There are new books that are destined to be classics.
Also, Charles Dickens was a horrible person and I can’t separate his art from who he was, so I’m fine leaving him behind. Bah humbug.
How exactly was Dickens a horrible person? I'm looking at his wiki biography and don't see anything "horrible" by any stretch of the imagination. His marriage clearly was not fulfilling but that's not tantamount to being horrible. But you make it sound like he hired child labor and was cruel to the women of the slums.
His wife was pregnant almost non-stop for ten years. He was also carrying on affairs and she only found out when he accidentally sent a gift for a mistress to his wife.
Then they separated and he decided he would keep four kids and she would figure out the other six.
There’s more to it, but this is common knowledge among British people. It’s a little strange that Americans don’t know and get mad about it if you tell them.
I’m going to guess the wiki for his wife talks about this.
There are definitely things about Charles Dickens’s life that reveal a flawed character. But you need to take into consideration both the many and awful traumas of his childhood, and the norms of the society in which he lived. Having a dozen children was a normative thing in Victorian England and would still be today had we not figured out reliable birth control - just look at the norm in societies where women don’t have access to education and birth control.
I am probably the angriest feminist on this board, who endlessly fumes about the inequality in our society and reading this board I am daily disgusted by the realities of most marriages - I’m sure at one time or another I’ve clucked with sympathy at your marriage, poster, and how you are used and mistreated by your husband.
That said, I can still recognize the genius of Charles Dickens - and forgive him for being a flawed human being because he was able to convey the frailty of humanity including the terrible flaws of character in so many of his novels depicted in both males and females who abused and mistreated the people they loved. That’s life. Dickens is life, in all its glorious ugliness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of the popular YA series are 400-600 pages each and have 2-6 installments.
I’m reading a historical fiction series that on book 18 and each book is 350-400 pages.
There are new books that are destined to be classics.
Also, Charles Dickens was a horrible person and I can’t separate his art from who he was, so I’m fine leaving him behind. Bah humbug.
How exactly was Dickens a horrible person? I'm looking at his wiki biography and don't see anything "horrible" by any stretch of the imagination. His marriage clearly was not fulfilling but that's not tantamount to being horrible. But you make it sound like he hired child labor and was cruel to the women of the slums.
His wife was pregnant almost non-stop for ten years. He was also carrying on affairs and she only found out when he accidentally sent a gift for a mistress to his wife.
Then they separated and he decided he would keep four kids and she would figure out the other six.
There’s more to it, but this is common knowledge among British people. It’s a little strange that Americans don’t know and get mad about it if you tell them.
I’m going to guess the wiki for his wife talks about this.
Anonymous wrote:People's capacity to read books has absolutely declined. There's no question about it. A 400 page novel used to be easy reading for any reasonably intelligent adult. But these days if you pop into a bookstore everything seems to be novellas if we can call it that. But now we as a society struggle with anything longer than a short magazine article.
I must admit I was once a voracious reader and now in my 40s I barely read a full book in a year. I'm embarrassed by it. But I also notice that when I go into a bookstore to browse the new books, the quality of current fiction seems to have also declined. And the stories themselves? It's either best selling authors from 25 years ago tiredly churning out another version of the same book, or the new young writers all writing the same story, just changing the skin colors or ethnicity, but it's effectively still the same woke story. It's rare for a new book to truly grab me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of the popular YA series are 400-600 pages each and have 2-6 installments.
I’m reading a historical fiction series that on book 18 and each book is 350-400 pages.
There are new books that are destined to be classics.
Also, Charles Dickens was a horrible person and I can’t separate his art from who he was, so I’m fine leaving him behind. Bah humbug.
How exactly was Dickens a horrible person? I'm looking at his wiki biography and don't see anything "horrible" by any stretch of the imagination. His marriage clearly was not fulfilling but that's not tantamount to being horrible. But you make it sound like he hired child labor and was cruel to the women of the slums.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of the popular YA series are 400-600 pages each and have 2-6 installments.
I’m reading a historical fiction series that on book 18 and each book is 350-400 pages.
There are new books that are destined to be classics.
Also, Charles Dickens was a horrible person and I can’t separate his art from who he was, so I’m fine leaving him behind. Bah humbug.
Anonymous wrote:I know it’s ironic to be recommending a book here, but I found Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention and How to Think Deeply Again by Johann Hari to be very enlightening. It goes into depth on what has already been said here (we can’t read books because our attention spans are shot from scrolling our phones, etc), and really inspired me to change my habits. It’s a very well-researched and well-written book.
Anonymous wrote: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)