Speed reading

I have this rule with books; If it’s boring and doesn’t entertain, inform, or grip you in the first 5 chapters or around 30 pages, bin it. That is to say don’t continue reading just for the sake of it. Just because your favourite aunt bought it for your birthday or your sister bought it for you for Christmas. Sell it, donate it to charity, or re-gift it to someone you think is more likely to appreciate it.

That was my rule.

I’ve slightly modified this rule for where the book contains content or information that you need to know, or you have been asked to read it for work, a book club, or another reason whereby you will be asked questions later. In this scenario I speed-read it.

Speed-reading is an artform in itself and each individual undertakes it differently. For me it depends on whether the book is fiction or non-fiction.

For fiction I kind of stare at the page unfocused picking out key-words and following the gist of the story. I look for any change in pace or emphasis on something important in the text. I take around 5-seconds a page this way, taking longer when I find something worth reading. I can guarantee that after some considerable practice I can finish most fiction books in an hour or two max.

For non-fiction I’ll read the back-cover, the inside jackets, and scan the table of contents. Then I’ll flick through each page only stopping if anything of interest catches my eye. I’ll have already noted sections or pages that I want to take a little more time with from reading the TOC. This way I’ll have gotten what I wanted from the book.

Not every book should be read from cover-to-cover. True, you may have your favourites, well worn copies that you’ve read many times. But you will encounter tomes that are just dull, badly written, with no life in them. And the older you are the less time you are willing to waste on bad prose. In fact feel free to speed-read these posts or skip them all together. I’m not writing them to make money. I’m writing them for me. But they may contain some nuggets of wisdom, so feel free to practice your speed-reading.

Cyberpunk

I loved cyberpunk.

I would religiously read William Gibson, Neal Stephenson, Bruce Sterling, and Rudy Rucker. But what happened? There’s been nothing really good since Neuromancer and Snow Crash in my opinion. Has the cyberpunk genre died?

Well there’s Richard Morgan’s Altered Carbon, which was made into two TV series. I highly recommend checking out series one and forgetting that there was a sequel. There’s the never-ending legacy that is Blade Runner. We had 2049 then Black Lotus with more on their way. PKD’s universe is here to stay with Spinners and Frank Lloyd Wright architecture blended with neon imprinted on our retinas.

But has there been any really good cyberpunk written since the aforementioned works? It’s as if the cyberpunk genre is no longer of interest as we live in a technological world. Or maybe consumers prefer to consume the genre in the form of video games, TV shows, and movies, rather than books. Paper is so.. retro.

Whatever the reason, I’m wearing out my copies of Neuromancer and Snow Crash as I re-read them each year in anticipation of some new author releasing a cyberpunk masterpiece.

Do you have any recommendations?

Only so many books

I read an article once on the art of finishing. It was more how to end something than finish it. If you are several chapters into a book and you are not enjoying it, put it down and read something else. Don’t force yourself to keep going in the hope that it gets better. If you are 15-20 minutes into a TV show or movie and you are bored just turn it off and go find something more interesting to watch.

There are so many books in this world that there really is no excuse to waste your time reading something boring. There are only so many books that you can read.

Take the average life expectancy for your country and gender, minus your current age, and times by twelve. Now times that by the amount of books that you generally read in a month. That’s how many books you have left to read, in theory. I’m guessing that it’s not a huge number. So why waste time on books that don’t interest you? Fill the time with books you enjoy. There are only so many books you can read.