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Monthly Archives: April 2011

Blog Under Construction

The blog looks a bit garish right now. I’m still working on it. I will find something better soon. I hope.

Addendum: I took out the extra starry background, which helps. I’m still not sure about the header. It fails, for instance, to say the name of the blog, which, one would think, might be useful.

Three Kinds of Reading

I posted my JBR List two posts back. It was incomplete; none of the nonficiton I read was on there. I’ve been thinking about how I read, and I have admit, I don’t read every book the same way.

1) Fast reading.
This is also called “speed reading,” like the reading you learn in “speed reading” classes. I did not learn to read this way from a class. It was my natural way of reading, and later I learned that other people did not read the same way. Basically, I skim along the sentences very fast, taking in the information visually, not by subvocalizing the words. This means I can read a novel in a few hours, but it has its downside too. I am terrible at proofreading, because my eyes simply skip along the text, and if there are missing or misspelled words, my brain simply fills them in correctly. I often don’t consciously experience the words qua logos but as images, like a movie playing in my mind.

2) Data mining.
This is a technique for reading non-fiction that I learned in grad school, also reffered to as “gutting” a book. I look for the thesis, the topic sentence, the supporting arguments, and skip the decorative prose. Basically, I strip the book down to its bones, its outline. I can gut a book in about twenty minutes.

Out of curiosity, I’ve tried this technique on fiction, to see if it is as useful. If one is reading solely for entertainment, perhaps not; it destroys one’s sense of full immersion in the story, the “movie in the mind.” For a writer, however, I strongly recommend trying it. Not all the time, or you will lose your enjoyment in reading, which is deadly, though probably also a stage every writer goes through at one point. But it can also greatly enhance you love of literature to step back and x-ray the bones of the story, the armature that supports the prose.

3) Close reading.
There may be other understandings of the term “close reading,” but I use it to mean when I read very slowly, sometimes subvocalizing, but definitely seeing the words for themselves, how they fit together, how they roll off the tongue, how they link up and lean forward. In non-fiction, I do this with difficult texts. I must read all Philosophy this way, or I lose track of what the author is arguing. (Sometimes I do anyway.)

For instance, a book that you would have seen on my JBR List, if I had included nonfiction, was I is an Other: The Secret Life of Metaphor and How It Shapes the Way We See The World. Therein, you will find this paragraph:

Understanding a metaphor (like reading a book about that process, in fact) is a seemingly random walk through a deep, dark forest of associations. The path is full of unexpected twists and turns, veering wildly off into the underbrush one minute and abrubtly disapearing down a rabbit hole the next. Signposts are like weather vanes. You can’t see the wood for the trees. Then, suddenly, somehow, you step into the clearing. A metaphor is both detour and destination, a digression that gets to the point.

This is a pop philosophy book, it’s not too hard to understand, but still I read it slowly, or at least not quickly, in order to savor paragraphs like this. In this one paragraph the author is self-referential on multiple levels. He directly reminds the reader that this is a book about understanding metaphor, then uses an extended metaphor to describe that process of understanding. He reminds the reader of a metaphorical cliche and at the same time expands the cliche into something new and original. He also manages to slip in a literary hat tip to Alice in Wonderland.

Obviously, close reading can be used for fiction too.

Addendum: A sign of the times on a closing Boarders.

My JBR List

I’ve made more time to read fiction this year. (Some New Year’s resolutions do happen.)

As a child, I devoured fiction, which, unsurprisingly, is where I learned to write, and more importantly, learned to yearn to write. After a while, my non-fiction reading took over, leaving me few hours for novels. I decided to make a conscious effort to make time for fiction. Fortunately, thanks to my Kindle, it’s easier to find odd moments for fun reading, when I wouldn’t be able to do school-related reading anyway.

Here’s the JBR list — “just been read” — books I’ve read so far this year (since Jan. 1):

Faefever
Bloodfever

Save My Soul

My Sister Writes Porn

Soulless

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

Enemies and Allies

Slave

The Crown Conspiracy
Avempartha
Nephron Rising
The Emerald Storm
Wintertide

A Discovery of Witches

House of Skin

Firelight

I also have a long TBR List. I’ll list those books as they are converted to my my JBR List.  🙂