ext_129775 (
eattheolives.livejournal.com) wrote in
christianreader2010-01-21 07:52 pm
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Have your reading habits changed over the years? Since I have kept a list of all the books I've read for over nine years now (I was thinknig it was five years, since I started keeping track in 2000 ... my how time flies), I've been able to really notice shifts in my reading patterns - nine years ago I read almost exclusively fiction; probably 10/90, if even that. At one point my parents - who never really monitered my reading in any other way - started strongly suggesting that I should read a nonfiction book for every two fictions I consumed.
For the last number of years the split has been more 50/50. A big factor, I think, is working at a library - I am exposed to SO many more nonfiction books in the course of my job thnt I ever was when I just haunted the fiction shelves. And with reading so much nonfiction, I think it's changed my standards for fiction. It takes a lot more for a novel to grab me than it did before.
How about you?
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I definitely used to read more nonfiction when I was in my early 20s. I think because I just wanted to learn and I was a lot less cynical about what I could learn from nonfiction (especially Christian). I was all into books about marriage, Christianity, or even personality and stuff. But then I kind of got frustrated or maybe bored with some of the helpful books, and I found much more enjoyment in fiction.
I need to branch out, though, because I'm sure I would enjoy some other types of nonfiction such as biographies and memoirs!
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Also, when it comes to Christian nonfiction, I've gotten to the point where I've gotten somewhat saturated reading human interpretations on scripture; I'd rather read the scripture directly. (I just sort of gravitated this way, but I think it has something to do with the idea in I Corinthians 3:1-4: There is a time for being milk fed, and there is a time for solid food.)
I think most of us have different stages in our lives, and these stages reflect our purposes in reading and thus our reading choices.
Marie, I am really impressed with you reading the entirety of non-fiction books. I have always found it easy to read only portions of non-fiction books that particularly interest me, and then move on to the next thing.
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(I really, really liked Julie Andrew's recent memoir, Home. Even if you aren't that interested in her personally, I think it would still be interesting - she has a beautiful way of writing.)
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