As you already know, I am an avid reader, and reading is not only one of my favorite things to do but is also something I feel really constitutes a big part of who I am.
When I was younger I had a habit of never leaving a book I started reading, even if I didn’t like it. As I grew older I became (a little) less strong-headed and also realized that if I don’t seem to “click” with a certain a book, there are two possibilities:
1. I really don’t like the book. In this case – why suffer? Better go on to something more enjoyable.
2. This is not the right timing for me to meet this book. I have let a few books “ripe” in my library, and to my surprise a book I could not get over page 20 in at one point was read in one continous read three years later.
That said, I sometimes go through periods in which I find it very difficult to read anything. These episodes are rare, but they do happen. They make me wonder – is there a “Reader’s Block” similar to a writer’s block?
Lately I find myself picking one book after another, reading a few dozen pages and leaving them for a later date, or moving very slowly through them. I started getting worried until I found this lovely book – The Oxford Murders (Crímenes imperceptibles) by Argentinian author Guillermo Martínez – an enjoyable, easy to read, intelligent little thriller that I finished in two days’ reading on the bus on my way to work.
Although I am still struggling with other books I started, this gave me hope that this phase shall and can pass.
Tags: Crímenes imperceptibles, Guillermo Martínez, Reader's Block, The Oxford Murders
3 Comments
I know the feeling, but I think I’m a little too extreme. Sometimes (maybe to do with the weather) I can read up to 3 books at the same time, and other times I can’t hold on to a single book. I have 4 books by my side of the bed right now waiting for me to start on.
I have gone through blocks to reading. One lasted for many years. I think my mind was preoccupied with other things–nothing specific that I could feel. From this experience i know that my head cannot be wallowing in other things if i want to read. Reading requires space in my head–free space.
The good news is that i have made up for all that lost time and read a lot. Forming a bookclub helps
About traveling–I do a lot of it so I have to have books besides guide books. I try to immerse myself in the literature of the country that I am visitng. I just spent 6 weeks in Japan and read a lot of Japanese literature in English. Here is a recomendation for a mystery/crime feminist read: Natsuo Kirino’s Out.
Carol,
You’re right – reading does require some mental space.
The tip about reading the literature of the country you’re visiting is great – how didn’t it occur to me before?
Thanks for the recommendation – I am definitely going to get my hands on it.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
Leave a comment