BEST ADVICE FOR SLOW READERS
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- Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
- This video gives advice for those who consider themselves slow readers. It is done in the style of a classroom lesson. If you watch all the way through you will be motivated as a slower reader to take on even the large classics; embrace your reading pace; stop checking to see how many pages you have left; and to find true enjoyment in your reading.
How many times have you looked at great classic books and thought of the delight of having read them. So often, though, readers fail to take on these classic books because of the time they take to read.
If you have the goal of reading more classics in the new year, you likely know the feeling of running out of motivation; or starting to check how many pages you have left to read; and then eventually giving up on your reading goals.
In this video we will look at 3 hugely important things to keep in mind if you feel that you are a slow reader.
Which tip do feel is most beneficial for you.
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I wish you joy in your reading.
I LOVED IT! I posted on Fb.
Thank you SO much. I really appreciate it 😊 🙏
@tristanandtheclassics,
I sincerely apologize.
Kind regards.
Great advice. Can’t believe I’m just learning this at 76 🤨. So 10 pages a night it is! Maybe I’ll cancel my newspaper and read books instead 😊 I’ve only just come across your channel - thank you so much ☺️
or read first in the morning, top of your concentration, with your coffee, to replace the newspaper, or worst, the tv news. The craziness of the world can wait, Eileen reads his bokks! 😉
“Treat a work of art like a prince: let it speak to you first.”
― Arthur Schopenhauer
Wow! Great quote.
Treat an aphorism by Schopenhauer like Prince. Let it do what it wants in an elevator.
As I've grown older, I've realized that this is the best way to read, savoring the words, conversations, characters. In fact, the whole experience is richer. Bravo for expressing this so well!
You are so right, Anna. I think school trains us to view books in the wrong way. When a child discovers books, they simply love getting lost in the story. At school, they are given books to 'get through' for a test. I think this has a damaging effect.
I completely agree with you. It is one of the lessons which I've learnt in my journey of classics to "RELISH EVERY WORD"
At so many art exhibitions people walk up to a painting, whip out their mobile phone, take a quick snap and completely ignore what’s hanging in front of them. They then move on to the next one, as if each work photographed is a conquest. It’s extraordinary, though it’s mainly younger people who do it. Perhaps many people take the same approach to reading.
Slow reader here and this definitely inspired me to be more mindful about what I'm reading and be more immersed in the experience so thank you :)
Hi, Sayona. I'm so pleased that you found this helpful. I wish you great enjoyment in your reading this year.
29:47
I recall that John Steinbeck was a slow reader by his own admission. In the back of one of his books, he published some letters with an editor and said this much: "I literally move my lips. Elaine [Steinbeck's wife] can read four books while I mumble through one. But I guess this isn't going to change."
That's fascinating. Thank you. Really interesting. 😀👍
Also, many of the books you mention (Such as Dickens, Thackery, Dumas, etc.) were issued in serial fashion, so the original readers were forced to stop between chapters and wait a week to get the next installment (like an episodic TV show nowadays). This gave the people time to talk to other readers and to think about what might happen next and to reflect on what they had already read (or perhaps to go back a reread something they particularly enjoyed or had trouble understanding; or something they got a new angle on by talking to someone). By all means, take your time reading these great books. Heavens knows the writers took time to produce them. The words were placed there for you to read, not to speed through as fast as you can (Imagine what Dickens would think about that!). He liked to perform his books, which means that they would be delivered at talking speed).
😅
Agreed. Taken in monthly or weekly installments allows you to step away and come back often when reading large books. I find myself screaming at the author to just get on with the story. Michener used to write great stories but he would go off on a tangent story for 10-20 pages and then return to the main plot which, while interesting, was infuriating as well. I resolve some of this by having about 10 books going at the same time and I have very good retention so I am usually back in the story within a page.
I sew as a hobby and a long time ago I read a quote from a fellow seamstress that said, "it's your hobby, what's your hurry?" This has always stuck with me. I can be slow at sewing and I'm also a slower reader. I've been working to get back into reading more faithfully and appreciate your videos which have been very encouraging to me.
I also sew as a hobby, I love to read but I’m a slow reader too. The last few years I decided to try audio books so I can sew and read simultaneously. It has given me so much joy doing the two things I love very effectively. This video is so helpful and reminds me to enjoy the process and not worry about finishing it quickly.
@FredaM yes, audio books are fantastic in the sewing room!❤️
Your channel is a gift. Keep doing what you're doing, Tristan!
Thank you, that is so kind!
Recently I have found myself reading each word as if I were reading out loud to a child. I got greatly annoyed at myself and tried to speed up. I put this new experience up to aging (I’m 67). But after listening to your video, I realized that I was really slowing down because I was enjoying the book (Middlemarch). I subconsciously wanted to put myself into the story that I was enjoying so much. Thank you for helping to give myself permission to slow down and enjoy. Great video, as usual!
This is a beautiful experience you have shared, Meg. Sometimes, my reading slows down because my mind can not focus or is distracted. This is a real nuisance. But, if I'm slow because I'm hearing a character speak, or I'm trying to visualise in detail, or marvelling at the words, then I have learned to be happy. In truth, even though I took courses to read faster, I still spend most of my time reading with the narrators voice audible in my mind.
My aim, I eventually learned, was not to be the most extensively read, but the most appreciatively read. And it is a lesson I cherish above most others.
totally agree. what's the big damn rush?
I love this comment!
This is exactly what I needed to hear! Goodreads can be toxic, especially when you're trying to hit a certain target of books per year and you just blast through things to get them off of your list. I'm looking forward to savoring my 10 pages a night!
Good for you, Eric. Hope you enjoy your reading even more 😊
It’s the journey, not the destination. This true for probably everything in life. When we rush in order to have accomplished something, we not only deprive ourselves of the pleasure of experiencing the journey, but we may even find ourselves unable to reach the sought-after destination. If I don’t take the time to really learn a difficult section of a piano piece, I will never be able to play it well. If I don’t work through a lot of problems, I will never truly understand the science or math subject I am studying. When we are too focused on reaching our goals, we tend to approach the process too superficially, and so we never achieve mastery.
Beautifully expressed 😊❤️👍
He GETS IT. This video was like a psychedelic trip for me because I'm watching a complete stranger on the screen reading my mind. I've been on a reading slump for 4 years, whoring from genre to genre, making reading lists, goals, projects and deflating shortly after. The problems he described are exactly what has been happening to me; I've been a reader all my life so I don't understand why the reason behind this never dying slump.
Thank you, Tristan. Know that your video made me feel immensely better.
My best advice to slow readers would be to stop regarding yourself as a 'slow' reader, but rather a careful and attentive reader.
Thank you I like your advice ❤
I can't even enjoy reading because it's too exhausting going that slow, but the brains won't give a sh**. So no, I'm just slow and trying to find a way.
'The books we want to have read' vs 'the books we want to read' is a revelation.
I'm so pleased you found it useful 😀😊
What matters is discipline. Just do it! Educate yourself. Never trust others to educate...
Slow reader here. I stopped setting my reading goals as “X number of books per year”. I changed my reading goal to “always have the NEXT book chosen” and I’m much happier 😊
I'm a slow reader. I'm slow generally. Sometimes I can't even be bothered to finish my
😂 I see what you did there!
lol
Clever!
This is just what I needed to hear, Tristan! I am, indeed, a slow reader *and* I am also guilty of being impatient while I'm reading. 🤓 Sometimes, it's just because I want to _know_ the ending, but sometimes it's because I want to get on to the next book! 🙄 I really want to learn to savor what I'm reading and the _ten pages in bed_ suggestion sounds like a good place to start. 📚 Thanks so much!
It's a common issue, Lu. The Impatient Nut is a tough one to crack. When you do, though, it opens a bright new world of experience. Let me know how you get on with the 10 pages a day.
Hi Tristan, I am a very slow reader and moderately dyslexic. Recently, I learned to aim for 25 pages a day, this is working really well for me. I am also a deep reader so find myself stopping to think about a passage and perhaps adding a few notes before I go on. Thanks you for all the recommendations I particularly appreciate the advice of short classics that I can read alongside a longer novel. As I use my IPad for reading. At first I used to give myself a 10 minute reading goal every night but found that it was interfering with my enjoyment of the book and often I would fail the task. Since I have dropped the reading goal to 2 minutes I find that I have often read for 30 minutes or more.
This guy is the most educated person I've seen in my entire life.
He could well author a book himself. When you do, notify us. I will definitely read them.
I'm re-listening while I work today.
If there were book tube oscars, this would get best video of the year.
I cannot express how much I needed to hear all of this.
Thank you, Tristan !
You are wonderful, Christina. I hope that you discover some gold bullion in your backyard.😀
I've been doing this for years lol. My friends make fun of me for setting a regimented schedule, but I'm a slow reader and it allows me to get through books.
Good for you Michael. Its better to enjoy books than torture oneself to read more.
Wow, what great insight and advice! You are spot on about this issue. I never realized why I have such difficulty appreciating art, until I listened to your talk. I have, personally, experienced this impatience and discouragement and let them turn me away from both books and even more so from appreciating a painting. I also love what you say about reading Dickens. This is a truly BRILLIANT talk!!!!
"Reading is about the journey."
Exactly. I am extremely well read. But that's because I started early and I'm now 54. I am a "slow" reader. I.e. I read at a normal/natural pace. I even reread particularly great prose. I rarely DNF a book, even if I dislike it. Sometimes, I even take notes.
My niece reads and logs her words per hour. She has always admired my library. She once asked if I could share my average words/hour, and I told her I have no clue and didn't really understand her question. I told her that I read at the pace the book demands. I think I greatly disappointed her. ;)
Fabulous advice. I’m a slow reader, but I have more time than the average person to read. But I still feel that impatience at not reading faster.
Totally agree. Though I've learned to enjoy meandering through a book, that imp of impatience is ever lurking in some crevice of my mind, waiting to pounce.
Sir, you remind me of the teacher in the movie dead poet's society. Great to have you as a teacher in RUclips. ❤
Love your 'reading in bed before going to sleep' tip - I have done it for years and love it!
And yes, I am a slow reader and I do get impatient when reading books over 400 pages, so I will try to enjoy the process more... wolud be nice!
It does wonders doesn't it? As for overcoming impatience in reading, once I learned to just enjoy a book without needing to rush, I began getting so much more from reading.
You are brilliant Tristan!! Just what a slow reader like me needed to hear; that there’s nothing wrong with it and it’s actually a good thing when it comes to the classics! Thank you so much!!
You're so welcome, Sumathi! I'm just delighted that it struck a chord with you. Enjoy the Classics. By all means study the classics. Never ever rush the classics.
I hit like before the video even started 😅
I am actually a fast reader. I read too fast then forget the whole book shortly after finishing.
My goal is to slow myself down. I've read War and Peace twice but don't feel like I really read it.
Next year I plan on taking the whole year to read it...one chapter a day.
My husband is a slow reader but he remembers every detail of every book..I wish to be more like that.
GREAT video as always. So much still applied to me.....that impatience with big books hit home💖
Hey Christina! Great to hear from you as always. Its nice to be able to read quickly, in many ways. However, as you say, sometimes details or atmospheres can get out or become blurry.
It took me a long time to be content to be slower. Once I decided that I was going to become a citizen of the pages and sojourn in the story, I started to relish my newfound surroundings.
I still get impatient and discontented from time to time, but it passes. The 10 pages in bed has been the greatest reading discovery of my life. It is remarkable how much one can accomplish with that tip alone.
"I am living in the book" ...this needs to be on a t-shirt 😎
@@radiantchristina I'll have to make some merchandise 😅
Annnnnd now I want chocolate 🤗
@@radiantchristina 🤣🤣🤣
Listening to the audiobook as I read along has been incredibly helpful to get me to slow down and really fall into the universe of the book rather than rush through it! 😊
This was a wonderful video, Tristan. I’m a slow, but greedy, reader. My slow reading pace has never bothered me - in fact I’m not even really aware of it. However, since signing up to Goodreads, I’ve found myself constantly checking page numbers. - what page I’m on, and how many I’ve got left. It’s a really annoying and counterproductive habit, one I’m doing my best to break. I’m currently reading Pickwick, Edwin Drood, and at bedtime, Swann’s Way, which I’m reading at around 4 pages a night, because it’s so rich. Why would anyone want to gallop through Dickens or Proust?! Thank you for the tips, you have a beautiful way of putting things. I particularly love the sightseeing analogy! (And now I want a chocolate…)
Thank you, Chrissy. It's wonderful that you are a contented reader. It adorns the reading experience so well. As for Goodreads and the like, I know what you mean. For some reason, these platforms (and I include youtube, for me) can make reading become a competition, or at least a comparative exercise.
Keep wandering among the pages of your books, Chrissy. I'd rather live in the shadow of one wonder for months than have just 30 seconds in front of 100 wonders.
I’ve found that the Reading Challenge for Goodreads can be really intimidating & I end up read in g to fulfill that number. I haven’t really made a reading goal the last few years because I never met it & got in a big reading slump lol
Great advice. I’ve discovered the art of slow reading this year on an online reading group where we read one chapter a day and post our thoughts afterwards. The beauty is you can read a few books at a time 👍
Oh my word, you have described me - to a “T” ! You are a treasure, nicely done.
This was the BEST advice on reading slow! I taught myself years ago to slow down, savor the flavor of the story. When I see rather lenghty chapters I get excited because I anticipate some real detail...Juicy Storytelling that will build on what I've experienced beforehand. Thank you again for this RUclips walk through on reading slow...absolutely splendid inspiration.
You're a wonderful mentor!!
I'm humbly greatful.
Thank you.
This video needs 100x the views it has. Probably the best reading advice video I've ever seen. So necessary in our modern content binging world.
Slow reader here. This is INSPIRING. And not just for reading, for life. Not an understatement. Thank you Tristan for allowing me to accept my reading speed and be happy with it. :)
I am commenting on every video I watch. You are so good at teaching, and explaining, and demonstrating your passion for literature. Honestly, I am learning so much. At 48 I would go back to school again if I had teachers like you. Thank you Tristan.
Wow, thank you! I really appreciate your kindness and support. Thank you so much, Cara.❤️😀
There's wine tasting and then there's... savoring every drop of a wonderful glass of wine.
Amen!
Thank you so much for your advice...as a slow reader I feel much more relaxed and happy! Actually i needed to rediscover the joy of reading without the stress of having to read this or that many books!❤
“We start off all pep and ginger and vim.” Isn’t that the truth with all of us!❤
Thanks Tristan! I’m a very slow reader and to protect myself from the uncomfortable comments like “Are you still reading that book?” I answer “I like to savor my books” I read Anna Karenina this year. 🎉 I just set one chapter every day or so. I’m so glad I read this book. It’s just amazing! I think I could reread it. Next is David Copperfield. Thanks for your channel. Take care.
That's a great way to answer.😀 Anna K is just divine and I want to reread it soon. Let me know how you get on with Copperfield. Dickens characters are like no other.
My sister actually got on me about reading slowly when I was proofreading a 4-page story for my friend, and it took me some time to not get offended and to say “so what”.
Perfect! I love reading, the joy of being inside a good story. In fact, there is a sense of loss when I turn the last page and have to leave that world, so sometimes I wish to be a slower reader.
I can absolutely confirm impatience was ruining my reading experience. I had a year where I read 50 books (mostly thrillers) and thought that I should be able to keep that pace with everything I read. Then, when I looked back at those 50 books later I couldn’t remember any details and in some cases forgot the stories completely. I actually like long novels because I get to know the characters and remember details much longer. I read The Count of Monte Cristo this year and am shocked at how much I still remember, because the book was longer. I made a decision earlier in the year to lower my reading goal on Goodreads and enjoy the books as I was reading them. I just finished Villette and loved it - Gorgeous writing, but the whole book feels like you are meandering around the main character, Lucy Snowe’s, life and thoughts. I would NOT have enjoyed it if I read it with the intention of just finding out what happens. Really appreciate your video and thoughts on this!
Thanks for sharing this experience, Tuesday. You defined so well the pressure that we seem to put upon ourselves. More, more, more, is too often the motto we live by. When, in fact, it should be, Slower, Better, Happier.
This media doesn't help either. We instinctively compare ourselves with others and become disgruntled with our own efforts. But once contentment is found, the rewards are so much the better.
Impatience and Dissatisfaction, Emily Austen’s greatest work.
Jerome and the Water Cooler by Gabriel Kay Garcia Marquis is worth checking out.
I am a slow reader. Thank you for this, it makes me feel so proud, so much better
Tristan, you have made me feel so much better. I have started reading again and enjoying it. Peter
Thank you, Peter. You have no idea how rewarding it is for me to receive a comment like this. I appreciate it greatly.
This was immensely helpful to me. While I don’t consider myself a slow reader, I am guilty of being impatient as I feel I have a great deal of “catching up” to do. I didn’t read as much in my younger years. Now that I’m in my 50s, I’ve realized all I’ve missed out on. This video has highlighted I can’t make it all up in a short time and must enjoy the journey…starting now.
Great insight and advice. A side note here: everything Tristan is saying about reading can be equally applied to how one lives his or her life. The impatience and "dissatisfaction" distracts from understanding that the journey through the book, not the arrival at the end and finishing of it, is the purpose. Relax and enjoy the writer's art, style, method, and story, etc. rather that arriving at, as Tristan says, the "having read" the book.
Very inspirational and motivating for a slow and frustrated reader such as myself. The Metropolitan Museum of Art is midway between my office and home. After work, I would spend an hour in a single room quietly studying each of the paintings; a different room each day. Your video inspires me to apply the same practice to my readings.
This is good news indeed, Anders. So pleased that thus resonated with you. Much of the time, we are frustrated because we feel that we should be somewhere other than where we currently are. Nearly always, those expectations are false. Funnily enough, the book Great Expectations has this as a constant idea.
Love that you spend such thoughtful time in the Museum. You have a mind that yearns to appreciate and wonder. What a golden gift!!!
This video and your philosophy has perfectly, allegorically explained the struggle of life. The journey not the part where we wither away is to be celebrated. What a rich way to put things into perspective.
Tristanandtheclassics,
I must have read this and copied it on the front page of The Count of Monte Christo a few years ago. It is from Samuel Johnson's Miscellaneous Essays, but I believe it is appropriate for slow readers:
" The true art of memory is the art of attention . No man will read with much advantage, who is not able, at pleasure, to evacuate his mind, or who brings not to his author an intellect defecated and pure, neither turbid with care not agitated by pleasure ? If the mind is employed in the past or future, the book will held before the eyes in vain ".
This is so true for those who try to hurry their reading, too. Anxiety to finish a book to get to the next one (eg: a TBR list) will not remember much of what he has read !
You have great analogies and they are a breath of fresh air when so many videos are about increasing quantity and not quality.
Be a citizen of a book's pages - I love that concept.
Tristan, you've just solved the riddle of my reading problems. Thank you!
So pleased you found it helpful 😀
tl;dr: If you can't remember story details because it takes you a long time to get through a book, it might be helpful to take some key notes and keep them with the book as you read.
Longer version: I'm actually a pretty fast reader (actually too fast sometimes, and I find myself needing to slow down to experience all those lovely nuances) BUT I also have an extremely busy life and sometimes don't have time to read as much as I'd like. I also love long books, so it often happens that I'll read, say, 150 or 200 pages over a couple days then get super busy and not be able to read for a week. When that happens, I often forget who characters are or what their relationships are or other useful details, and it's annoying.
So I've developed a habit that might also be helpful for slower readers: I pop a sticky note inside the front cover (usually a pretty large one, and plain, non-sticky paper works fine too) and use it to note down things like character names, place names, family trees, certain dates, and other details that feel like they're important enough that I'll want to remember them for sure. (Side note, this is especially useful with novels that have been translated into English, as the names and places are often unfamiliar to me and therefore hard to remember.) Keeping all this information right IN the book ensures that it's always there for reference when I need it.
It's important, I think, to note that I do NOT take extensive notes here AT ALL! I only write information for the most important or recurring characters, I only do family trees when it's both important to the story AND hard to keep track of or remember, I write in words and short phrases rather than sentences and paragraphs, etc. There's certainly a time and place for longer notes, but this isn't it. Just keep it simple, stick to the most important stuff, and I hope you'll find it as helpful as I do.
As a former English and reading teacher, I would often suggest to my slow or struggling readers to listen to the audio book as they read. Sometimes, someone else setting the pace can be helpful to get you started. Because this channel focuses on classics, most of the books should be easily found on audio.
I’m a native-speaker of English learning Chinese as adult for fun. I read very slowly in Chinese and sometimes I feel like I’ll never finish an entire novel. The advice in this video is actually quite helpful even for people like me. I will just keep reading and forget about the TBR😊 The person who created that TBR isn’t who I am today. I think two to five pages in such a tough language as Chinese and then the remaining in English per night would work well for me. I will also remember to savor my daily chocolate 🍫 ❤
This video is so amazing and inspiring!😅👏. You're so right. This is exactly my problem. I am so impatient!! You deserve so much more recognition. Love your content. You're incredible!👏 🎉😊
First, this man has been looking over my shoulder as I have attempted large books in the past. Thank you for the great advice. Tristan is a wonderful spokesman for reading the classics..
I would say that this is Best Advice for Fast Readers too!! You have inspired me to just...slow...down. I just started reading Rosamond Lehmann's the Weather in the Streets, slowly, and I'm already noticing and appreciating things I probably would have missed before. Thank you so much for this!! (I may eat my next chocolate a little more slowly too!😅)
This was so nice to hear, Kristen. Thank you. Reading at an intentionally slower pace; ambling through the pages at leisure, is a very satisfying experience.
Trying to eat chocolate more slowly, on the other hand, is a much harder task 😅
When I read I hear all the words in my head, in real time. In other words, reading is primarily an *auditory* experience for me. That’s why I read so slow.
I hear when I read, too, Kevin. I can read faster and ot hear as much, but I prefer to hear the narrator and characters.
I’m dating myself but in my youth I took the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course and trained myself to read 2,000 words a minute and read profusely. Then I read Stegner’s “Angle of Repose” and now I read less than 200 words a minute. His writing was so poetic that I savored EVERY word and I’m perfectly content at that speed.
PS. I discovered you yesterday and I’m hooked. Thank you.
I was a faster reader when I was younger. My pace has slowed naturally, for whatever reason, and I find that I delve more deeply into stories and connect with them more when I go slowly. I've stopped caring (for the most part) about how many books I read and more about what I truly want to read. It's been a wonderful thing with some of the longer works like War and Peace, Count of Monte Cristo, and Brothers Karamazov. Thanks for your video, it was lovely to hear your thoughts on this!
Ah Courtney, how splendid that you have attained reading Nirvana! Reading what one wants, at a pace one is content at, is where the luxury begins.
Hi! How do you read war and peace? Do they have books with complete translations including the french dialogues? I can't understand their conversation a lot of times.
@litol.spring I read the Anthony Briggs translation and it translated everything to English.
@@CourtneyReads thank you!
I no longer feel stupid for being a slow reader. I have the advantage of seeing the book in my mind.
I have considered myself a “somewhat fast reader” but have gotten in books and savored so I do know what it is like but now after this I want to “experience more” and will slow down. Sometimes I read a book and then a few months later I struggle to remember things. Thanks for the reminder and the tip on enjoying a chocolate.
“A citizen of its pages.” I just love your channel!
Great video! Two months ago, I started reading Great Expectations (I am not a native English reader) and then I had a lot on my plate and couldn´t go on at my usual reading speed but now I´ve returned to the book. I felt a bit guilty but I can´t and won´t finish it faster than usual. I like the novel a lot, only two fragment where difficult because of a lack of background knowledge.
Brilliant, Sabine! Well done for not hurrying to finish. Dickens is especially worth taking time over. Learn to love his characters. Pay attention to their little habits of speech or behaviour, like Wemmick and his almost deaf father, living in their house, which they've tried to make look like a castle. Spend time in the dining room at Miss Havisham's, where the wedding cake and spiders are. It's a splendid world which should be enjoyed.
@@tristanandtheclassics6538 Thank you Tristan. I actually do like the Aged Parent a lot, and Wemmick of course. So delightful. Looking forward to your next video!
This is exactly what I needed to hear as a slow reader. Onward and upward to proceeding through my book collection!
Thank you so much!!! I have ADHD, and since I became an adult with responsibilities, I no liberty can finish a book. I get exceptionally bored, something I didn't get while younger and had all the time to do whatever I wanted...
You described me to a tee!! That’s exactly what I did with Lord of the Rings!!
😅 I think we are all guilty. 😀❤️
I use a similar method to 'live' with my long book characters and rejoining them every day while running on treadmill or walking outdoors. However, I have to love the voice of my audio book reader that can add so much to the experience. I recently 'have been' (in my mind) on an island while savouring the story told with an Irish accent. The book was The Colony by Audrey Magee. Wow what a delight it was😊.
I just finished listening to the Duke's Children by Anthony Trollope. It took me lots of miles to run... but I did not feel I was in a hurry 😊. Enjoyed every word if it. Thanks for your great video.❤
I am definitely a slow reader. Especially since I like to reread a sentence or a word that is beautiful or impactful to me. I learned to love it!
So glad I’ve been going with this approach. I started reading A Song of Ice and Fire, and I was afraid that I was reading too slow and wanted to catch up as I soon as I can. But I started to really take my time with each chapter and that allowed me to really immersive myself into the world and into the characters point of view. I’ve been enjoying the series a lot more this way.
i feel so called out by this video…
😅❤️
This is a valuable video. I have applied it and shared it with several fellow readers who were getting discouraged and frustrated. Thank you soooo much for this video. I just subscribed.
Thank you so much. That really heartens me to hear. Great to make your acquaintance by the way.😀👍❤️
Setting realistic goals, so very important.
Thank you so much!! I am reading and studying the Bible, and this video is the best for Bible reading!! I wish I learned this sooner! Thank you for taking the time to educate us!!
Thank you for expressing what I've always felt about reading classic literature. 👍👍👍 I've always felt that it is more important to understand and feel what the writer is expressing rather than just get through the book. If a writer took the time to produce a brilliant work, we should take the time to read it and get the full effect of that brilliance.
Very accurate and articulately delivered. Thank you for your always enrichening and encouraging videos. You emphasize what should be emphasized, rather than emphasizing for the sake of being emphatic or "dramatic."
This came up for me on the algorithm, and honestly its the best reading video I've seen on YT...great advice.
Thank you very much for this video! I was trying to read quickly just now and once again felt desperate. It's difficult for me to make peace with my own pace because one of my work responsibilities is guiding my students through books, yet some of them read much faster than I do. At the same time, I write as well. There are numerous occasions where someone asks me, "So you're a writer! Have you read x?" and I have to repeatedly say, "No, I haven't, but I want to," which often leaves me feeling ashamed and disqualified, even though my tutors have never seen my writing worse than the works of more well-read peers. I know almost all the details of every book I've read and every film I've watched. I used to stand in front of artworks and do 3-4 hours of analysis, but I still feel the pressure to read as much as other people do. My mom and sister can read any book within a few hours; I don't know how they do that. But now I think I might just need more compassion for myself :)
You are the best Tristan!!!
So are you, Sylvia. 😀❤️
Thank you for sharing not only your helpful tips for us "slow" readers but also your contagious and earnest enthusiasm for great literature! I absolutely love your channel.
Thanks for posting. I’m a painfully slow reader. However, one advantage I find is that during a slow read, the book becomes part of my life. I’m currently doing a slow re read of Great Expectations I now notice various aspects of the characters I hadn’t seen before. So for me, slow reading has huge benefits
Such great advice! So true about impatience and dissatisfaction. Very useful! Thank you for taking the time to explain all so well!
Thank you for this. I am a very slow reader. I will take your advice and read 10 pages a night and see how I get on.👍
This is just what I needed. This is something everyone should live bye. Thank you for sharing this.
Throughout my life, I've generally been what might be described as results- rather than process-orientated. I also used to love reading but find I'm having difficulty getting back into the habit, and your advice has made me realise that perhaps the two are probably linked, as I find myself keen to complete books quickly while feeling I'm not paying my dues to the authors' efforts. I shall now be content to take my time in savouring the nuances of my accumulated novels without falling the dreaded 'page-counting' trap. Many thanks!
Tristan, your channel is like a belated Christmas gift. So far I’ve seen only several videos but they are so inspiring, motivating, interesting, insightful 👏🏼 Thank you
Thank you, Gabriela. You are so kind.😀❤️
This is such awesome advice. I am saving this to re-watch this with my grandchildren. Thanks so much.
Brilliant advice. Thank you. I’ll have to take in my ten pages per day first thing when waking up. If I try to read in bed, I can barely make it through two pages before I start yawning and nodding off.
This guy is absolutely correct. I've actually been doing exactly what he said for years. I'm a SLOW reader. I read a few pages a night. I've read a lot of books over the years.
One thing I wish he said was that some classic novels are just not that interesting. You don't have to finish them. If you don't like them. That's okay. I hated Les Miserable and Moby Dick but loved Don Quixote. It's just a matter of taste. Just because something's a classic doesn't mean you'll enjoy it and then why bother forcing yourself through it?
I'm definitely a slow reader. I read for 15 to 30 minutes a day sometimes an hour in the morning. I tend to lose focus if i read for longer. I can't read at night I'm too tired and can't focus. It takes as long as it takes. It took me about 3 months to read the woman in white.
I just discovered your channel, and I’m so glad you’re here!
Never mind being a slow reader…It all seems so overwhelming, sooo many good books to read, but where to start…that kind of sums up my dilemma. I have just discovered your channel. You are a marvel to listen to and watch!!! But while I am doing that, I am certainly NOT reading a book. 😄
This was such a phenomenal video. I’m a relatively slow reader and have taken speed reading courses. I mostly read fiction and I find that I actually prefer to read it slowly, to savor it, as Tristan said. This is phenomenal advice and I absolutely love Tristan’s enthusiasm for the classics and literature in general. So glad to have stumbled upon this channel.
So pleased that you enjoyed it, Matthew. Great to make your acquaintance. 😀
Captain, this was such a great video, and I think very needed for a lot of us. I am probably an average reader but I always say that I am a slow reader, and I think I know why. Distraction! I don’t plan well and therefore don’t make the time to read when I should, and one thing after another distracts me throughout the day, and then I’m rushing to finish. It’s frustrating, because I want to savor the journey. I feel like I rushed through a few books this year and I regret that. The ten minutes at bedtime is golden and you really put that into perspective. I’m taking your advice and maybe I’ll have some good chocolate while I’m at it. 😏
Hey Mandy!!! I totally sympathise with the distraction problem. My bedtime reading, though, is my favourite reading. It's such a delight to read easily and unrushed. The temptation to gallop can still arise but I pop a chocolate in my mouth and slow down again.😂
I love reading but I've always been self conscious about the speed at which I read. And I have been SO very guilty of wanting "to have read" all these books! Right now I'm reading the last book in Durrell's Alexandria Quartet and I am NOT rushing it.