terriko: (Default)
[personal profile] terriko
Before I started high school, I had to have some sort of interview with the vice principals of my proposed school. To this day, I don't know exactly what the purpose of this interview was, although I suspect it was more for my parents than for me in that it gave them a chance to check out the school I was planning to attend.

The most memorable part of the actual interview was when they decided to ask me how much I read. "So, one book a week, one a month, one a year...?" I was absolutely horrified of the idea of reading only one book a year. I read three a week, easily.

I figured that with the responsibilities of an adult living on her own, I'd never be able to average three novels a week ever again. So imagine my surprise when I looked at the books I've reviewed for January. In 31 days, I have read six full novels and five graphic novels, half of the next novel in the queue, listened to most of an audiobook, and about a quarter of a non-fiction book that I'm taking slowly for my research discussion group.

That's getting awfully close to three books a week right there.

I'd feel guilty about it, but my scientific writing process requires me to get completely away from the document so that I can see it with fresh eyes when I revise, so those books are providing me with a great way to work more efficiently. That might sound like a justification, but when I don't read, I do other things: play games, make crafts, do exercises, do chores. I think of all these things as necessary distraction tasks, like the shape rotation ones they use in psych studies -- if I don't have them, the process just doesn't work.

So I guess I'm just going to channel my inner teenager and be proud of all that reading.

Date: February 1st, 2011 06:23 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Dubious US literacy stats from Wikipedia that I've seen mirrored all over:

- 1/3 of high school graduates never read another book the rest of their lives.
- 42 percent of college graduates never read another book after college.
- 80 percent of U.S. families did not buy or read a book last year.
- 70 percent of U.S. adults have not been in a bookstore in the last five years.
... via a 2007 'Jenkins Group' study.

The reason I call 'dubious' is only because I personally have no frame of reference for this - I can't wrap my head around a third of people never reading, ever. I suppose that goes to show how much I take my literacy (and the literacy of my family and friends) for granted.

-Jay

Date: February 2nd, 2011 08:57 pm (UTC)
claudine: (Default)
From: [personal profile] claudine
I also have difficulty imagining this. However, if your friend reads more than two books for fun per year, she might get a better proportion of 'good' ones!

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