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Thread: An Embarrassing Confession?

  1. #1

    Default An Embarrassing Confession?

    I don't know if this can really be classed as a confession, because what I am doing, is admitting to something I have not done.

    Well here goes, I confess that I cannot remember the last time I actually read a book, fiction or non-fiction. (I am not talking weeks or months, but years.)

    I read items and blurb on the internet, I read news on ceefax/teletext, I read the odd article in a newspaper or a magazine, I read the Guiness book of records a bit at a time. (mainly on the loo)

    BUT I must admit, I have not read a book from cover to cover for absolutely years and years.

    It is not as if I don't have the time; maybe it is laziness.....is anyone else guilty of this "crime" against literature?
    Take a hundred lines:- "The word is INFRACTION not INFARTION"

  2. #2
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by brokencross View Post
    I must admit, I have not read a book from cover to cover for absolutely years and years.

    It is not as if I don't have the time; maybe it is laziness.....is anyone else guilty of this "crime" against literature?
    brokencross, I've got the opposite problem...I'm addicted to books!

    I've always been like this...always got at least one "on the go" and if by any chance I find myself without one (like on a train journey) I really panic! Or if I realise I've got a book, but I've left my glasses at home!

    Maybe you just need to get back into the habit of reading books again...if you want to that is, it's not compulsory!

  3. #3
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    Default Confessions of a book worm

    I am like Angela - usually have at least one book on the go, cannot imagine not having at least one to hand.
    Awful if I have a really good book and go to bed - can hardly bear to put it down to go to sleep, often then waken during night, read a bit more until my eyes cannot stay open any more. Admit many times fall asleep book in hand and glasses on.
    I must confess I am a compulsive reader - housework, food, husband, anything (but friends) can be ignored if I am into a good book.

  4. #4
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    Default What no book!

    I'm the same Pat and Angela, I couldn't imagine not having a book to read. I gather books around me in readiness, the panic would really set in if I thought I was going to be without a book!

    Get reading Brokencross, you are depriving yourself of so much.

    LB

  5. #5
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    Smile

    I can't imagine life without books. Maybe you just haven't found the right genre for yourself. If you've watched a drama or tv programme you've enjoyed, see if there is a book for it. It's a good way of getting back into reading.

  6. #6
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    Default

    Same as yersel brokencross.Hadnae read a book in years,suddenly came across a book by a new writer J.K Rowling.....it was called Harry Potter.Got hooked on it and all its sequels.Got me into the book reading habit.Read more books in the past seven years than in ma past 35.The final Harry Potter book is oot this year...cannae wait.Cheers to JK for all the good reads anyway.

  7. #7
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    Default

    I am 64 years old and enjoy all types of fiction Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, Phillip Pullmans Dark Materials and many others but the book that does it for me is Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks, so get reading Brokencross
    you are missing so much pleasure and education.

  8. #8
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    Default

    housework, food, husband, anything (but friends) can be ignored if I am into a good book.[/QUOTE]

    Same with me but I havent been to the library in a couple of weeks as reading a biology textbook. SOme get sick of reading books after a while, which happens with me from time to time. I think I read too much thrillers and horror. They all seem to blend into each other. Books are definately something to be lost in!
    Were it not for hope the heart would break Scottish Proverb

  9. #9
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Cinders392 View Post
    housework, food, husband, anything (but friends) can be ignored if I am into a good book.
    Same with me but I havent been to the library in a couple of weeks as reading a biology textbook. SOme get sick of reading books after a while, which happens with me from time to time. I think I read too much thrillers and horror. They all seem to blend into each other. Books are definately something to be lost in!
    For the 55 years since I learned to read (I'm 59), I have read an average of a book every two days..............reading in the bath for hours, propped on the taps doing the dishes, on my knee nursing the bairns etc etc!

    In the year since moving up here, with real strenuous physical stuff to do outside, I've been lucky to get through a book a week!

    So I guess how much you read depends on how exhausted you are!

  10. #10
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    Default

    dont read as much as i used to or as much as i would like to, due to never finding enough time or when i do have time a can never seem to get peace to read
    so its a few chapters at bedtime, which can take a while to get through a book but a guess thats better than nothing
    The man who views the world at fifty,
    the same as he did at twenty,
    has wasted thirty years of his life.

  11. #11
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    Smile wot no books?

    I am with the rest of you guys,life without a book would be just unthinkable...

    Mind you I am a bit narrow minded at times...give me anything to do with the napolonic wars at sea and I am lost to all humanity...

    A mere mention of Patrick Obrion and I am off in a world of my own.

    Sad ,but I think I will stick with it..

  12. #12
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    Default

    I'm in a bit of a quandary - I don't know which book to read next!

    Just finished Jonathan Wilson's excellently informative "Behind The Curtain -Travels In Eastern European Football" and am presented with the following choices:

    1. Tom Reynolds' "Blood, Sweat And Tea" - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Blood-Sweat-...e=UTF8&s=books
    2. Bill Bryson's "The Life And Times Of The Thunderbolt Kid" - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Life-Times-T...e=UTF8&s=books
    3. C.J. Sansom's "Winter In Madrid" - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Winter-Madri...e=UTF8&s=books
    4. Jeremy Clarkson's "And Another Thing: The World According to Clarkson: v. 2." - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Another-Thin...e=UTF8&s=books


    Leaning towards the Bryson, but The Wife wants me to choose Reynolds' "blook" (a book based on his brilliant "Random Acts Of Reality" 'blog http://randomreality.blogware.com/ - a real-life account of working on the streets of London as part of a Rapid Response Unit) so that she can then read it herself, as I got it from her for Christmas and she won't read it before I do.

    Any advice appreciated!
    "It makes my blood burn with metal energy..."

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Valerie Campbell View Post
    Maybe you just haven't found the right genre for yourself. If you've watched a drama or tv programme you've enjoyed, see if there is a book for it. It's a good way of getting back into reading.
    This sounds a good suggestion, to get you started.

    Or, just consider what sort of TV programmes you like watching and choose a book that's similar in theme - anything really, it doesn't have to be fictional - history, gardening, travel, wildlife, all sorts of topics.

    I've always liked fiction best, but recently I've been tending more towards biography and history...a sign of getting older I think

  14. #14
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    always have at least one book on the go. seen me with 3 at one time one in the bog one in my bedroom and one downstairs. just finished reading the da vinci code and before that a book on conspiracy theories.
    feel weird when there is no book sitting near me.
    no amount of darkness can drive out darkness
    only light can do that.

  15. #15
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Cedric Farthsbottom III View Post
    Same as yersel brokencross.Hadnae read a book in years,suddenly came across a book by a new writer J.K Rowling.....it was called Harry Potter.Got hooked on it and all its sequels.Got me into the book reading habit.Read more books in the past seven years than in ma past 35.The final Harry Potter book is oot this year...cannae wait.Cheers to JK for all the good reads anyway.

    I was the same, it was Harry Potter that really got me back into books! I think it's so easy to be put off reading if you are trying to wade through heavy-going dirge (like Stephen King - toooooo descriptive!). That's where HP was brilliant - a complete no-brainer to read in the sense that you can devour it in a few days - really fast-moving with twisty-turny plots! I love them! Book 4 was my all-time favourite!
    I'm now into comedy books! And I love Bill Bryson. Anyone else read his "Notes from a small island"? He even ventures up to Thurso where he gets the train to Inverness at "Oh my God o'clock" thinking he'd be totally alone, only to discover a hundred biddies with their morning rolls waiting to go to Inverness! Hee hee

  16. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by elaine View Post
    I think it's so easy to be put off reading if you are trying to wade through heavy-going dirge (like Stephen King - toooooo descriptive!). .. And I love Bill Bryson. Anyone else read his "Notes from a small island"? He even ventures up to Thurso where he gets the train to Inverness at "Oh my God o'clock" thinking he'd be totally alone, only to discover a hundred biddies with their morning rolls waiting to go to Inverness! Hee hee
    I used to feel I always had to finish a book...but well, life's just too short for that.
    You might need to persevere to get into a book sometimes, but when you've read the same 20 pages over and over again, and you still couldn't care less what happens...time to give up I think.
    I love Bill Bryson too -well, I mean I love his books
    Last edited by Angela; 21-Feb-07 at 18:00. Reason: repetition

  17. #17
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by brokencross View Post
    I don't know if this can really be classed as a confession, because what I am doing, is admitting to something I have not done.

    Well here goes, I confess that I cannot remember the last time I actually read a book, fiction or non-fiction. (I am not talking weeks or months, but years.)

    I read items and blurb on the internet, I read news on ceefax/teletext, I read the odd article in a newspaper or a magazine, I read the Guiness book of records a bit at a time. (mainly on the loo)

    BUT I must admit, I have not read a book from cover to cover for absolutely years and years.

    It is not as if I don't have the time; maybe it is laziness.....is anyone else guilty of this "crime" against literature?
    Its a crime that I wasted part of my life reading your post.

  18. #18
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    I too enjoy reading and maybe this is getting away from the original post but .....what does everyone do with their once read books!
    All suggestions welcome..........
    Families are like fudge - mostly sweet with a few nuts.

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by dirdyweeker View Post
    .....what does everyone do with their once read books!
    All suggestions welcome..........
    I'd suggest keeping them ("books do furnish a room"!), giving them to friends you think might enjoy them, donating them to a charity shop of your choice, having a look at this website www.bookcrossing.com - or taking a selection along to brokencross!

  20. #20
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    Bought a 1000 page Stephen King hard back in perfect condition for one pound fifty at a charity shop two weeks ago and not finished yet.

    Even the Org has difficulty in providing such entertainment value at the same hourly rate!

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