Sunday 4 July 2010

When readers don't digest

I'm reading at the moment. I disappoint myself by not reading more often, so it's worth a mention. It's about all I am doing, mind. I perhaps should have mentioned that I'm taking a month 'out' of my usual creative efforts (or pained procrastination thereof) to watch the World Cup. Sitting in front of the TV night after night is usually something I can't abide, but a bi-bi-yearly (quad-yearly?) football tournament feels like a decent enough excuse to do just that. They're horrible markers of time, World Cups. I watched the last one at my mum's place, as I was living there back then, with my right leg on cushions as I nursed a torn calf muscle sustained by unwisely cajoling my body through the ostensibly mild - but clearly too demanding - rigours of a charity cricket match. Was that really four years ago? Was I really still in my twenties back then? Well yes, of course. And the next one will be upon you just as fast.

But anyway, back to my reading. It's nothing taxing, just the gentle 'One Day' by David Nicholls. I bought it partly because I liked 'Starter For Ten' but mostly because I like the cover. Here it is:

The back is almost the same but with some enthusiastic review snippets. Tony Parsons reckons it's 'Totally brilliant' but even that didn't put me off. The artwork is by a guy called Craig Ward who, upon Googling, I found to be a very skilled exponent of typography and design. I don't think there's anything wrong with judging a book by its cover, incidentally. Good work should be packaged well, and if it isn't then somebody isn't doing their job properly. I felt pretty confident that a book with a cover like this would be an entertaining read, and so far it's proving to be just that.

Most people would call me a slow reader. I would call me a proper reader. I read books as though I were recording the audio version. Not out loud, I should add, just at that kind of pace. It has always infuriated me that 99% of people who read books do not do it this way. That's largely because I'm jealous of their ability to devour a great many more titles that I am capable of, but I still can't understand how it's done. When I read a review that says 'It was so good I read it in a single sitting!' I want to hurl something heavy at them. It is impossible, I posit, to read a standard length novel in a single sitting unless a) you have got up very early and prepared yourself for an all day slog, or b) you are skipping huge great important chunks of it and getting little more than an overall impression of the story. I once heard someone say that they read a fairly lengthy novel in its entirety while travelling on the train between Glasgow and Birmingham. NO YOU DIDN'T. IT ISN'T POSSIBLE. I was once taught how to speed read news stories; "Just read the first sentence of each paragraph" my teacher explained. "Subsequent sentences just expand upon the first." I've never done that, but it makes sense as a means of gleaning the important information. It doesn't work with a novel though, does it? I've tried picking up the pace, allowing my eyes to travel at increased speed in the hope of shortening my time expense but invariably I end up having to go back to re-read it all again because I missed a vital piece of exposition. So now I just read at my own pace, smugly assuring myself that I am respecting the author's craft. They have, after all, agonised for hours over their choice of words, sentence structure and cadence of tone and the last thing they need is some buffoon editing it all with their careless desire to reach the climax and move on to some other poor sod's effort.

Of course the danger in criticising something that 99% of people do (even if that figure is nothing more than a wild and dramatic assumption) is that you're unlikely to find much empathy in your audience. I'd best get back to my book, I think.

8 comments:

Andrew MW said...

Interesting, I do precisely that too. I’ve always been frustrated with my reading speed as a result, but I read every word. If I miss a word then after a couple more sentences I’ll become a bit uncomfortable and have to go back and find the relevant word, which wastes an awful lot of time!

Matt Keefe said...

Quadrennial is the word you're looking for, Graham - the World Cup is a quadrennial event.

Do most people really skim read books? I never knew that.

Graham said...

Andrew - thank you, I am reassured. Perhaps my figures are wild assumptions with nothing to anchor them in fact but then so many people, busy people, devour a huge number of books in such a short period that I can't see where they find the time unless cutting corners.

Matt - quadrennial, yes. I suppose I should have figured that out, or at least looked it up. I've never actually heard it applied to sporting events. With my complaint about the speed of passing time, though, bi-bi-yearly seems quite appropriate.

Matt Keefe said...

Yes, though use of 'bi' is always problematic. (I'm on dodgy ground with a paragraph that begins with a sentence like that, I know.) It could mean either four-yearly, or four times a year. Biannual is used to mean both twice a year, and every two years. Properly it means twice yearly. Biennial means every two years. Perhaps you could go for bi-bi-yeerily or something just to be that bit clearer.

Simon said...

+1 for the slow readers' club, Graham!

Why only every four years though, the Euros just not grab you in the same way?

Graham said...

Matt - so biyearly, biannual and biennial all mean the same thing; that is, they all mean two different things. If you told that to someone just starting to learn the language they'd probably give up there and then.

Simon - thanks to Steve McLaren, I was forced to deny that the last European Championships were even happening.

James Rocarols said...

Hi Graham

I know David Nicholls' brother, Richie, you know. He works in Oddbins in Islington.

Graham said...

Hello James

Small world, eh?

I've finished the book now, but found it ultimately disappointing. Don't tell Richie.