Reading and listening
22/1/22 19:57![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I continue to have trouble focusing on reading. I mean actual reading from a book.
In an attempt to re-corral my attention and recover some of that pleasure, I've
- Sworn off social media (we'll see how long that lasts...)
- Joined a silent reading party where twice a month we get together on Zoom and just read for two hours (a form of accountability)
- Got at least four very different books going (so that when it's reading time, I can pick what I'm in the mood for)
- Established a couple of comfortable and well-lighted places to read.
- Natalie Goldberg's Three Simple Lines (a lovely memoir and rumination on haiku)
- David Mitchell's Number9 Dream (long novel; I'm aiming to read all his novels in 2022)
- Ken Mogi's Awakening Your Ikigai (kind of a little philosophy/lifestyle guide)
Currently in progress:
- Colson Whitehead's Harlem Shuffle (a caper/heist novel)
- Richard Tarnas's The Passion of the Western Mind (a huge survey of western philosophy)
- Sean Russell's Moontide and Magic Rise (a really long fantasy that I've been picking at for several months)
- Matthew Salesses's Craft in the Real World (on correcting some of the faults of the American MFA writing program)
How do others keep themselves reading?
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24/1/22 20:09 (UTC)I am 100% in favor of reading fanfic, re-reading comfortable old favorites (I went through much of Lord Peter Wimsey and Bertie Wooster and Jeeves over the fall), and preferring easy, engaging genre fiction. Because it's all reading and it's all good.
I hear nothing but great things about Iron Widow and just haven't gotten to it yet. It seems like an absolute must-read for everyone in the C-drama fandom as well as all the other itches it scratches!