• @[email protected]
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    82 months ago

    I always dread finishing a really good series, going back to the dregs of “not bad but not great” books is depressing.

    Recently I’ve been on a “litrpg” kick, and let me tell you there are a few winners and a whole slew of mediocre novels in the genre.

  • @[email protected]
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    92 months ago

    Just pick something off the too be read shelf and get at it. If it’s not the vibe put it down and pick up something else. No need to overthink

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        Just remind yourself that you already did the hard work of overthinking when you started keeping a TBR list and adding books to it, and randomly choose one to start next😄

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        Is this a book whose message I agree with or want to explore right now? …Do I really want to read <insert theme> for 300+ pages… Do I really want to read <insert theme> for 200 pages? …Should I go with something high concept, or settle for trope-y genre fiction? …Let’s look at reviews on goodreads…the average is 4 stars, but this person says this book is a GIANT waste of time, do I want to chance it? …I really like <insert author>'s books, but am I tired of hearing the same voice and themes explored? …I’m reading too much fiction, I need to read some non-fiction. …Non-fiction is just some author spending 300 pages trying to sway me to a particular point of view, or their just explaining on concept verbosely and repetitively for 300+ pages… Maybe I’ll just read a comic, eh all these series are just spins on older, better drawn and written ones… I’ll just grab ten different books from the library, one of them has to be good, right? …All ten of these books look like they’re just a damn waste of time! Why do I need to muse on the history and sociological implications of the toothbrush for 400 pages?! …Maybe books are just overrated, why do I think I need to read anyways? …What am I really getting from all of this reading? Is someone awarding me a prize at the end? Is this like those old book competitions in school where I win a pizza party after reading 200 hundred books? Aaaaaaaaagggggghhhh!!!

  • @[email protected]
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    192 months ago

    Well, not really. The ‘to be read’ list is long, and the amount of unread books in the shelf is large. It’s just on to the next.

      • Bob Robertson IX
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        32 months ago

        This is what I use Goodreads for… I’m constantly adding new books to to ‘want to read’ list, and I generally add them faster than I’m reading, so I never run out. And when I do get to a time when there’s nothing on the ‘want to read’ list that I want to read at that moment, I’ll come to Lemmy and look at a ‘books’ community and there’s always a ‘what’s everyone reading’ thread where I can find something good.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        I’d wish I had a fancy answer. Would’ve made for better conversation. But thank you for asking. I just keep a bulletpoint list, in my notes. It’s not too long to manage like that.

        How about you? And others?

    • That Weird VeganOP
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      72 months ago

      It’s true, I have a shitload on my tbr shelf. Still takes me way too long to decide what to read. I always get dread that I’ll read something i don’t like. Same with movies and tv shows. I get this kind of dread that I’ll watch something i don’t like, so I just end up not watching anything new.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        I’m like this with videogames, I need a 3rd party website to keep track of what I’d like to play, but end up playing what my friends are

  • Bathamster
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    22 months ago

    Thats why I pick my books randomly from my to read list

  • @[email protected]
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    22 months ago

    Often enough my library will make this decision for me. You can’t read what’s not available

  • @[email protected]
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    22 months ago

    No. I just read whatever is on top of the stack of books waiting to be read, unless a new book in a series I’m already reading just came out, then I’ll start that.

    If there isn’t a book that is screaming your name from the shelf, then you aren’t going to miss out on some life changing moment. Books aren’t instantaneous moments that you’ll miss out on. Your experience might be different if you read a book when you are in your teens vs when you are in your 20s vs in your 40s, but if you read a book now vs in a few weeks, I think you’ll be OK.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 months ago

    It’s so stupid, there’s more great things to read than you can ever possibly finish.

    But yes, I do the same thing.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    I don’t go in person to the library super often any more, but when I did I got in the habit of grabbing one book semi at random off the shelf. I say “semi at random” because it’s probably from a section I enjoy (likely fantasy) and I’ll quickly vet it as something I would at least possibly enjoy. But otherwise, just grab a random thing.

    Pair that with a willingness to stop reading a book if you’re not really into it, and sometimes you find gold where you’d normally not have thought to go looking. (A willingness to not be stuck with a book can go a long way toward making it easier to start one, in my experience.)

  • @[email protected]
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    42 months ago

    I buy books aspirationally. I have more that I want to read than I’ll possibly finish. If I’m near to finishing a book and none of the ones I already have are appealing (I’ve been on a tear on a particular historical topic lately), I’ll order something that fits.

    I couldn’t wait to start a new book on Monday after finishing the last one on Friday. They are from competing scholars with opposing views. I read 60 pages of the new one yesterday (I mostly only read when I’m at the office, which is three days per week; I’m online when I wfh).

  • @[email protected]
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    32 months ago

    I have this whole system where I alternate between poetry/non-fiction/fiction and contemporary/classic, so I always have about fifty books on my shelf and there’s always an obvious next one to read. Like right now I’m reading some classic prose fiction so my next read is contemporary poetry.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    Absolutely. Which is why I like medium sized series of books that way the next book is usually clear, but I don’t have the secondary issue of never feeling like I’m “done” you get with long series.

    Start looking when you get to the last book and by the time you’re through you can hop right in