Reading Well - by Simon Sarris - The Map is Mostly Water
The Map is Mostly Water
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Reading Well
Simon Sarris<br>Jul 17, 2023
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Reading is alluring. It has a nameless quality beyond satisfying desires for information and pleasure. Despite more colorful and interactive media, reading text somehow remains more refined, more seductive.<br>There is a visceral feeling to good reading. Partly this is because reading is nearly solitary.1 At the beginning you are alone with just the characters. By the end, you are alone with just the author. To hear him well demands no other distractions. When one reads, or at least when I read, it is always very slowly and in a voice. Perhaps you have already imagined a voice you are reading this in. Say hello for me.<br>Reading is letting someone else model the world for you. This is an act of intimacy. When the author is morose, you become morose. When he is mirthful, eventually you may share in it. And after finishing a very good book one is driven a little mad, forced to return from a world that no one nearby has witnessed.<br>(Book clubs might spoil the effect. So might reading the same thing as everyone else. Choose carefully.)<br>I have some suggestions on how to read well. If they are forceful it is simply because they are mine. Take what you wish.<br>~ ~ ~<br>For man is eager to learn, and his fondness for tales is a prelude to this quality.<br>— Strabo2<br>As is a tale, so is life.<br>— Seneca
You should embrace the visceral quality in reading. Read mostly fiction. Read slowly. There is a kind of marinating that happens with very good works, they are always more than their story. The goal is not to digest information, but to layer over your reality with a fresh coat of moss. Your own world becomes colored by these stories, so it is worthwhile to spend time seeking the excellent works from across cultures and history.<br>You should have a goal, in some sense, to be influenced by the works that you read. All stories influence you, regardless of how they get to you. A person who reads no great stories will be influenced by the few stories he does come across in life, for better or worse — and I think mostly worse.<br>If you read what is excellent you will not suddenly become excellent, but a life that is sown with stories is one better positioned to think and dream. The more stories, the more likely one is to understand and identify all the influences that act upon oneself in life.<br>He who has no poetry in himself will find poetry in nothing. A person that reads no stories is unready for life. A person that reads many stories will be open to yet more stories. The appetite grows by what it feeds on. Dine as best you can.<br>~ ~ ~<br>You should start many books and complete few. You should never feel beholden to completing them, there are simply too many worthwhile works to read.<br>You should re-read the books you adore. With a second reading you will realize just how much you have forgotten, how much you have absorbed, and how much you simply missed the first time, just like you miss any detail of life without repetition. I think this more important than any other suggestion. When you have found a masterpiece, you should reread it just as you would revisit a beloved foreign land, or a faraway friend.<br>You should buy books on a whim, whenever possible, enough that you start to forget about them. You shouldn't know the whole contents of your own shelves. If you create a home library it should act as one: It is there for you to discover and rediscover, to get lost in. Sometimes you can start or continue a book only when the mood is right, so it is good to have a storehouse ready. But you should also prune the unworthy. A good garden needs both.<br>You should leave notes in the margins of books, for yourself upon rereading, or referencing, or for your children. Do not listen to the people who shrink from writing in books: If you buy it then it is on your shelf to serve you, and you should make the fullest use of it.<br>I find it edifying to read by era. For example I read these — over the course of years — not because they were on some list but simply because one begets interest in the next, and they build upon each other.
Reflections on the Revolution in France (Burke)<br>Napoleon: A Life (Andrew Roberts — twice, one of the best biographies I’ve read)<br>Memoirs from beyond the Grave (Chateaubriand)<br>Count of Monte Cristo (Dumas)<br>War and Peace (Tolstoy — currently reading)<br>(And perhaps next I will read Zweig’s biography of Fouché.)
Reading culturally adjacent works is especially rewarding. This should come as no surprise, context builds meaning, and opens subtleties that are inaccessible to outsiders. It helps, in the same way, to read around a work to better understand it: First a novel, then a biography of the author, then another novel of hers, etc.<br>~ ~ ~<br>Audiobooks are the modern lector:
fact check: we’re so back<br>I think audiobooks are too often ignored (or scoffed at) by some serious...