Search This Site
Latest Changes
Latest Comments
To Think About . . .
The biggest problem in the world could have been solved when it was small. Laotzu

    follow me on Twitter

    Powered by Squarespace
    Newsletter
    Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for my Email Newsletter
    Constant Contact 2008 All Star
    Email Marketing by
    Constant Contact
    The Author

    Mark Forster is the author of three books about time management and personal organisation. The most recent, Do It Tomorrow, was published by Hodder in 2006.

    USEFUL BLOGS
    « Countdown | Main | "No S Diet" Report »
    Friday
    Nov032006

    How to Finish Reading All the Books You Start

    I read recently a literary critic who said that Tristram Shandy was one of those books in which no one ever got beyond page 10. Well I can do better than that. I was given Tristram Shandy as a school prize in 1959 and there it is in my bookshelf with a bookmark at p. 58. I think that works out at about six pages a decade.

    The trouble is that I have lots of books like that. It's not that I get bored with them or don't like them. I would be perfectly happy to decide to stop reading a book I wasn't finding interesting. It's that I don't finish the books I do want to read. In fact I have bookshelves full of books with bookmarks sticking up half way through them. Even if I do get one of these books out of the bookshelf, I will have to start reading it again from the beginning because it's been so long since I looked at it that I've forgotten what I've already read.

    Usually the reason I stop reading a book is because another book arrives on the scene. I start reading the new book in the enthusiasm of a new subject, and the old book gets forgotten about. Of course I never finish the new book either!

    Recently I've found a way that avoids all this, and allows me to get all the books I start finished. If you have the same problem (and I know a lot of people do), you might like to try it.

    What I do is simplicity itself. I chose five books as my "active" books and put them in a pile. Then I take the top book from the pile and read as much as I want to in one session. At the end of the session, it goes at the bottom of the pile. Then for my next reading session, I take the next book in the pile, read as much as I want to of that, and put it at the bottom of the pile. The two most important rules are:

    1) I don't allow myself to read any book that's not in the pile. If a new book arrives it has to wait until one of the others is finished.

    2) I don't allow myself to keep a book on top of the pile for more than one session. Once I've put it down, it has to go at the bottom of the pile.

    This works like magic because the variety keeps my interest going. To make sure it works as well as possible, here are a couple of things to note:

    1) Give yourself a good variety of books, both in subject, size and ease of reading. If you choose five heavy tomes, you will simply get yourself bogged down.

    2) You can stop reading where you like, but most people like to aim for the end of a section or chapter. It helps if you read the first couple of sentences of the new section or paragraph before you put the book down. It helps your mind to prepare for the next session with that book.

    Maybe I'll even get Tristram Shandy finished someday soon!

    PrintView Printer Friendly Version

    EmailEmail Article to Friend

    Reader Comments (11)

    Nice trick, Mark! I'm also a relatively new fan of being thoughtful regarding *how* I read (I wrote about it in " How to read a lot of books in a short time" - http://ideamatt.blogspot.com/2006/02/how-to-read-lot-of-books-in-short-time.html )

    Cheers!
    November 7, 2006 at 14:03 | Unregistered CommenterMatthew Cornell
    Hi Mark,

    Thanks for this interesting article. I have a couple of questions regarding your implementation of this reading system.

    You say that you take one book from the 'Active' pile, and read as much as you want to of it in one 'session'.

    "Once I put it down, it has to go to the bottom of the pile".

    I wonder what you define as 'one session'. If you sip just, say, a minute-and-a-half of the book before being interrupted by the door bell or a long phone conversation (for instance) does that constitute the end of the session? My worry, I suppose, is that I may become frustrated on occasions where I'm only able to catch short, unsatisfying snatches of each book before having to put it away again. Is there a danger of taking a frustratingly-long time to complete each individual book? Or am I taking the 'session' thing far too literally?

    Also, I'm interested in how you have found the long term application of your system? Have you been using it long? And do you get narratives mixed-up, or are they fairly easy to separate in your mind? I'm so used to reading one book at a time that I'm a little cautious of trying it this way!

    I ask these questions because I am an avid reader myself, yet sometimes get frustrated at my inability to match my reading speed to my book-gluttony (I can speed read a little, but to prefer to use this for newspapers and suchlike, and to savour novels at a reasonably sensible pace).

    Your reading system sounds like it could be just the solution for me, but I just wanted a little clarification on the above points.

    Many thanks, Mark, for your books (I have read the first two several times, and am about to start 'DIT' for the second time) and the fantastic website and fascinating blogs and articles.

    Regards,

    Neil Cumming

    November 11, 2006 at 20:07 | Unregistered CommenterNeil Cumming
    Dear Neil,


    Regarding the length of a session: this is entirely up to you. What I was recommending was that you didn't keep on picking up the same book without giving any of the others their turn.

    It's important that you have a good mix of books. That means you get some progressing quickly, while some progress slowly and surely. If you try to read five heavy tomes on "The Molecular Structure of DNA" at the same time, yes, you will a) get bogged down and b) confuse the books together. But if you're reading a detective novel, a classic novel, a popular history, a personal development book and a book on the Molecular Structure of DNA, you won't get bogged down and you won't confuse them together.I should mention that there's nothing sacred about the figure of five books. If you find it works better for you with three or four, that's absolutely fine.
    November 14, 2006 at 13:37 | Registered CommenterMark Forster
    I have some law reading, chapters I can take out of the course manual. I am tempted to incorporate this in the five, to see how it works. Although I do wonder whether I should keep it separate from "fun reading".

    Wendy
    December 5, 2006 at 22:04 | Unregistered CommenterWendy
    "In fact I have bookshelves full of books with bookmarks sticking up half way through them"

    .WOW...been feeling very guilty about spending money on books...I hadn't finished for a variety of reasons.

    These tips are awesome and perfect for someone like me.

    THANKS!!!!!!!!!!!
    February 6, 2009 at 15:50 | Unregistered CommenterJack Clark
    What a useful idea! And it's interesting that it foreshadows your new Autofocus (http://www.markforster.net/blog/category/autofocus) methodology - do a little bit, put it on the bottom of the "list", do a little bit of something else, repeat. :)
    February 6, 2009 at 23:18 | Unregistered CommenterAlys
    Jack:

    Thanks for bringing this subject back up to the top of the pile.

    Alys:

    Thanks for pointing out that this method is very similar to AF. I need to think about that, and see how reading books etc can be best incorporated into AF. At the moment I am just putting each book in as a separate task, but maybe there is a better way using a sub-list. Hmmm....
    February 7, 2009 at 12:37 | Registered CommenterMark Forster
    Hi . I stumbled upon this post through another blog. That's a cool suggestion. I have the same problem, and currently i'm trying to rid my shelf of those books with bookmarks in them. I haven't figured out how, until i read this entry. That's an interesting suggestion and allows movement in my 'to read (to finish)" list. And I have to agree variety is key. I tried reading two books that were both 'heavy' and I got tired and overwhelmed. I suppose my greatest challenge would be resisting that new book.
    I'm sure to try this later.
    April 8, 2009 at 2:30 | Unregistered CommenterI
    I:

    I hope it works for you, but I have to admit I still haven't finished Tristram Shandy!
    April 8, 2009 at 15:16 | Registered CommenterMark Forster
    dude thats a good trick im only 14 and i've already written a book and have several ideas for new ones, but i usaully have a hard time finnishing books and your write as soon as i pick up a book from the libray or buy one i forget about all the other ones.
    P.S. feel free to email me
    June 15, 2009 at 5:28 | Unregistered CommenterAllen Rathbun
    Just discovered this post from 2006. I'm pondering how the principle of the "active pile" of books can be implemented in the current version of AutoFocus. One obvious way is to simply create a repeating task "Read the top book in the active pile." Another is to create 5 tasks, "Read some of book A", "Read some of book B," etc., and rely on intuition to ensure that each book gets its share of attention in due course.

    Another question is the usual dilemma: whether I dare to put reading associated with a current project into the general AF list or instead put it into a separate list, or timeblock it, etc. etc.

    And I can see ways of gaming the technique: say, reading a paragraph of the top book in order to get to the more interesting book below.

    And then there's the hope that someone will produce fascinating apps for cycling through e-books on the Web in this fashion ...

    All the usual AF high jinks.

    Chris
    October 15, 2009 at 8:49 | Unregistered CommenterChris Cooper

    PostPost a New Comment

    Enter your information below to add a new comment.
    Author Email (optional):
    Author URL (optional):
    Post:
     
    All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.