There are times when it is difficult to choose what to read. It can be mind boggling–even restless to choose what to read.
I used to make a list of all the books I wanted to read, then start at the top of the list and work my way down. But more recently, I’ve been choosing books capriciously, investing my time in what will hold my attention.
What we choose to read depends on what our aim is in reading. Is it just for entertainment–light-reading, or is for information and knowledge? Is our goal to know a topic or a body of work on, say, science fiction, or is it to be taken to a new world–to escape into imagination?
In the past, I was driven to read an author’s body of work, o read a few books that were popular or were considered “great works”. But having gone through these phases, I feel like that reading “great works”, for example, wasn’t as great as I thought it would be. Some of the books were boring, and it took considerable effort and time to finish them.
The qualities that the books were admired for weren’t things I connected with, such as the author’s style, tone, or use of symbolism. As a result, I steered away from what others hailed as great or amazing, and started choosing books that I’d enjoy or that I would connect with.
