How to choose what you read
If you can read only 2,400 books in a life time – which should they be?
Mary Knox Merrill/CSM/file
So many books, so little time. John Warner, a contributor to The Morning News, did some thinking earlier this year about how to improve our odds of finding winning reads, given what a small number of books we can finish in a lifetime.
“I consider myself a pretty avid reader, and I finished 47 books last year, not even one a week. Let’s imagine a nice 60-year span of productive reading in my adulthood, where I average 40 books a year. That’s only 2,400 books in a lifetime…” he wrote.
“When left to my own devices I almost always choose fiction written about contemporary life. These are the stories I’m drawn to as a reader. They’re also the stories I’m drawn to as a writer… The end result, however, can sometimes make for a pretty myopic reading list. It’s like finding a thing you really like at a restaurant and ordering it every time because you’re sure you’re going to like it, but at the same time, you could be missing out on something even better,” he wrote.
His spin on a solution, as befits an editor with a McSweeney’s pedigree, was “The Biblioracle,” a service where Warner asked readers to list the last five books they had read, whereupon he would provide a recommendation for a good next read.
It was enough of a hit, topping 1,000 comments between reader requests and Warner’s answers, that he had to cut it off early, promising to return later in the summer. And commenters seemed happy with the responses they got, some saying they loved the sound of the recommendation, some saying they had already read the book in question, and it had been a good pick.
He suggested Michael Crichton’s “The Great Train Robbery” to the commenter who had most recently read Jean Auel’s “The Mammoth Hunters,” Stieg Larsson’s “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” Dan Brown’s “Digital Fortress,” Dave Eggers “What is the What” and Frank McCourt’s “Angela’s Ashes.” A writer whose list included Jodi Picoult’s “House Rules” and Ann Patchett’s “The Magician’s Assistant” was advised to try “The Help by Kathryn Stockett, though he added, “But I bet you’ve read it,” and suggested Anne Tyler’s “Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant” for a second attempt.
For me, nothing beats randomly browsing bookstore shelves, and I’m willing to take some dud reads along with the serendipitous surprises I find that way. But I still love the idea of a Biblioracle offering advice.
And, as one commenter wrote, “What to do if you don't get your Biblioracle recommendation request in during the designated window? Go talk to a librarian. They've been doing this sort of thing for decades.”
Rebekah Denn blogs at eatallaboutit.com.
How do you decide what you read? Join the Monitor's book discussion on Facebook and Twitter.