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1/27/2009 1:45:39 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
lovelycapri
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,138)
Ferndale, MI
35, joined Aug. 2008


Say you read a book like 4 years ago. Is it hard for you to read the book again?

It seems that i can never re-read a book.




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1/27/2009 2:24:04 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
sonnabo
Over 10,000 Posts!!! (14,081)
Fairhope, AL
38, joined Dec. 2008


It depends on the book. I have a few that I keep and re-read from time to time. But it's never as good as the first time. Just like watching a movie you've already seen. Once you know how it ends the suspense is gone.

1/27/2009 7:17:05 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
alicekathleen
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,605)
Sacramento, CA
72, joined May. 2008


No. I reread most favorites. I have read a few short stories that I liked so much, like Brokeback Mountain, that I
immediately began the story again. Can you see a movie twice?

1/27/2009 7:41:23 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
lovelycapri
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,138)
Ferndale, MI
35, joined Aug. 2008


yeah i can. but its like with a book i feel like im going to be disappointed cause i know whats coming next. but for some reason i can remember the beginning and end of a movie but not the middle. i dont know its strange

1/27/2009 10:48:41 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
alicekathleen
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,605)
Sacramento, CA
72, joined May. 2008


Maybe that is the answer. I am a fast reader, can read one an evening if I am into it and book is of normal length. I watch dvd's, movies, like
reading a book....start, stop and go to bathroom, start, stop and make a phone call, start, stop and go have
a meal. I have seen favorite movies, like Rebel Without a Cause, over half a dozen times and enjoy it every time.
I love a HUGE book like War and Peace or Shantaram that I know is going to be good and last for a week.

1/28/2009 5:40:30 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
mrjj
Olympia, WA
62, joined Mar. 2008


I re-read Catch-22 every 4 years or so--and it is always relevant. Different wars, but always the same issues...

Also, I find that if you wait 4 or 5 years, almost any book seems new...maybe thats a problem with my middle-aged brain?? lol

1/28/2009 1:07:09 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
turbodoc
Noblesville, IN
67, joined Dec. 2008


I agree with jj, if it has been a long time between reads, it seems new. There may be bits and pieces I remember, but on the whole, it is new (again).

1/28/2009 7:32:37 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
tomtom83
Milwaukee, WI
34, joined Jan. 2009


I read a book once, it was sweet! now everyone look at my banana

1/28/2009 7:51:18 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
lovelycapri
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,138)
Ferndale, MI
35, joined Aug. 2008


your way to silly tomtom

1/28/2009 11:39:58 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

semicautious
Salt Lake City, UT
32, joined Jan. 2009


I think that's the great thing about literature, though, is the books you do return to, even though they typically aren't as good as the first time around, they are still good and familiar. You know what to expect and that's why I re-read books. I'm a literature major, though, so it's in my nature to get ridiculously nerdy about literature. I had an English Lit. teacher in high school who explained it perfectly. Books are like people, you return to the ones that had an impact on you... and those books are like a close friend that you run into after years' of not seeing each other... some things are a surprise, some things never change, and it's comfortable because it's familiar. Does that make sense?

1/29/2009 5:38:10 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
mrjj
Olympia, WA
62, joined Mar. 2008


Quote from semicautious:
books are like a close friend that you run into after years' of not seeing each other... some things are a surprise, some things never change, and it's comfortable because it's familiar. Does that make sense?



That makes perfect sense. And there is one more point that I think is relevant here--I am not the same person I was when I first read Catch-22 at age 20 back in college. Hopefully I've matured, and hopefully I have developed some insights in the intervening
23 yrs (GAD--HOW DID THATT HAPPEN?).
So when I re-read a book, not only is the book somewhat new, but so am I...

1/31/2009 9:54:29 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
hope2burmrsrite
Milwaukee, WI
29, joined Sep. 2008


I have read the Diary of Anne frank like 6 times...

2/26/2009 1:29:44 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
lovelycapri
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,138)
Ferndale, MI
35, joined Aug. 2008


thanx everyone

3/19/2009 9:56:47 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
emeraldtora
Somerville, AL
42, joined Mar. 2009


It really depends on the book. I have a great memory with books I have read so most of the time I still remember all the details. Now if it is a book that has a lot of twist and turns with a whole lot of character interaction that is part of a series of books. Then I will read it again.

4/1/2009 6:56:45 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
goodtimes40
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,041)
Paragon, IN
49, joined Mar. 2009


I buy all the books I read cause I have no problem re-reading them. I have so many that by the time I pick up one I have already read, the characters in between have overwhelmed me to the point where it is almost new! Especially the really long multi-book series where there are so many characters that it's hard to keep up with where they were and what they were doing since the books in the series only come out about one per year. The best example of this would be Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time I have been reading it since it first came out in like 1987 and the story has yet to be completed! I hope he finishes it before he up and dies on us!

4/2/2009 6:35:07 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

hawkeyejr
Over 10,000 Posts!!! (23,937)
Stuarts Draft, VA
54, joined Mar. 2008


I actuallyb love to reread books,the charactors,looks dialects,and scenes,always appear more vivid and add enjoyment to the read.I hope that I'm not the only one who can hear the charactors,and narrators voices and see vivid pictures,when reading.An imagineation is a terible thing to waste.

4/8/2009 5:03:37 AM Does anyone have this problem?  

nobs4u
Over 7,500 Posts!! (9,324)
Mansfield, OH
56, joined Oct. 2008


I like to "become"one(or more) of the characters or narrators or even the author,kinda like being in a play.Walk their worlds in their shoes,might be a different one each time I reread it.I usually wait 6 months to a year before I attempt to re-read something lenghthy;short stories,anthologies,2-3 months."Running into a close friend after not seeing them in years"that was an excellent way to put it!Well said!

4/8/2009 12:42:29 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

witchykym
Hubert, NC
48, joined Mar. 2009


The ones I usually reread are the ones where I've felt a close attachment to one or more of the characters.

I also will usually reread a book if the ending surprised me - I just have to go back and look for the clues I must have missed if I didn't have it figured out before the end.

Then there are the series, where the books initially came out spaced a year or more apart. Those I will reread once the whole thing's finished, so I can read them back to back.

8/9/2009 9:53:30 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
pinciperro
Waterloo, IA
56, joined Apr. 2009


I think, when I was young, I read " Harriet the Spy" probably fifteen times. I couldn't get enough of her adventures, and was highly disappointed with the movie version. Arggg!
I do reread books, because sometimes, I just want to relive their story.

And........ I don't know what it is about the book " The Thorn Birds", but I used to forget that I had already read it, only to get a fourth of the way through it and go.... WTF? And.. I don't really even like the book.

8/9/2009 10:39:52 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
joaquin_stick
Over 2,000 Posts (2,428)
Lexington, MI
64, joined May. 2009


I enjoy rereading well-written books. Sometimes you can get a lot more out of a book the second or third time like the books of Thomas Pynchon.

8/11/2009 7:35:37 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
noob_online
San Diego, CA
60, joined Jan. 2009


I re-read very few. The only one that comes to mind is Lord of tthe Rings - Read it in high school then just before the movies came out .

8/11/2009 1:35:41 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

wsprs0nthewind
Over 10,000 Posts!!! (25,454)
Powell, TN
53, joined Mar. 2009


Same concept as watching a movie more than once. I rarely re-read a book.

8/12/2009 9:23:37 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

dancerdeb
Crystal Lake, IL
52, joined Aug. 2009


I re-read books constantly, but it kind of goes with my profession (English teacher). However, I must admit that I re-read books I love just because I love them. I find that lots of books reveal deeper meaning to me with second (or third or forth, etc.) readings.

8/13/2009 5:00:10 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
librajason
Over 10,000 Posts!!! (11,990)
Towanda, KS
42, joined Jun. 2009


Here recently, I was readin' a book called White Shark....the more I read, the more convinced I was that I'd read ten years before....turned out I had. I was like DOHH!!!! But it was still a good book.

But..OT.....I won't read the same book twice.....The best part of reading is that you get to use your imagination to see the story in your head(which is much better than television) and it ruins it if you already know whats gonna happen. It also helps calm my hyper-active little brain.



[Edited 8/13/2009 5:04:13 PM ]

8/14/2009 11:46:10 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
eugune72
Over 2,000 Posts (2,252)
Lemon Grove, CA
45, joined Jul. 2009


yes but for a different reason i read a book and still remember the dam thing in detial 10 years later.

8/20/2009 8:22:41 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
rrobbbbb
Round Lake, IL
52, joined Mar. 2009


Yes, lord of the rings (like newbonline) and a few classics. This will sound strange, but its almost like revisiting the characters. You know you've read a really good book when you feel like you will miss the people in it.

9/30/2009 2:25:09 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
strider123
Cypress, TX
28, joined Jun. 2009


I love Lord of The Rings and the Hobbit. I've read them about 7 time in last 10 years. Every time i read it i notice something i didn't catch the time before.

9/30/2009 11:36:38 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
10brandy01
Springfield, TN
26, joined Sep. 2009


I have the same problem except if I haven't read
it in like 4 years or so I can usually read it again.

9/30/2009 10:12:32 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
older_wiser
Over 7,500 Posts!! (8,704)
Orem, UT
63, joined Dec. 2008


There are books, like movies that I revisit. There are alot that are only one time aqauintances, some are friends.

10/3/2009 10:57:23 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

keykeper34
Over 1,000 Posts (1,361)
Boise, ID
63, joined Apr. 2008


Quote from lovelycapri:
Say you read a book like 4 years ago. Is it hard for you to read the book again?

It seems that i can never re-read a book.


Boy am I glad that there is another person on the planet
that only reads a book once.

I belong to two book clubs and usually read two books at once.
meaning I will start on book one and read a while, put it down and
pick up the second book and read it for a while.

When I finished reading my books I usually donate them to the second hand
book store so they can resell them.

Or I just give them away.

10/11/2009 7:20:58 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
middy63
Over 1,000 Posts (1,685)
Tell City, IN
54, joined Jul. 2009


I read alot (usually 2-3 books a week that I read
simultaneously, because I'm anal like that)
...and sometimes in between library visits and
book store trips I "have" to re-read books, lol.
But I like re-reading most books if I enjoyed them
the first time. I have some I re-read yearly just
because I love them so much.

I would agree that if you are the type that
rewatches movies over and over, that you'll generally
have no trouble re-reading books.

10/12/2009 7:35:32 AM Does anyone have this problem?  

laloquis
Avon Park, FL
35, joined Oct. 2009


I definately re-read books. I don't get rid of any of my books, if there is one that I particularly loved I'll go back and read it over. I did lose one of my favorites that I'd read a couple of times, (I lost a box of books when I was moving ) I was very upset. I did however, go out and bought it again so all is well

11/18/2009 10:59:37 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
rider133
Amelia, OH
54, joined Oct. 2009


I Have enjoyed reading a book more than once .But there has to have a number of years between reading it the first time and reading it again.The only exception to this being the BIBLE.

1/23/2010 5:27:17 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
lovebugs013
Over 2,000 Posts (3,809)
Chandler, AZ
32, joined Dec. 2009


There needs to be about a 6 month span between reading a book again for me. But some ive read again about 2 months later, when you re read a book you pick up on a lot of other little things you missed. So it makes the book even better. I have some books i read up to 5 times.

1/24/2010 3:28:54 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

bryguy67
London, OH
49, joined Oct. 2009


I usually buy the books I read, and if I haven't read it at least twice, it hasn't paid for itself.

Currently, I'm reading the Dragonriders of Pern series by Anne McCaffrey. I've probably read them at least a dozen times. I enjoy them so much I've even replaced a few that got lost during a move.

1/26/2010 12:21:29 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
veritas_08
Dallas, TX
36, joined Jan. 2010


Definitely depends on the book. House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski I've read four times from cover to cover but I cannot say conclusively that I have read it. Every time I read it I find something I missed the previous times. Or understand something in a new light.
This is NOT a book for light readers. It'll mess with your head bad if you get deep in it enough. But its worth the trips. If you don't mind the upside down words n using a mirror to read it lol at the beginning the book says "This is not for you." Take it as you will.

1/27/2010 1:26:56 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
esmeraldar
Over 10,000 Posts!!! (14,582)
Toms River, NJ
69, joined Jan. 2009


I can usually reread a book if I liked it the first time. The problem I have is trying to go back to a book that I didn't finish the first time. Sometimes I can do it but most of the time I can't. I guess there was a reason that I didn't finish it.

1/27/2010 1:50:37 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
delphynelilith
Hemet, CA
43, joined Jan. 2010


It is very rare that I cannot re-read a book. As a matter of fact, I read Watership Down every year. It is almost a necessity.

3/12/2010 7:14:19 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
keeyam
Quinton, SK
56, joined Feb. 2010


If I enjoy the book I will re-read it over. This allows me to unwind as I slowly become enthralled by the novel. Even if I do know how the ending is going to be, I still enjoy it. Some of my novels I like have doggie-ears to them...lol

3/17/2010 7:02:35 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
mocoohayzzirgk
Swanton, OH
49, joined Sep. 2006


I have on occasion read the same book more than once. It always seems like there are little things that I miss or forget the first time around. But it has to be a good book.

3/19/2010 8:00:44 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
softlyspokensky
Lewisville, TX
30, joined Mar. 2010


It depends on how complex the book was. If its something simple without much detail or depth then I can't reread because simply theres no point to. If, however, its a book that has a lot of symbolism and detail then I will probably reread it so that I can grasp everything. Like for example, Jane Eyre, one of my favorite books but now that Im rereading it Im realizing that I paid attention to the main plot and missed a lot of things inbetween that were important.

3/22/2010 5:05:05 PM Does anyone have this problem?  

scottybouy
Oldsmar, FL
48, joined Mar. 2010


I will occasionally re-read a book if it is something inspiring.

4/7/2010 7:42:05 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
little_moma
Manchester, TN
51, joined Mar. 2010


i watch re-runs of out dated movies..but they just seem to get better and better..so with a great book.

4/13/2010 4:18:59 AM Does anyone have this problem?  

damnbignfine
Fort Lauderdale, FL
51, joined Apr. 2010


It can be disheartening at times, but it depends on the book. I recently decided to re-read Sherrilyn Kenyon's Dark Hunter Series. (I joined the fan club and found that I couldn't answer a lot of the questions because I had read the previous books soooooo long ago, I couldn't remember the details. It makes you seem like a sucky fan...LOL)

5/21/2010 4:37:41 PM Does anyone have this problem?  
doctormatthews
Chicago, IL
39, joined May. 2010


Sometimes I'll forget that I read a book. Then I pick it up again and half way through I realize I know what's going to happen. First it's a weird deja vu, but then I realize, duh, this is that book. I did that with Camus' The Stranger.

Usually, if I pick up an old book, I usually just skim it and reread all of the best parts. But I think the only books that I have successfully read twice were "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" and "To Kill a Mocking Bird."

Really, there's too many unread books to waste your time on one. They're a lot like women.

6/2/2010 4:00:32 AM Does anyone have this problem?  
dukesblues01
Over 1,000 Posts (1,263)
Roxana, IL
42, joined May. 2010


I've read many of my books more than once. I love reading, but I have a bit of ADD. When I go back to an old book that I like, I'll usually pick up on little details that I missed the first time around. Sometimes those little things make me love the book even more than before.