Re: Re-reading
Mar. 5th, 2012 07:56 pmAre Sounisians re-readers?
I think we all know the answer to that question. I think its safe to say that most/all fans of MWT's books would have to be. But I know so many people who aren't re-readers. Which makes me think--
Why is that?
What makes re-reading a different experience from reading books only once?
Do re-readers only like certain kinds of books while read-only-once-ers like others? Or maybe they like them in different ways?
Do you feel that re-reading takes you away from reading and discovering new favorites, or is re-reading an old favorite better than taking a chance on a new one?
Any thoughts or discussion on re-reading (or re-re-re-re-re-reading ;-) welcome here, even if its not a direct answer to any of the questions above. :-)
Oh, and in case anyone hadn't noticed... I'M BACK. I MISSED YOU GUYS!
I think we all know the answer to that question. I think its safe to say that most/all fans of MWT's books would have to be. But I know so many people who aren't re-readers. Which makes me think--
Why is that?
What makes re-reading a different experience from reading books only once?
Do re-readers only like certain kinds of books while read-only-once-ers like others? Or maybe they like them in different ways?
Do you feel that re-reading takes you away from reading and discovering new favorites, or is re-reading an old favorite better than taking a chance on a new one?
Any thoughts or discussion on re-reading (or re-re-re-re-re-reading ;-) welcome here, even if its not a direct answer to any of the questions above. :-)
Oh, and in case anyone hadn't noticed... I'M BACK. I MISSED YOU GUYS!
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Date: 3/6/12 04:05 am (UTC)(1) I have no, no, no idea. Personal preference? But I think you're onto something when you ask (in question 3) whether re-readers might like books differently than only-once-ers.
(2) The first time you read a book, it's a surprise. You aren't sure if you'll like it at all, first of all, but then once you do decide you like it and you settle in and start to trust that the author will deliver the same quality ending as she did the beginning and middle parts, it can be exhilarating to have absolutely NO idea what's going to happen. I always feel like the first time I read a book is the most shocking, the most dramatic, the most emotional. If I re-read a book, it's likely to be a much calmer, more thought-provoking, even an analytical experience. In the case of MWT's books, for instance, I have never been as absolutely STRUCK by what was happening on the page as the first time I read. But I didn't understand all the implications of what I was reading until my second, third, or twelfth re-read, and I'm constantly deepening my understanding of the characters and the intricacies of the plot each time I go back to those books, so I think a re-reading experience allows a reader to appreciate the craft of a book more directly than the first reading, when, because you don't know what's coming, you can't possibly know how all the pieces are going to fit together.
(3) I think not all books merit re-reading, and there are some books that I've enjoyed immensely that I have no desire to pick back up. I would say that people who re-read and people who don't are not necessarily targeting different kinds of books, because maybe personal preferences just lead someone to prefer the first-reading experience far beyond the re-reading experience, but I also think that if you never read books that become deeper or more complex on re-examining them, you probably won't get a very good impression of re-reading and you might decide you don't like to do it. I'd be interested to see if someone who passionately dislikes re-reading could be persuaded to do it once (or twice) after being exposed to the Queen's Thief series. I don't think it's possible to understand The King of Attolia, for example, without re-reading in whole or in part.
(4) Both. I know I've been re-reading more often lately, because a few months ago I had to drag myself out to the bookstore to look at some of the new releases, because I realized I had no idea what any of the new books were! But I also think that it's a lot easier to re-read a book you know you can trust to be good. All I know is, if I want to stay on top of the new stuff, I can't do what my grandmother does. (She has stopped buying new books because she has so many it takes her 5 years to re-read them all. At the end of 5 years, she goes back to the beginning and starts over.) I love discovering new books too much to do that, but re-reading is easier sometimes. Hmm. I hadn't realized what a dilemma this was for me until you posed this question!
This is an excellent discussion topic, Rosalee!
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Date: 3/6/12 06:14 am (UTC)First, a little story: I once knew a very nice, very intelligent, very attractive guy who irrevocably annulled all of the formerly mentioned qualities with the passing remark, "I don't think any movie is worth seeing more than once." Blink. (Okay, so maybe he wouldn't apply this rule to books... but movies are stories too, and I can't imagine thinking any such thing about movies OR books. Suffice to say I am a re-re-re-reader and re-re-re-watcher.)
To echo drashizu, it has a lot to do with appreciating craft vs initial response. Though it varies which I notice first... sometimes I am so captured by the story during the first reading, I'm almost completely oblivious to the writing itself. This has decreased over time, however, as I've gotten older and done more of my own writing. Nowadays I can be easily distracted by what I perceive as great or poor writing, and it's only the during the second reading that I really abandon myself to the tale.
But I have many reasons for re-reading. Some books are just plain comforting, like old friends. I come back to them when I am sad or lonely or in search of an anchor. Some books are so familiar I come back to them for the simple pleasure of reading when life is full and hectic and I haven't got a lot of extra room in my brain for puzzling out something new. Other books (guess which ones I'm thinking of) catch me so completely off guard that I MUST go back and read them again, sometimes several times, to fully appreciate just how perfectly I was blindfolded and led astray. And some books just taste wonderful, like chocolate fondu, so I keep dipping. The lines blur between these categories, of course. The more that apply, the better the book, and the more times I re-read it.
My favorite re-readables: Beauty by Robin McKinley, The Eagle of the Ninth by Rosemary Sutcliff, Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones, Crown Duel by Sherwood Smith, Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine, Gaudy Night by Dorothy Sayers, anything Tolkien or Lewis. And the award for most re-read goes to The Queen's Thief series! W00t.
What are some of yours?
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Date: 3/6/12 07:28 am (UTC)Love this metaphor. And the entire paragraph it was in, actually.
Favorite re-reads: Howl's Moving Castle, definitely, as well as Ella Enchanted. The Silverwing series by Kenneth Oppel. Animist by Eve Forward. Catspaw and the rest of the Cat series by Joan D. Vinge. Anything Miles Vorkosigan. And, although they're recent enough that I haven't had time to reread them yet, I can definitely feel that the Vlad Taltos books by Steven Brust are going to be on this list very soon.
I agree with everything you said about movies as well. I have a few favorites of those that I watch over and over, too. Princess Mononoke is one I rewatch almost twice a year. I also love Clue, the film made from the board game, and The Lion King and Brother Bear and Mulan and... pretty much any animated Disney movie, actually.
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Date: 3/6/12 12:29 pm (UTC)4. For me, sometimes yes. I adore new books but whenever I re-read The name of the wind and Harry Potter 4-7 I do feel like there were other new books I wanted to read that are now back at the library and out of my reach for a while. It makes me sad.
My favorite re-reads are Harry Potter 1-7, The name of the wind, anything Diana wynne jones I can get my hands on, and anything queens thief.
Also, my someone-is-going-to-get-there-face-ripped-off book is KoA. For reasons unknown to me it almost always calms me down a bit.
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Date: 3/6/12 03:23 pm (UTC)2. You (can) see so much more the second time around; you're not racing to find out what happens next, so you can take your time along the way to enjoy how you get to the end
3. As near as I can tell, I will read and enjoy all kinds of books. But the books I re-read have characters that have come alive and become friends. I can not think of any reason connected specifically to re-readability that would render the book unlikable to someone who prefers a once through and then on to new territories approach.
4. Not at all. I find that rereads make up on average about a third to half of my reading diet so it's a very balanced approach. :)
Here's a question: do you like to let books settle before you re-read them? ie, can you reread immediately, or do you have to wait a bit until you don't remember quite how events are structured? Are there different levels of re-readability?
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Date: 3/6/12 03:35 pm (UTC)Or it could just be that they simply read different kinds of books. Some books simply don't invite a re-read, either because the plot is superficial enough that trying to recapture the first-felt emotions is like trying to retaste the zing out of pre-sucked Pop Rocks (how's that for a visual?) OR because all of the punch is in the ending. Here's what I mean by the latter. MWT's crown jewel is her endings, right? That's always what bowls us over when we read the first time, but the books can still be enjoyed later because they can be dissected to find the clues we had previously skipped over AND the book holds enough action and personal interest to sustain itself even without the twist. It's the same reasoning used by people who watch The Sixth Sense or Fight Club again and again. They know the twist, but now there are clues to reexamine and the whole thing is so dang interesting.
As for re-reading vs. new favorites, I don't think it's an either/or. I love new books. They're always so exciting! I read one new book a week to review for my blog, and that's while holding two jobs. However, that doesn't prevent me from going back to enjoy The Thief (as I'm doing right now), or Rilla of Ingleside, or any of my other favorites. Old favorites always serve a purpose. New books are for adventure and excitement, but old favorites are like your favorite stuffed animal on a stormy night. They're comforting. The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight made me cry buckets, which surprised me. I expect that with Rilla. So if I'm feeling particularly nostalgic and mellow, I go for Rilla. If I want to waste an entire day for straight reading, I reach for an MWT book or Hunger Games.
Re-reading favorites serves one other purpose. They make excellent fillers for those new books. If I've finished New Book A and know for a fact that New Book B will be at the library ready for pickup in a day and a half, I'm not going to try to cram in a New Book C. It's just bad for mental digestion. Instead, I'll pick up Old Book D and enjoy our visit. Not only can I read it more quickly than a new book, but, since I know the story so well, I can also set it down mid-story if I need to.
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Date: 3/6/12 06:35 pm (UTC)I read fast, so I don't feel like I'm losing time when I re-read. Also, sometimes I get almost physically hungry for a particular book and NEED to re-read it right then and there.
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Date: 3/6/12 06:52 pm (UTC)I think that I re-read the books where the characters are like friends. Those are the ones I always turn to.
Re-reading also brings up : Do you read through completely, or do you flip?
I tend to be a flipper, letting the book fall open to where ever and reading that scene. But it depends on the individual book. I really like Crown Duel by Sherwood Smith, but find it is difficult to flip, because all the scenes flow into one another. (Though I will happily read chapters 22 and 23 anytime !! :) I prefer to read through it completely. Rise of a Hero and Forging the Sword by Hilari Bell are good flipping books, because each chapter is like a mini episode in the whole series, with an ending to the individual adventure.
I enjoy re-reading, but I don't like when I feel like that is the only thing I have to read because I can't find anything new to read.
*apologizes for the rambliness*
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Date: 3/6/12 06:56 pm (UTC)Depends on the book. Some, like QT, you want to go back immediately, kick yourself in the head, and then remove yourself from the book quickly. Others you go back to only after some time has passed, and you remember the gist, but not the details, where it becomes kinda like a first read all over again. The ones where you feel a connection with the characters are the ones that you can re-read without letting them settle, because it is like leaving your friends.
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Date: 3/6/12 06:58 pm (UTC)Completely Agree!! :)
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Date: 3/6/12 06:59 pm (UTC)Sometimes looking for new books is such an overwhelming prospect, that turning to the tried and true books is really appealing.
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Date: 3/6/12 07:41 pm (UTC)I think re-reading depends both on the person and the book. I know some people are very persistent, and they will go through a book they don't like, or even re-read it just to get a new perspective on it. Then there are people like me who will drop a book half way if we really don't like it. It depends on what people find the most beautiful or worthwhile experience in reading a book. For people who only like plot-driven books, re-reading may seem a little redundant because all the twists are known already. But there are also people who re-read because they like the language or style of the writing, or like what the other Sounisians have said above, the characters feel like they're old friends. And in some cases, like QT, even though we already know the twists, it's those hidden clues scattered along the pages that make re-reading so worthwhile. We get to discover something new each time.
Hmm... for the last question, I think it's a mix of both. I'm constantly in search of new books that I'm hoping I like, but for a picky reader like me, sometimes it's just safer to stick with what's in my bookshelf if I need to quickly grab something. Sometimes though, my type of re-reads aren't the full fleshed kind, but the "I know there's this awesome scene on page blah, and I'm gonna read it ten times!"
Anyway, I don't think I was a member yet before you left, but welcome back anyway!! And you said from the other thread that you're back from the Philippines, so... uhm, Kamusta?
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Date: 3/6/12 08:00 pm (UTC)This is what While She Knits is for.
I also find that sometime I have book "moods", when a certain book is good, I'm just not in the mood for it. When I've read it before, I know whether or not I'm in the "mood" to read it.
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Date: 3/6/12 08:03 pm (UTC)I know what you're talking about being "hungry" for a specific book. Been there, done that.
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Date: 3/6/12 08:05 pm (UTC)Serial re-reader over here so this topic definitely piqued my interest! I browsed through some of the responses to this post and one point that stood out for me was the one about how some books just aren't "built" to be re-read--though which books these are depends on the kind of reader you are, I guess? I tend to go for the ones that I can immerse myself into, while my sister prefers either chic lit or those Chicken Soup for the Soul-type books, which are genres that I tend to leave alone after the first read.
I enjoy rereading immersive books because they tend to have a lot of details in them which I inevitably miss out on during my first read. I'm the type that gets that impatient, I-wanna-know-what-comes-next feeling so I tend to speed through the scenes. Re-reads are partially propelled by guilt for having skimmed over the author's hard work, ahaha. I am never bored though because I always pick up on something new.
Whilst reading The Queen's Thief series, I had many moments where I slowed down or stopped completely in order to appreciate a particular passage or scene (for example, the attempted assassination in the garden in The King of Attolia). I'd dig into any book with finely-crafted prose, intriguing characters, and a clever plot so it doesn't surprise me that I've become a fan of MWT's work. :)
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Date: 3/6/12 08:06 pm (UTC)So have you found that you've become more of a re-reader since joining sounis for books other than MWTs, or is it just these books that you've re-read?
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Date: 3/6/12 08:23 pm (UTC)Hear! Hear!!
I have certian scenes like that that I read over and over again. (The last couple of Chapters from Crown/Court Duel for example) It's sorta like comfort food, or the overlarge sweatshirt that you through on when you want to be cozy. They're always just waiting to give you a great big hug!! :)
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Date: 3/6/12 08:24 pm (UTC)And then I found Fantasy. An eventually QT. I found charachters that I could connect with, so re-reading was like visiting old friends. I do tend to start like "Oh boy, I'm gonna go read {insert favorite scene here}!" but usually I read through my favorite scenes and then I keep on reading into the next scenes, and usually find myself adding new favorites.
Occasionally, when I read a really good book, I finish the last page and am ready to turn the book over and start again from the beginning!
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Date: 3/6/12 08:27 pm (UTC)I have that "wanna-know- whats-comes-next" syndrome too. I usually get about 20 or 30 pages from the end of a book and it occurs to me that if I keep reading at that pace, I will soon be finished. So then I go painstakingly slowly just to savor what's left of the book.
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Date: 3/6/12 08:28 pm (UTC)I like the immersive books because you can surround yourself in them, so the more you re-read them, the more you fell like a part of the world of the book.
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Date: 3/6/12 08:42 pm (UTC)Yeah, definitely! I've gone back and read books that I sometimes picked up in high school but didn't bother to cherish that much, like Sabriel by Garth Nix. And then I re-read my other favourite series, Bayern Books by Shannon Hale. It's weird now though, because I think MWT has made me a little paranoid with subtleties and such. I can never read a book anymore without going over a paragraph two or three times even on my first read, and thinking "Ooh, that word looks suspicious. Maybe it will come up again later in an uber-big twist."
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Date: 3/6/12 08:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 3/6/12 09:07 pm (UTC)Oh me too! But it happens rarely, but when it does, the book usually becomes one of my favourites!
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Date: 3/6/12 09:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 3/7/12 01:36 am (UTC)Obviously, all of MWTs
lots of DWJ, expecially Howls Moving Castle and the Chrestomanci books
Ella Enchanted
Robin Mckinley, most especially The Blue Sword, The Hero and the Crown, and Dragonhaven
Elisabeth Marie Pope
To Say Nothing of the Dog
Just to name a few. As I stated elsewhere, generally my rule is if its worth reading once, its worth reading again.
It also depends on my mood (as I've already said...). When you've already read a book, you *know* when you're in the mood for that type of story and you sort of get "hungry" for it.