James Heard
Explorer
I can read several books in just a few hours if they aren't incredibly complex in their concepts or aren't so long or dull that my mind resists long walks with them. I do everything fast. I don't reread everything, but I certainly reread things that I want to remember more clearly or simply enjoy enough to have a second account of it. Luckily my Narnia books are sturdy hardcovers.
Sometimes I'm astounded by conversations with people who read books lethargically and thoroughly, that can remember character's last names and minor details. Those things fade fairly quickly for me, but then I've been known to rip through three or four books before my younger brother has even made it through half of a single one and what devil-details I might miss seem to be balanced by a larger sample of comparison.
My most severe difficulty lately has been trying to remember enough details of certain short stories I'd read when I was much younger enough to search through a mountain of fiction magazines in my attic and locate them to reread them.
Sometimes I'm astounded by conversations with people who read books lethargically and thoroughly, that can remember character's last names and minor details. Those things fade fairly quickly for me, but then I've been known to rip through three or four books before my younger brother has even made it through half of a single one and what devil-details I might miss seem to be balanced by a larger sample of comparison.
My most severe difficulty lately has been trying to remember enough details of certain short stories I'd read when I was much younger enough to search through a mountain of fiction magazines in my attic and locate them to reread them.