Add another divine apparently, between people who think that books can only be for reading or "using", and those of us who firmly believe we can have it both ways.
I believe that these two sets of requirements are at odds with one another, and that in the universe of limited resources that is the book publishing world, one has to be able to hammer out priorities.
There are three ways to do books. Lots of crunch, lots of fluff, try for a balance.
Personally I skip any book that tries for a balance or lots of fluff. Other can skip the crunch books. WotC is going for the crunch market, others or going for the more fluff part of the market. Neither are wrong or they would be changing to meet our requirements.
I have the opposite problem. I find crunch the easy part, and a rather mundane not so interesting part of DMing. What I'm not as proficient at, is creating and dealing with fluff.
I quite understand and have played under a DM like you. The only difference for the players is what books the DM used at the table.
And I'm not singling out gamers- I think that this lack of breadth in reading is societal, and gamers (while better read than average people) just reflect that. I can't cite any actual evidence about modern readership, of course, just personal anecdotes.
When I was in law school, for instance, the fact that I read anything besides the newspaper & textbooks came as a surprise to my classmates. Our profs were much more broadly read, and I often found myself explaining classical references (such as "Sword of Damocles") to classmates in study sessions.
Among the gamers in my overall social group, the only ones who DM are the ones who read more than a few books a year.
Have you checked out the number of movies the younger generation watch now a days? My daughter routinely watches four to six movies a week if she has time. She has anecdotes, and quotes from dozens of sources that I don't even begin to recognize. It is these kids that don't have patience to read the are driving the PD, face book and other things.
Your experience with book reading contradicts mine. Back when I had a group, the least read members are the one most likely to DM. Of course out side of me the tended to watch far more movies and tv.
I can't stand most fantasy from the 60 to the 80. They are contrived, unreal infeel of the world. This has led me to read very few. On the other hand modern fantasy like the The Deed of Paksenarrion by Elizabeth Moon or the Sword Sworn by David Weber.
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