How I Read 10 Books a Month
Published on OctĀ 16, 2013 (updated JunĀ 11, 2024), filed under misc (feed). (Share this on Mastodon orĀ Bluesky?)
I read 10ā15 books a month. As Iāve been doing this for a few years and thus developed a routine, I thought it could be interesting to share a few notes, tips, and quirksāI remember how hard it can be to even read 1 book a month.
Contents
- What Do I Read?
- How Do I Select Books?
- What Makes Me Fast?
- How Do I Read Books?
- How Do I Work with Books?
- How Do I Deal with Exceptional Books?
- How Do I Review?
- What Are My Favorite Books?
What Do I Read?
I pretty much exclusively read non-fiction; every two years I read a novel. My motivation to read is to learn, not so much to experience. As a teenager I was probably the opposite, and solely read fiction. Of the books I read today, half are study-related (the Jens definition of philosophy and social sciences), the other half consists of mixed topics.
How Do I Select Books?
I like to take in as much as I can. Iāve always had a predilection for being a generalist (whoās also a little specialized). When I pick books I pick either the truly excellent books (ah), or I place a bet and choose books that I call ālong tailā books, books that arenāt that popular but are āpotentialsā in the periphery of my areas of interest. There is some junk out there but also some real gems; Iāll explain in a second why the junk doesnāt affect me so much.
What Makes Me Fast?
Certainly, reading much doesnāt necessarily mean reading fast. And Iād consider myself a fast, but not as fast a reader as one who really is a dedicated speed reader. I have learned how to speed read, and I apply some of the techniques (which I think should be part of any school curriculum), but thatās not the key for me reading many books.
The key I found is use of time. I donāt play video and computer games, and I donāt watch TV, shows, and rarely films (none at all since I began my recent travels). That gives me plenty of time to read and study, a circumstance I enjoy quite thoroughly.
Also, though this could be very common, I donāt just have one reading setting, I adjust my speed per book. My reading speed and priorities depend on whether the book is important to me, how long it is, how expensive it was, &c. Most books I read ānormal.ā Some books I use for speed reading training. Other books I scan. And even others, though rarely, I merely flip through. That is the most drastic form then of treating a book, to avoid wasting time and deal with any accidental junk book effectively.
How Do I Read Books?
On the process side, I read several books at the same time, six on average. On the format side, I almost exclusively read electronic books, on Kindle. I love physical books, too, and for some select fields like information design there is no alternative, but theyāre more expensive and just not practical if you read, move, and work with them a lot. At the moment Iām using an actual Kindle device again, but for the most part I use the Android app (yet thereās of course an iOS app, too) *.
I then use pretty much any alone and idle time to read. I occasionally find myself hating pulling out my phone in a line like everyone else, but thatās just how I, and maybe the others, get my intellectual fix.
How Do I Work with Books?
Hereās why I prefer ebooks. I love marking important passages and adding notes or reminders. The option to do so quickly (and cleanly) is precisely what I need for my studies, well in fact every book by now unless it be complete garbage, and I can do this most efficiently in electronic form.
When I finish a book the real work begins in that I take all my highlights and notes and, using the Kindle Highlights overview if I can (another ebook plus) or manually if I have to, move them to a Google doc. That doc, which I create for every book, then turns into an āexecutive summary.ā Later, and even better for sustainable personal growth, I review all of these summaries once more to edit and tweak. The final result is what I found to be a different level when it comes to working with books, as I get double or triple exposure to every bookās contents (reading, taking down notes, and reading the notes). See an example with my highlights from Wallace D. Wattlesās The Science of Getting Rich.
In addition I have a system to mark very important and rather complementary highlights and notes, and I create āsuper-documentsā for topics which contain all the highlights and notes for several books on those topics, but this is not relevant for demonstrating the idea here.
How Do I Deal with Exceptional Books?
For books that I find exceptional, or for which I end up with a lot of āhighlighted highlightsā I create another, shorter document only featuring the āsuper-highlights.ā If you have taken a look at the highlights document for The Science of Getting Rich, see my ābest ofā document for it.
How Do I Review?
With the outlined process, although I could, I donāt have to go back and read books again but have the option to just consult my book documents, their ābest ofs,ā or their super-documents if one exists. I can read those in a much faster time and still get a solid refresher. In every instance in which Iāve felt the need to get back to a book this process proved invaluable.
What Are My Favorite Books?
Iām working on a post about the very best books Iāve ever read [now available]. Iām excited and hope you enjoy them, too. Until then, let me give one example for what I was referring to as ālong tailā in the beginning, a book that Iāve found quite interesting: The Propaganda Techniques. Itās short, it looks like nothing, it has its flaws, but itās one of these gems you donāt find on bestseller lists.
ā§ Knowing that many of my readers and visitors here read a lot, tooāwhat are your tips and secrets, what do you do?
Update (August 17, 2022)
9 years and 764 books later, I shared more thoughts and tips.
* Google Books lost me very early by not offering highlights and notes functionality (and that although, since this was during my time at Google, I had shared feedback with the team). At my rate of reading it didnāt take long to build a library that was so big that there was no point in switching anymore. Iām still upset about this, though I canāt comment for the Books team and its priorities. I now look at Amazon to step it up.
About Me
Iām Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and Iām a web developer, manager, and author. Iāve been working as a technical lead and engineering manager for companies youāve never heard of and companies you use every day, Iām an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for OāReilly and Frontend Dogma.
I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)