Actually, your question is a good one. Those of us who studied creative writing in college are taught how to read an article or a story.
You can read for the following:
1. Reading for content: that means that you are observing how the story is put together, the plot, the character development, if the action and scenes make sense.
2. Reading for grammar: that means that you observe the parts of sentences for correct grammar and spelling. Parts of sentences are correct -- no faulty parallelism or subject verb agreements, dangling modifiers, and so on.
3. Read for a critique: reading the story in a way that you are looking for a "catch" or "flaw" that ruins the essence and flow of the story-telling.
4. Read for pleasure: reading a story, ignoring all of the faulty road signs that make a story disastrous, and enjoying the content as it is, without any input or suggestion.
Hope that this helps!
2006-08-25 23:58:04
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answer #1
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answered by magnamamma 5
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a number of those are from woman perspectives, some could be a sprint "girly lady" on your liking yet others could desire to be ok. i've got left the two form on and you will ascertain. Meryll of the Stone (Brian Caswell) Picnic at striking Rock (Joan Lindsay) Stranger with my face (Lois Duncan) enjoying Beattie Bow (Ruth Parks) My Sister Sif (Ruth Parks) Hitch hikers handbook to the Galaxy (Douglas Adams) Holes (Louis Sachar) Lord of the rings / The Hobbit Eragorn trilogy Narnia The Golden Compass Interview with a Vampire (Anne Rice) Requiem for a Princess (Ruth M Arthur) finding for Alibrandi (Melina Marchetta) Angels Gate (Gary team) Sisterhood of the traveling Pants Pelican's Creek (Maureen Pople) The Diary of Anne Frank To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee) The Shiralee (Dárcy Niland) Into the Wild (John Krakauer) Chocolat (Joanne Harris) Harp interior the South; damaging guy's Orange; Missus (Trilogy by Ruth Parks) the place the middle is (Billie Letts) My place (Sally Morgan) Little females (Louisa could Alcott) Rebecca (Daphne De Maurier) the three Muskateers (Alexandre Dumas) something by the Bronte sisters or Jane Austen despite you do don’t run The December Boys (Robert Noonan)
2016-12-11 15:40:03
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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i have read thousands of books and only ran into one i did not finish. i have read books with subject matter so deep and heavy with words so long and complicated it would bend the mind. i have a small hand held calculator type thing called the spelling ace that is so much faster than a dictionary, just type the word in and the definition pops up. its great for spelling too. i love to read and have spent whole weeks at a time knocking off book after book. my sister gave me the chronicles from narnea(forgot how to spell it and it is a fictitious word so not in spelling ace) and i killed that fat book in three days. most books only last a day or two but that would be from sunrise to sunset plus some. i remember when i first started reading i would have to go back over what i just read sometimes. i do not skim over the words but read every one of them. i eat them up. i feel one missed word could cost me information i need to know. i was not so fast at first but after awhile with much practice my speed just came. best to start off with books you like then branch out to things you dont know about(i mean subjects you like). tv is not good with a book but sometimes i read with it on, for the most part i can block it out but it would be the reason for me to have to reread a part of the book over. thinking about something else also. but most of the time i get so lost in a book that i hear and think of nothing but absorbing the words and the story. i guess i have said enough about my love of books. just take your time and relax and set your own pace and let the story come to you. so many books and so little time. good luck and happy reading
2006-08-26 01:22:42
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Clear your mind before you open a book. When you start reading, try to focus on each word. Use you wild imagination to picture out how the scene goes or even how the character looks like. Find a quiet place so you can pay full attention on the book.
2006-08-25 23:49:53
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answer #4
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answered by Stephanie K 2
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When you read a book, you should first try to grasp the general idea of the author, this is a very good way to read efficiently.
2006-08-26 00:01:27
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answer #5
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answered by early worm 1
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Sit in a really comfy chair (or lie on your bed). DONT read the blurb and DONT read the end of the book. Just start from the begining and just enjoy the story as it comes!!!
2006-08-25 23:49:49
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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take the book, switch a WHITE light on (not yellow, your eyes will get tired) lie on your bed, open the book, start reading from left to right, DON'T start with the last chapter to see what will happen in the end,this will spoil the book and you will not enjoy it...
2006-08-25 23:57:18
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Take your time, don't rush. Read everything carefully and try to picture the scenary and put yourself in the situation described in the book. Don't read when you are very tired.
2006-08-25 23:49:34
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answer #8
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answered by TheFatIdiot 3
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first, sit in a comfy chair (really comfortable) then open the lights make sure u can see the books clearly. clear your mind imagine some scenes about wat u are reading. dont rush and take you're time make sure you understand it
2006-08-26 01:47:46
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answer #9
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answered by pinkish 2
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Take a book-Open it and start reading.
2006-08-25 23:46:26
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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