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How fast can people really read?
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oh, well. trudge on.


I agree with you, Rebecca. The to-read shelfs mean different things to different people. I just wish that my books would go from to-read to read by the time I pass on to heaven to read all the books that I never got a chance to read.

No ADD present: book completion takes approximately 6 hours
Some ADD present: book completion takes approximately 6 days to 6 weeks
The Haus of ADD: book completion never takes place

Yes, Hannah. There is reading in heaven. Hope you like Aramaic.

Fascinating, Jon. I ask myself these same questions every time this particular phenomenon appears while browsing GR groups, friends, etc. I've even seen it written (not saying where, so don't ask) that the true measure of an authentic, committed (in many ways, no doubt) and, dare I say, proven reader is the existance of a larger-than-life TBR list, one that grows faster than chia sprouts in a rain forest. Yes, I'm scratching my head on this one, too.

my to read list has grown geometrically & exponetially since I joined GR...and I can only hope that I will get through it...except for one MAJOR problem! I keep finding new books...and adding them!

1. Enter them by hand, one at a time.
2. Embed SQL code in a form element to exploit a firewall weakness.
Number 2 requires a good knowledge of programming, and as we all know, computer programmers are godless heathens (so religion is out). That leaves Number 1, an ideal task for practitioners of the Chunn-Tongra belief system that requires acolytes to complete a difficult and meaningless task (known as a 'quest') in order to find favor in the eyes of their forest god, Ch'a. Once almost extinct, followers of Ch'a were finally recognized by the mainly Catholic government of Brazil, which decreed the remaining Chunn-Tongra village deep in the Amazon rain forest to be "pessoas afagados do Ch'a". To commemorate the recognition of this newfound settlement, the Parliament issued a license for the construction of a new Walmart on the site.
Anyway, that's what was going through my mind.
Jon Etheredge



Wow. It didn't take much to get me off topic.

Wow. It didn't take m..."
Try to stay focused there, Pee Wee.
(Yes, I know what "ruminating" means. Don't stand behind me.)
In my experience, a good speed-reader can flush down a novel in about two hours. My own circle of friends, slowed down by the need to point at each word and sound out the big ones, gnaw at a book for a week or more. So let's say a book can be read in three days.
I'm delighted to report one of my books shares a shelf with 25,696 other unread works. What I would like to know is exactly when will this reader get around to posting a review.
Reading non-stop, the owner of this library could expect to finish in about 211 years. OK, I'll concede she's exceptional. She listed 25,724 books as having already been read, so she must be a speed reader.
Let's give her, oh...two books a day and no toilet breaks. She can get the task done in about 35 years. Taking into consideration the years she wasted on potty training, kindergarten, and a fourth grade education, I'd guess her to be about 45 years old.
So her life is half over. How sad, in a doomed, lonely, Rod Serling-esque way.
The lesson to be learned here? You have GOT to be kidding!