10 Tips to Read More and Read Better
The subject of reading has been much on my mind lately. I love to read but often receive emails from people who struggle to read and struggle to enjoy reading. Thus I thought it might be beneficial to piece together a list of tips to read more and to read better. I hope you find it useful.
Read - We start with the obvious: you need to read. Find me someone who has changed the world and who spent his time watching television and I’ll find you a thousand who read books instead. Unless reading is your passion, you may need to be very deliberate about setting aside time to read. You may need to force yourself to do it. Set yourself a reasonable target (“I’m going to read three books this year” or “I’m going to finish this book before the end of the month”) and work towards it. Set aside time every day or every week and make sure you pick up the book during those times. Find a book dealing with a subject of particular interest to you. You may even find it beneficial to find a book that looks interesting—a nice hardback volume with a beautiful cover. Reading is an experience and the experience begins with the look and feel of the book. So find a book that looks like one you’ll enjoy and commit to reading it. And when you’ve done that, find another one and do it again. And again.
Read Widely - I’m convinced that one reason people do not read more is that they do not vary their reading enough. Any subject, no matter how much you are interested in it, can begin to feel dry if you focus all of your attention upon it. So be sure to read widely. Read fiction and non-fiction, theology and biography, current affairs and history. You will no doubt want to focus the majority of your reading in one particular area, and that is well and good. But be sure to vary your diet.
Read Deliberately - Similar to reading widely, ensure that you read deliberately. Choose your books carefully. If you neglect to do this, you may find that you overlook a particular category for months or years at a time. Al Mohler, a voracious reader, divides books into six categories: Theology, Biblical Studies, Church Life, History, Cultural Studies, and Literature and has some project going within each of these categories at all times. You can draw up categories of your own, but try to ensure you are reading from all of these categories on a regular basis. Choose books that fit into each of these categories and plan your reading ahead of time, so you know what book you will read next and you know what you’ll read after that. Anticipation for the next book is often a motivating force in completing the current book.
Read Interactively - Reading is best done, at least when enjoying serious books, when you work hard at understanding the book and when you interact with the author’s arguments. Read with a highlighter and pencil in hand. Ask questions of the author and expect him to answer them through the course of the text. Scrawl notes in the margins, write questions inside the front cover, and return to them often (and, if the questions remain unanswered, even seek to contact the author!). Highlight the most important portions of the book, or the ones you intend to return to later. As Al Mohler says, “Books are to be read and used, not collected and coddled.” I have found that writing reviews of the books I read is a valuable way of returning at least one more time to the book to make sure that I understand what the author was trying to say and how he said it. So interact with those books and make them your own.
Read with Discernment - Though books have incredible power to do good, to challenge and strengthen and edify, they also have the power to do evil. I have seen lives transformed by books but have also seen lives crushed. So do ensure that you read with discernment, always comparing the books you read to the standard of Scripture. If you encounter a book that is particularly controversial, it may be worth ensuring that you can reference a review that interacts critically with the arguments or that you can read it with a person who better understands the arguments and their implications. You do not need to fear bad books as long as you read with a critical eye and with a discerning heart.
Read Heavy Books - It can be intimidating to stare at some of those massive volumes or series of volumes sitting on your bookshelf, but be sure to make time to read some of those serious works. A person can only grow so much while living on a diet of Christian Living books. Make your way through some Jonathan Edwards or John Calvin. Read Grudem’s Systematic Theology or David Wells’ “No Place for Truth” series. You will find them slow-going, to be sure, but will also find them rewarding. Commit to reading some of these heavy volumes as a regular part of your reading diet.
Read Light Books - While dense books should be a serious reader’s main diet, there is nothing wrong with pausing to enjoy the occasional novel or light read. After reading two or three good books, allow yourself to read a Clancy or Grisham or Peretti something else that never changed anyone’s life. Allow yourself to get lost in a good story every now and again. You will find that they refresh you and prepare you to read the next heavy book.
Read New Books - Keep an eye on what is new and popular and consider reading what other people in your church or neighborhood are reading. If The Secret is selling millions of copies, consider reading it so you know what people are reading and so you can attempt to discern why people are reading it. Use your knowledge of these books as a bridge to talk to people about their books and what attracts them to the ones they read. Use your knowledge of these books to understand what other Christians are reading and why.
Read Old Books - Do not read only new books. I cannot say this any better than C.S. Lewis: “It is a good rule, after reading a new book, never to allow yourself another new one till you have read an old one in between. If that is too much for you, you should at least read one old one to every three new ones. Every age has its own outlook. It is specially good at seeing certain truths and specially liable to make certain mistakes. We all, therefore, need the books that will correct the characteristic mistakes of our own period. And that means the old books.” So be sure to read old books, whether that means classics or whether that simply means books that come from a generation or two before your own. And be sure to read history as well, since there is no better way of understanding today than by understanding yesterday.
Read What Your Heroes Read - A couple of years ago, while at the Shepherds’ Conference, a young man who was in ministry but had not had opportunity to attend seminary asked John MacArthur what he would recommend to this man so he could continue learning and continue growing in his knowledge of theology. MacArthur’s answer was simple: He said that this pastor should find godly men he admires and read what they read. So do that! Find people you admire and read the books that have most shaped them. I have compiled a short list of recommended reading at Discerning Reader. While the content is still a mite sparse, I do hope to add some more lists to it before long. Even in its current form it may be a good starting point for you.




Comments (17) »
1. Jason
September 17, 2007
10:16 AM
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2. dt
September 17, 2007
10:22 AM
Good tips.
3. diane
September 17, 2007
12:55 PM
My sentiments exactly!
I am a voracious reader and I found myself nodding more vigorously with each of your points! Thanks for taking the time to type out these tips!
diane
ps… our family will be speeding (well, not speeding) through Oakville, Ontario on Thursday!!!! :)
4. mikbry24
September 17, 2007
1:05 PM
Thankfully you did not title this post “10 Ways to Read More Better”
5. The Cutting Truth
September 17, 2007
2:49 PM
All very fine comments, but I wonder if there ever gets to a point where the love for books can slip into idolatry. First, we know that books are a relatively new commodity that has only recently - in the grand scheme of things - become so prevalently available. The saints of old, those great men and women of God in the past (i.e. before the printing press), read (if at all) only the smallest fraction of what is available to us today, yet lived lives far more eternally significant and productive. Perhaps reading isn’t all that it’s cut out to be? Perhaps there comes a saturation point after which its benefits gradually diminish? Perhaps there might be other better/wiser/godlier ways to grow and expand than an admittedly private and solitary (and sometimes selfish) activity in which the temptation to slip into smug self-righteousness can be all too palpable, especially as we notch another completed book onto our bookshelf like a trophy?
Anyways, these are some questions I ask myself because I have been a life-long lover of books (I even have a book I keep by my toothbrush to be read only while i brush my teeth. I can usually get through a “toothbrush book” every six months!). I know of the incredible benefits reading can have, but I am also becoming aware of some dangerous tendancies creeping into my reading lifestyle, and was wondering if anyone else has the same thoughts.
(btw - I think Challies is a lucid writer, but I do not - despite reading it about ten times now - understand his 6th sentence: “Find me someone who has changed the world and who spent his time watching television and I’ll find you a thousand who read books instead.”
6. ChrisB
September 17, 2007
3:20 PM
Some thoughts on setting a “reasonable target.” Pick a book. Decide how much time a week you will spend reading (e.g., one hour, four days/week). Read for one hour at a quick but comfortable pace. How many pages did you cover? Divide total number of pages in the book by that number to get how many reading “sessions” you’ll need. Look at the calendar and set yourself a due date to finish the book.
My thoughts on the importance of variety in reading were posted on my blog.
7. Chad Winters
September 17, 2007
3:58 PM
I’m finding it difficult to divide my books into Mohler’s categories, there seems to be considerable overlap….
8. erin
September 17, 2007
5:36 PM
Great tips! If only I could get my freshmen college students to think this way! Perhaps I will mention these tips to them as a way of giving them practical reading advice.
9. mikbry24
September 17, 2007
6:52 PM
“Find me someone who has changed the world and who spent his time watching television and I’ll find you a thousand who read books instead.”
I think that’s relatively easy to understand. Tim was pointing out how preferable reading is to watching television. While you may be able to find a “world-changer” who prefers watching TV to reading, it is more likely to find a “world-changer” who is a reader as opposed to a TV-watcher…hence the statement “Find me someone who has changed the world and who spent his time watching television and I’ll find you a thousand who read books instead.” Pretty simple, really.
10. Steve
September 18, 2007
1:10 AM
Tim, I know your comment about finding one person who changed the world watching TV was (at least in part) tongue-in-cheek, but consider that TV is a far more recent invention than the printing press. Given the length of time television has been in existence, relative to books, and it’s a given that you could find more people who read books and subsequently changed the world, than you would people who watched TV and changed the world.
Which brings me to my main point/question - don’t you think Christians are at great peril when they ignore popular culture? The reality is, it seems to me, that more and more it is television and the movies that are reflecting and shaping the values of society. Books, for better or worse (I know you would say worse), have lost influence. Not all their influence, to be sure, but certainly they’ve dipped below film & TV. It strikes me that the practitioner of Christian ministry would do him/herself and society well to be more informed about pop culture.
11. Robert Tewart
September 18, 2007
7:08 AM
Great suggestions Tim. I just checked Ann Coulter’s “Godless” from the library yesterday. I have to admit though, the main reason I checked it out was to see what she had to say about evolution.
Rob
12. Reformed Gary
September 18, 2007
9:39 AM
Thanks for the tips!
I just listed all the books I read this year and came up with 10 (about 8 more than any other post college year) God has really awakened a desire in me to learn more about him through reading. I’m very thankful for this site and others, like Monergism as well as Reformation Heritage Books for making the process of finding edifying material easier.
I usually have two books going at a time, one at work to read at lunch and another at home. I have also tried to vary the material between theology, history, Christian living and even a couple of secular books.
13. Kim
September 18, 2007
10:58 AM
Thanks Tim. I love you blog, especially your A La Carte each morning. I’m developling my passion for reading, and your site is quickly becoming fuel for that fire. There is so much good material to take in. Here’s a question for you or any other of your readers - I’m a youth leader at our church, and I have a kid in my small group who is reading perhaps too widely for his maturity - books that, at his age may do more damage (The Black Tattoo?) than good. Any recommendations on how to challenge him to read with more discernment?
14. Matt
September 18, 2007
11:19 AM
I’d recommend Piper’s “Brothers we are not professionals,” for a lot of reasons, not the least of which is a helpful chapter that challenges with additionally profitable ideas on the priority of reading.
15. Jendeis
September 18, 2007
2:09 PM
Very good lessons. I think that an additional one might be that if you want your children to be readers, let them see you read. My siblings and I are all voracious readers and I’m certain that watching my parents enjoying reading helped develop that in each of us.
16. Benjamin Potter
September 18, 2007
4:40 PM
“After reading two or three good books, allow yourself to read a Clancy or Grisham or Peretti something else that never changed anyone’s life.”
This suggests that writers of fiction are not really writing “good books.” I would argue that getting lost in a good story is just as important as reading for information. Good writing is any that you can interact with whether for the purpose of learning or relaxing.
I’d also add Respond to reading take time to review the books you read, if only in a paragraph for Amazon.com. This helps in interactive reading and forces you to read with purpose (even when getting lost in a story).
17. drew
September 23, 2007
4:36 PM
What about speed reading? Recently, I’ve thought to at least go to Barnes & Noble and browse through some speed reading books to see if I could glean any helpful techniques to read more efficiently.