Editors' Association of Earth discussion
Do you struggle to read for pleasure?
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Cat
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Feb 26, 2015 10:31AM
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I haven't noticed this at all, though I can see how it would be a factor for some people. The only thing that really affects my reading for pleasure is the amount of spare time I have and the sort of mood I'm in. That said, I'm rarely in the sort of mood where I don't want to read anything.I've always done a lot of writing, and the revision stages of it are no different than the editing I do for work. Could be I've trained myself, since I started writing at an early age, to separate reading from writing and editing.
Nope. I can read all day for work, then read all night for fun. I do find that I sometimes have difficulty shutting off my editor brain when I am reading for pleasure, though, and I have to remind myself to stop thinking so much and just enjoy it.
I generally have no problem reading for pleasure. I find it relaxing and rejuvenating to get lost in another author's world. And I am usually able to turn off the editor side of my brain. But so far this year I have been suffering from readers block. It's disconcerting. I've been working on a lot of challenging development editing projects and figure that my brain is too taxed.Has anyone else been incapable of reading?
I struggle to read for pleasure at times. It's very easy to be jarred out of a book by errors of one kind or another.
I don't have trouble reading for pleasure, maybe because there's a distinct physical difference between reading for fun and reading for work. Reading for work happens at my desk, on a screen, glasses on. Reading for fun happens on paper, on the couch, glasses off with the book 3 inches from my face, frequently with an adult beverage in hand.
I make sure that I squeeze reading for pleasure into my schedule. I love to read! Also, I enjoy reading the manuscripts that I edit and the ones that I beta read/evaluate.
So, it's all good, as they say.
I still enjoy reading for pleasure, and usually have 4-5 books in progress at any given time (Like to read while on exercise bike). HOWEVER, since I became an official freelance copyeditor, I am finding it much more difficult to ignore misspellings, grammar issues, awkward phrasing. Just can't shut off my "red pen" eyeballs! Perhaps audiobooks would be a solution.
Julia:I like to read while on my exercise bike, too. (2 birds, 1 stone)
To avoid those spelling errors, I turn on the text-to-speech feature on my kindle. But, I still hear the awkward phrasings!
HKelleyB
HKelleyB wrote: "Julia:I like to read while on my exercise bike, too. (2 birds, 1 stone)
To avoid those spelling errors, I turn on the text-to-speech feature on my kindle. But, I still hear the awkward phrasing..."
Oooh, I didn't know of such a thing! Probably not on the Kindle app for iPad, though. Darn. *Adding to Christmas wishlist*



