Steve Stanley’s Reviews > Deep Reading: Practices to Subvert the Vices of Our Distracted, Hostile, and Consumeristic Age > Status Update
Steve Stanley
is on page 137 of 227
When our reading experience creates connection with others, we can celebrate that commonality and avoid, or at least resist, judgmental, either/or approaches to texts and people.
— Dec 11, 2025 11:56AM
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Steve’s Previous Updates
Steve Stanley
is on page 206 of 227
Rereading texts also remedies the consumeristic urge toward productivity and the desire to gain cultural capital by reading certain valuable books…Although we will never discourage readers from encountering treasured works of literature, philosophy, theology, history…we also firmly believe that reading a text only for the sake of adding it to one’s list of intellectual conquests is not the best way to read.
— Dec 16, 2025 08:50AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 205 of 227
When we attend to the same text more than once, the contrast between our previous and current reading, not to mention the act of repetition itself, allows us to resist distraction and deepen our insight.
— Dec 16, 2025 08:46AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 205 of 227
I (Roberts) am a quick reader of the printed page, but I often miss details on a first reading. When I listen to an audiobook, I catch descriptions and details I skimmed over the first time, deepening my attention to the text and particularly to each author’s distinctive style.
— Dec 16, 2025 08:44AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 159 of 227
Asking questions of the text and of our fellow readers forms us into readers with the gift of inquiry, readers who dig deeply into the text for new insights, and readers who are neither skeptical nor jaded but rather docile, teachable, and open to new and exciting encounters with texts and with other readers.
— Dec 16, 2025 08:07AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 153 of 227
Learning how to ask and explore questions is an important aspect of practicing exploration and understanding through reading, as questions draw readers’ attention to new, and complex, perspectives.
— Dec 16, 2025 08:04AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 137 of 227
Just as important as encountering those who we may find repugnant—or at least who defy easy categorization—is celebrating points of connection and commonality wherever we find them, both in the texts we read and in the people with whom we share this reading experience.
— Dec 11, 2025 11:51AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 112 of 227
When we approach worldviews, especially those inconsistent with our own, not with hostility and suspicion but with wisdom and charity, we expand our capacity to love our neighbors, develop virtuous habits, and make decisions that honor God.
— Dec 11, 2025 06:20AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 76 of 227
Expanding our definition of 'reading' to include ebooks and audiobooks as well as communal reading and review creates an inclusive, equitable environment wherein all of us, including those who are neurodiverse or from cultures outside of the Western mainstream, can experience the spiritually formative act of reading.
— Dec 09, 2025 06:33AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 76 of 227
As readers in the digital age, we can derive many benefits from deliberate attention to our reading processes, including our habits, environment, and tools for access and comprehension of texts.
— Dec 09, 2025 06:32AM
Steve Stanley
is on page 66 of 227
At the very least, when we talk about texts, we should avoid delegitimizing electronic or audio texts and instead treat those forms of reading as valid. (65-66)
— Dec 09, 2025 06:23AM

