How to Read a Book

Casey

Let’s start with the title, because it’s always struck me as a little ironic. How to Read a Book. If you’re holding this book in your hands (or listening to it, or reading it on a screen), you obviously already know how to read a book. But that’s not really what Adler and Van Doren mean. What they’re actually offering is a guide to reading with the intention of understanding and mastering a subject, particularly nonfiction. Once I reframed the book that way, everything about it made a lot more sense.

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Narrative (2nd edition)

Casey

Narrative (2nd edition) by Paul Cobley is a bit of a different beast for me — because, at the end of the day, it is a textbook. This is one of the titles recommended by BookTuber Benjamin McEvoy in his “How to Get an Oxford English Education for Free” video, specifically the first book he listed in the English Literature Criticism category. And reading it, you can absolutely tell: this is a book designed to be paired with lectures, discussion, and a professor guiding you through the denser bits.

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The Ode Less Travelled

Casey

I have to admit: I didn’t complete all the poetry exercises in this book. I started with good intentions, but quickly realized I’m more interested — at least for now — in understanding how poetry works than in writing my own. And honestly, that’s okay. The exercises will be there if (or when) I circle back. What mattered most to me was learning how “good” poetry is constructed and how best to read it, especially out loud.

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