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Showing posts with label 100 best novels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 100 best novels. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

How to Read More: Tips and Tools

Reading Shelf
As an English graduate student, I have a ton of reading to get through every week; academic articles, stories, novels, books, research, and many other minor things. I was recently talking to another student who was asking me how I manage. Talking with him for a while I realized that I have learned some secrets to getting more reading done! Not really secrets, but I do have some tips and tools that I utilize to get my reading done that I think everyone who wants to read more can use. I prioritize reading, make lists, use text to speech, listen to audio books, and annotate.

Prioritize Reading

First thing I do is that I prioritize reading. I have a wide array of texts to read regularly. I am not a speed reader, but I have studied speed reading and practice it when time is of the essence. By prioritizing reading I have trained myself to get into the proper mind set. I can always find time to game or check in on social media, but I would not get all the reading I have to do done if I did not make it a priority. I make lists of articles I have to read for class and have a due date for when I need to finish them. When I have something on my to do list, it is easier to get it done and I enjoy checking it off. When I have some free time I pull up the Kindle app on my phone and open my pleasure reading book, instead of Facebook. Sometimes I get on Facebook, I am not a robot, but since I prioritize reading over many other things, being on Facebook will make me feel bad while reading my article will make me feel accomplished.

Make Lists

I love the feeling of checking off an item from my to do list. I feel accomplished and I can reward myself with some slacking off time. Reading is a task on my to do list. I enter appropriate due dates for when I have to have something finished. I do not have a separate to do list for readings, reading is a task just like everything else I have to get done. Make it manageable. I enter an article as a task or a number of pages. For instance, this week I have three articles to read and each one is entered as a separate task that I can check off. I also have three books I need to read this quarter, for preliminary reading on my thesis. I maintain a separate list of everything I have to read for that and I enter book and page numbers into my to do list. Reading ten pages, one chapter, or one article is manageable. Reading a book is not something I can check off my list quite as easily. I use any.do because it is simple to manage and available across all platforms. I compiled a massive list of the 100 best novels in English, which is a good place to find something worthwhile to read.

Text to Speech

For all the planning and prioritizing I do, I sometimes can only concentrate for so long. Some articles I have to read are quite useful but boring. For the times I cannot muster the attention span I use text to speech software. Another tip about text to speech is that it helps you edit your own writing. Reading a text out loud helps to hear any type of grammatical mistake as well as errors. It is built right into Microsoft Word and is available for free from many places. I use natural reader on my computer (available for both Mac and PC) and it is free.

http://www.naturalreaders.com/

Natural Reader has better voices on it than plain text to speech and you can purchase premium voices if you like. I enjoy Hazel, a British female voice, at three times the speed. I read along as it reads to me and I get the material through multiple senses at once, hearing and seeing. This helps me to retain more of what I am reading. Also, I have to keep reading, I can’t stop. Hazel is relentless, I have to pay attention to her. Even I can only read for so long and Hazel keeps me more engaged because it is a more active reading experience. On the Natural Reader website you can also paste anything you want it to read out to you if you do not want to download and install the free program. The free version does have pop ups that ask you to upgrade to premium but it is not necessary. I have learned to use the nuisance of the pop up to keep me on track. I reward myself with a short break after five or six pop ups.

If you have a Kindle Keyboard http://amzn.to/1QnLYS6 like I do, you can use it to have it read almost anything to you. The new Kindles do not have text to speech. I send articles to my kindle and read on there when I want to read and listen at the same time.
Custom Skin on Kindle

Audio Books

The main complaint I hear from people about text to speech is the robotic voice is hard to understand. I think Natural Reader helps out with this but for those that just can’t get used to it, there is the traditional audio book. These have been around for ages in the form of books on tape. Now they are a small mp3 file that almost any electronic device can read. I use Audible on my phone for when I am walking or driving to school. I always have my phone with me and it is convenient. Check whichever app store you use and it should be available. Audible has a great special that allows you to try the service for 30 days and gives you two free ebooks as well.

Try it out and see if this works for you. This is another way to get more reading done tailored more for on the go moments. They also offer free books available to download. Here is one I recently read, that I think has a lot of value in it. It came highly recommended and it is completely free right now as an audiobook.

 Recession Proof Graduate.

Project Gutenberg also offers free Audio booksThey have both text to speech and human reader versions.

Annotate

After you read a lot you might begin to forget some specifics. As a grad student I need to be able to engage with the material and recall it for class discussions. The best way to engage and find particular passages is to annotate what you are reading. There is even a name for writing in the margins, Marginalia. To me annotate means to make some kind of note or mark in the text. If you find something interesting highlight or underline it so that you can find it later. I like to respond to my text and I write reactions in the margins. I write things like awesome, haha, cool, and useful. I also like to write down questions that come up as I am reading. I write them close to the text that inspired them. The more you write the better and be specific. Whatever system you use make sure you understand it. Don’t make it too convoluted or cryptic. You want it to be able to transport you to when you originally read the text and felt a response. I also write down important passages that I think I should remember in my notebook. Kind of like a reading journal. A reading journal is what some people use to keep track of everything they read in one place. Instead of placing marginalia in different text, they compile all their reading notes and comments in a reading journal. This can be a great habit to develop. Since school and work are both related for me, I have one notebook that I write class notes, reading notes, and work notes in. I have a little system in place to help me track my stuff. I recently found the Bullet Journal method http://www.bulletjournal.com/ and it works well for me.

Conclusion

Everyone has different habits and tricks to get more done. These are the ones that I have used for years to help me keep up with a heavy reading load. I would recommend you try them all out and see which ones work best for you. I personally use all of them and I find it is the best solution for me. If you have any questions feel free to drop me a line or tweet me. Thanks for reading and let me know if any of this helped!


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Saturday, September 20, 2014

The 100 Best Novels in English with Links for Kindle

When I first got my Kindle, I couldn't wait to fill it up with the best novels. Searching around on the internet I found this great list. The goal when they made the list was not to have a competition about what the best book was, but to get people talking about great books. To narrow down the list they had a couple requirements for the novels. 1. Published between 1900 and 1998 (when the list was made), and 2. published in English. There are other lists that cover nonfiction and world literature but let’s focus for now on the 100 best novels written in English in the 20th century.

All these novels were voted for by hundreds of thousands of readers. The final list was compiled by the board at Modern Library and arranged from 1 to 100. They are not in order per se, and I would not recommend reading it in order, but organized from the most loved and critically acclaimed.

Any book on the list would be a great read and guaranteed by thousands of readers to entertain and enlighten. Many of the books are available for free in ebook, which is the purpose of this article, others range anywhere from $1.99 to $11.99. I won’t post the prices because they fluctuate so much at Amazon, but I will highlight in Bold the ones that are Free.

Let me know what you think in the links below, and let’s get talking about great books!

The List

by James Joyce

by F. Scott Fitzgerald

by James Joyce

by Vladimir Nabokov

by Aldous Huxley

by William Faulkner

by Joseph Heller

by Arthur Koestler

by D.H. Lawrence

by John Steinbeck

by Malcolm Lowry

by Samuel Butler

13. 1984
by George Orwell

by Robert Graves

by Virginia Woolf

by Theodore Dreiser

by Carson McCullers

by Kurt Vonnegut

by Ralph Ellison

by Richard Wright

by Saul Bellow

by John O’Hara

by John Dos Passos

by Sherwood Anderson

by E.M. Forster

by Henry James

by Henry James

by F. Scott Fitzgerald

by James T. Farrell

by Ford Madox Ford

by George Orwell

by Henry James

by Theodore Dreiser

by Evelyn Waugh

by William Faulkner

by Robert Penn Warren

by Thornton Wilder

by E.M. Forster

by James Baldwin

40. THE HEART OF THE MATTER
by Graham Greene

by William Golding

by James Dickey

43. A DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF TIME (series) Link to book 1 of 12
by Anthony Powell

44. POINT COUNTER POINT
by Aldous Huxley

by Ernest Hemingway

by Joseph Conrad

47. NOSTROMO
by Joseph Conrad

by D.H. Lawrence

by D.H. Lawrence

by Henry Miller

by Norman Mailer

by Philip Roth

53. PALE FIRE
by Vladimir Nabokov

by William Faulkner

by Jack Kerouac

by Dashiell Hammett

by Ford Madox Ford

by Edith Wharton

59. ZULEIKA DOBSON
o:p>
by Max Beerbohm

by Walker Percy

by Willa Cather

by James Jones

63. THE WAPSHOT CHRONICLES
by John Cheever

64. THE CATCHER IN THE RYE
by J.D. Salinger

by Anthony Burgess

by W. Somerset Maugham

by Joseph Conrad

by Sinclair Lewis

by Edith Wharton

by Lawrence Durell

by Richard Hughes

by V.S. Naipaul

by Nathanael West

by Ernest Hemingway

75. SCOOP
by Evelyn Waugh

by Muriel Spark

by James Joyce

78. KIM
by Rudyard Kipling

by E.M. Forster

by Evelyn Waugh

by Saul Bellow

82. ANGLE OF REPOSE
by Wallace Stegner

by V.S. Naipaul

84. THE DEATH OF THE HEART
by Elizabeth Bowen

85. LORD JIM
by Joseph Conrad

86. RAGTIME
by E.L. Doctorow

by Arnold Bennett

by Jack London

89. LOVING
by Henry Green

by Salman Rushdie

by Erskine Caldwell

92. IRONWEED
by William Kennedy

93. THE MAGUS
by John Fowles

94. WIDE SARGASSO SEA
by Jean Rhys

by Iris Murdoch

by William Styron

by Paul Bowles

by James M. Cain

by J.P. Donleavy

by Booth Tarkington

Please check the price before buying it for your Kindle, as books change in price and availability regularly. The books without links are currently unavailable in the Kindle Store. 

So what do you people think about the books? Which would you recommend? Which ones have you read?

 Check out our Facebook Page and Like us to keep up to date on the latest Kindle Literature posts. You can share this post or any others on your social media of choice and bookmark the site for future posts, free Kindle books, and the best Kindle novels. Make sure you subscribe and check back for more. Happy Reading.