How fast can you read?

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KIR

Sparks, NV
Joined
Mar 2, 2022
Messages
2,503
When I was going to elementary school, I found that there was a library nearby and one day, I went over and I got to check out a book and was given an application for a card. I guess that started my love of reading as eventually, I read every book and all the magazines in the house. I subscribed to the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction which helped my reading speed as they were easy to read. In house were books of war that my father liked, the Naked and the Dead being one of them and books my mother liked which included the Kinsey Report. Shortly before I went into the service I read some 30 books by Edgar Rice Burroughs about Tarzan. It practically had a cliff hanger at the end of every chapter. When the James Bond movies came out, I read all of the ones written by Ian Fleming and got to know the definition of an adjective and how it helped my writing at the Uni of NV. However, just before I enrolled I took a speed reading test (500 wpm) and later the whole course. I started reading "dynamically" at the end of the course, but I am sure many would not believe.
The point of the post is that today I read that there are people who do not believe that actress Sarah Jane Parker can read two books in a day. The news article did not mention the size/length/legibility for age... However, I think it must have been a slow news day to mention that some people don't believe she could read two books in a day. They must be very slow readers.
The other point of this post is curiosity as to...your reading speed. I am down to 450 wpm. How about you?
 
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I don't read very well; consequently, I never read books or newspapers. I remember a teacher (I know I should say professor) in college who said (emphatically and often) that you CANNOT be successful in business unless you read the NY Times and Wall Street Journal every day. I vowed to never read either. I retired after 44 years with a major multi-national.... most in my generation did not make it that long. I DO wish that I was able to read, but I make do with what I was given and, espouse "attitude is everything".
IMHO,
J
 
I took a "developmental reading class" in college for an easy credit. I started the course reading 1,100 wpm with 90% comprehension and left the class at 1,500 wmp with 90% comprehension. That's fiction. For things like thermodynamics I have to slow quite a bit.

I know that I've gotten slower with age but I don't know how much. I think that my ability to concentrate has been ruined by TikTok and Youtube.
 
I also was a big reader when I was younger as we too had a library nearby, directly across the street from our house. I spent a lot of time over there reading just about anything related to space and science fiction. I also loved reading comic books, much to my dad's chagrin. I would take my 25 cents weekly allowance and buy a comic and a candy bar and bring home 10 cents. Dad would get upset and say "I don't understand why he likes reading those damn things" and my mom would say "Well, at least he's reading." I still have some of those old comics.
To add, I have no idea how many WPM I can read. Fast enough that I don't fall asleep. Most of the time.
 
I have no idea how fast I can read. I never got into speed reading. I don't believe I know who Sarah Jane Parker is. I did love to read growing up. I remember when I was in about 5th grade getting on a biography kick. I read the biographies of many of the old West gunfighters, many presidents, famous pioneers, etc. Then later on I developed an interest in fiction. When I was in Junior High & High School, I would alternate between reading more serious books & Louis L'Amour westerns.
 
I also loved reading comic books, much to my dad's chagrin.

Until junior high school, comic books were something the I got when I was sick. Then I started buying them on my own and that really upset my father. He'd blather on about putting away childish things and I'd say, "I don't care what some dead tent merchant thinks" which would enrage him even more. I stopped buying comics when they got to be $1.50 for a basic title. It's probably been forty years since I bought one.
 
I can't recall which grade, definitely elementary school. They select a few of us to go in a room one by one with a teacher and visitor. The visitor explained that the room would go dark, and the screen would have a story projected on it. But only one word at a time would be shown. After each "story" we would leave the room and another would go in. When out, we had to write a narrative on what the story was about. I forget how many times we went in and out, but remember the lighted words went by faster each time....I do recall my parents reading the report at home wondering why I excelled at the reading exercise but did so poorly with grades. I did enjoy reading though...loved The Hardy Boys as a kid and like to read The Readers Digest condensed stories....I remember when one of the digests had Jaws and Dogs Of War....I took it and hid it in my room and read it over and over.
 
I have no clue how fast I read. But I do know that some things I can read faster than others.

But I do enjoy reading. Always have. But I do have my preferences.
This.
Most nights I sit and read in my chair when everyone else is asleep. I can easily read a book a night depending on what it is. On my Kindle I average about a hundred books a year, that doesn't count real paper books. I drive my wife nuts buying used books.
When I was in school I caught a lot of grief because people didn't believe that I read whatever we were supposed to read quicker than everyone else.
 
I only read as fast as I need to.

I don't read books any more (though I still read the Bible a bit) but I do read Fox news, the N.Y. Post and Times, NPR, U.S News and World Report, Briebart, The Hill, Washington Times, Newsweek, BBC and NPR almost daily as well as keeping up with my hobbies of photography, guitar playing, shooting, solar power, tropical fruit trees and gardening.

I don't need the news media to formulate an opinion, I already have most mine down pretty well, and I don't read them to remember the content, I just like to know who's who.

I also get by "typing" with 4 fingers.
 
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Again, no idea. I read for enjoyment, mostly. And I like to take my time and allow the story to unfold in my minds eye. And, while not the same, I really enjoy a well told story. When I was working I loved audio books on my daily drives. You'd be amazed how fast the time from L.A. to Sacramento flies by with a good book being read.
 
I recall an English class where we were to read A Tale of Two Cities and Les Miserables during the semester. Most kids put up a howl of protest at being "made" to read two long books. I blew through them in a couple of weeks. That same semester I read Exodus, Hawaii and several others I can't recall right now. Only English class I ever got an A in.
 
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