How do you guys read books that you don’t feel like reading?

I consider myself a decent reader. If I’m very interested in a book, I’m able to stay up all night, reading it as much as I can until I feel like if I read anymore I’ll get fired for sleeping on the job. I love to read fantasy books, but usually most interesting fiction books are able to keep my attention.

The trouble I’ve got is with non-fiction books. Books that are talked about as “must reads”. Books like Sapiens, The Selfish Gene, Pale Blue Dot, or any textbook/technical documentation. I’ve tried again and again to read non-fiction books. Breaking it up into smaller chunks, listening to them as audiobooks, or just slogging through it page by page. But nothing seems to stick in my head if I grind through them.

Now, before you go “Hey naznsan, just don’t! Life is too short to read books you don’t want to read!”, the thing is, I want to read these books. Some of them explain things I’m decently interested in. Some of them I have to read for work/education. I just seem to have trouble either focusing, staying motivated, or retaining any information in such books.

So does anyone have any tips or suggestions on how I could read such non-fiction books like I read my fiction? Or am I doomed to just slog through page by page, relying on my notes to do all the remembering?

  • @AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    3
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    Find a reason to want to read before you start.

    Read favorable and unfavorable reviews until you feel the urge to make up your own mind. Do enough background research to form a preliminary opinion of your own, then see if the author’s reasoning matches yours. Get two books on the same subject, and switch whenever you start to get bored; then compare their approaches.

    In general, approach nonfiction not as information to passively absorb, but as an argument someone is trying to persuade you of.