Read faster, caveman - Nick Green
Recently I had to borrow my wife’s Kindle (thanks to the
biggest bugbear in the ebook system – no longer can two people share a simple
book without handing over their entire bookshelf. Sort it out, Amazon.)
My own
Kindle is one of the early models with keyboards, the e-reader equivalent of
the brick mobile phone, so at first I could only slam her Kindle Paperwhite
against a rock while grunting, ‘Where controls? Me need make words.’
Me have kindle fire! |
Eventually the rock bumped the ON switch, and I was away.
I’d been looking forward to reading Donna Tartt’s ‘The Goldfinch’, partly to
dispel my suspicion that Donna Tartt was actually one of those spoofonyms like
Eileen Dover or Claude Boddy (respective authors of ‘The Great Descent’
and ‘Lion Taming For Beginners’). For
instance, ‘The Baker’s Hat’ by Donna
Tartt… Aaaaaaanyway, I got reading, and soon noticed a nifty little feature
boasted by the newer Kindles. A message at the foot of the page said, ‘Time
remaining in chapter: 14 minutes’.
That’s handy, I thought. I do most of my reading on trains,
and it’s good to know whether you’ll finish this bit before terminating at
Leighton Buzzard (I know some readers with a borderline phobia of breaking off
mid-chapter). What I didn’t expect was that this prompt would become a source
of distraction, stress and ultimately humiliation.
There are stories of people driving dangerously fast to try
and beat the estimated time of arrival on their SatNavs. It’s throwing down a
gauntlet, isn’t it?
I accept your challenge... |
I turned to page two of ‘The Goldfinch’ and the Kindle
said, RECALCULATING. TURN AROUND WHERE POSSIBLE. YOU ARE IN A DUCKPOND.
Actually it didn’t, it said, ‘Time remaining in chapter: 17 minutes.’ Hmm, I thought, that’s odd. Isn’t it supposed
to go down as I read more? Maybe
Donna beamed in some last-minute bonus material via the Cloud.
I put it from my mind, and let myself be swept up in crystalline
prose and transatlantic angst. But on the next page I couldn’t help noticing:
20 minutes remaining. Twenty? This was getting absurd. I have less to read now,
you dumb e-reader. I should take less time, not more.
Next page: 22 minutes. Then, 24. It felt like being in a
sinking balloon. I’d blame Donna, she isn’t the briskest of reads, perhaps
because she spends about a decade honing each book to perfection, but I knew I
wasn’t dawdling. I read at a speaking pace, in that I say the words in my head exactly
as if I were reading them aloud. When a book is particularly well crafted, like
this one, I also like to drift back over pages and paragraphs as I go,
savouring the turns of phrase, chewing over multiple interpretations and so
forth. It’s wine, not Vimto. But now I was starting to read as if the very
whips of Sauron were behind me. I was well into the chapter now, and the cheeky
little slab was telling me I now had 30 minutes to go to the end of the
chapter. Twice as long as it predicted at the start. What was going on?
Donna did her best to help out by offering a bit more in the
way of page-turning action, but the finish line kept stretching off into the
distance. Forty minutes now. Fifty. Would I break the hour barrier? Five pages
later, with a moronic boom, I did. I began to think the tide would never turn.
STOP! In the naaaame of love... |
Finally, at 1 hour 4 minutes to the end of the chapter, the predictions
stabilised, wobbled a bit in both directions, and finally began to slip down
again, until it reached 59 minutes and my train pulled into the station.
Here’s the thing. I presume that this particular Kindle has
calibrated itself to the reading speed of its usual master, i.e. my wife. Which
can only mean that she habitually reads at least FIVE TIMES faster than I do. I
knew she was a quicker reader, but by that much? Given that I proceed at
speaking pace, that can only mean that when she reads she
musthearthewordsinherheadlikethis. Is that normal?
I always assumed critics
were exaggerating when they claimed to have ‘devoured the book in one ravenous
sitting’. Now I wonder. Could it be that I’m just an exceptionally slow reader?
I have gazed into the Kindle Paperwhite, but the Kindle
Paperwhite has gazed also into me. You know, I’m not sure I care particularly
for books that read me while I read
them. What next? Iris-scanning emotion detectors that gauge whether you’re
enjoying it enough? Sweat sensors in the screen to see if Stephen King is
properly scaring you? God forbid, interactive intelligent books that actually
delete the bits it notices you skipping, so that you get distilled fight or sex
scenes as applicable?
Comments
I lost the time counter and % tracker at the bottom for a while (I think I switched it off without realising) and suddenly I was rudderless! It's scary not knowing how much book there is left to read!
I replaced my original Kindle with a Fire when it died Love the Fire. It has a touch-screen and is very light and easy to use.
Valerie, the virtual keyboard only pops up when you touch a 'log-in' box, or otherwise indicate that you want to use it. Then it vanishes again.
I loved having the Fire with me when we were in Barra recently. I used it to write a diary, with the Docs to Go app. We identified birds with the Bird of Britain app (lots of photos and their songs, as well as info about them.) We identified the other islands we could see by using the UK Map app. We used the calculator - I was constantly fishing it out of my rucksack.
I know I'm always surprised by the times given for audio book lengths. I always imagine them to be longer. "Only 8 hours!" I exclaim and double check to see if it's been abridged.