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| Source: http://www.ralphmag.org/CP/nabokov.html |
In my humble opinion –because let’s face it, following that
reading it’s impossible not to be humbled- Nabokov wants us to understand that
a good reader is both emotional and methodical. He explains in several
different ways that we have to strike a balance between the two to properly
read any given work. Nabokov expands on the idea of avoiding the pitfalls of
simplifying works of literary art, by cheapening them with too much emotion; or
glancing past their beauty with cold eyes working back and forth to simply take
in the words.
I wholeheartedly agree with Nabokov's explanation of being a
good reader. If you liken everything in a story to your own life, you've missed
the trolley entirely. At that point you've basically turned beauty or tragedy
into your own surroundings thus robing the author of the vision (s)he may have
had at the time of writing to some degree. At the same time if you simply read the book as a set
of organized words and don’t liken it to anything familiar, you are just reading
words for the sake of optic nerve exercise. He is right; enjoying a great
writing does require a difficult balance, which is itself hard to explain.
I believe the characteristics of a good reader are primarily
patience, and concentration. My definition of patience closely matches Nabokov’s
explanation of “re-reading.” I find re-reading indispensable when I’m studying
or reading in my free time, and let’s face it, re reading takes serious time
and patience. The other feature I hold in high regard is concentration –for me
at the very least-. I only find when I weed out the author in the writing. When
my image of the author becomes clear –and I don’t mean the picture on the dust
jacket- I start to pick out what they are picturing, and I get the whole
picture, not my own iteration.
I
consider myself a ghastly reader. I hold myself in the highest contempt for my
lack of being able to entirely absorb a story or scene. Granted I've read many
books in my life, but I fear that every time I put one of them back on the
shelf; I’ve overlooked some key detail, some glaring premise that everyone to
read the story before me picked up on during their first read through. I've been told time and time again that there is no mystery to an author’s writings.
I find this statement to be comprised of pure insanity, I defend that every author
is a liar; and a good one at that.
I fear I have gone way over the response size limit, for this I apologize – and thank you for reading-.
Found my “authors are liars” statement interesting? I found
this article from 2009 that makes some good points about the subject during a
routine Google search just now. I found it amusing.

I think your response was very concise and to the point. Well done. Yes, I did enjoy that " authors are liars" quote and I agree. There are many pieces of literature that I have read in my lifetime I believe to be a mystery on some level. Isn't that the point of some literature? True, patience is a great quality to have as a reader. I fear I overlooked that one myself. Truly, if you have no interest in what the author is writing about, but must read it anyway, patience is a virtue.
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