this post was submitted on 13 Dec 2025
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I am 60, i have read alot, I mean a lot, severalbooks a week for decades. I also don't watch TV and quit work when i was 35, so i am always busy.
I am starting to think this is juat like social media brain rot, what was the book 10 books ago I read, no fusking idea.
I am thinking of changing it up and selecting say 20 books and just re reading them a 1/2.dozen times to really know them.
The probelm with that is what ? Of all the books I've read in my life maybe 3 stand out. I tired going highbrow and read stuff like Joseph Conrad but "Heart of Darkness" is dull as batshit :) Watership Down (at least I finsihed it).similarly, Tolkein I gave up on 20 pages into The Hobbit etc
I'm also in my 60s, I'm recently retired, and have been reading quite a bit (not as much as you, but I'm on my 70th book since the beginning of the year).
A couple years ago, I started keeping a log of the books I've read. It's just title, author, brief synopsis, whether I liked it or not, and maybe a little commentary. I initially started it just so I could remember what books I read, but then some friends started asking to see it to help them their next book.
It's really helped me remember what I've read. Often I can remember just from hearing the title, but sometimes I have to look back at my notes, and then it usually all comes back to me. You might give it a try and see if it helps you, too.
I too found myself not being able to really discuss books I had read that long ago. So I slowed down my reading pace. Not just how many I take in, but how much time I spend reading the books. With particularly challenging things I have always returned to them, and re-read them as my understanding of the book expands, or my perspective on things changes, however I realized I remembered them in far more detail than others, and it was because the challenge slowed me down, and forced me to spend time contemplating what it was I was reading, as I was reading it.
I enjoy reading a lot more now. I am not in university any more, I do not have to read 500 pages per day.
i think one solution is to take notes while reading. maybe try and summarize the plot or write down some interesting things. I also read a lot and notes help keep things together. What I do after reading a book is to go through the highlights I made (which don't take much effort in the moment) and see if I wanna make any of them permanent in my obsidian vault. That process takes from ten minutes to an hour per book, but that's how insights stick. It gets you actually thinking about the book, instead of just experiencing it without much brain activity. But sometimes when I know I'm reading trash turning off my brain can be comfortable too.