Xan_Winner
Xan_Winner t1_ixy6jkl wrote
Reply to When a physical book is so bad you believe no other mortal should read it, what do you do with it? by HeavyBlastoise
Hollow out the middle and hide your drugs in there.
Xan_Winner t1_iuclh0e wrote
Maybe read some murder mysteries with very tightly woven clues. You can't know which details are important to the solution and which aren't, so you need to read it all.
You'll probably try to skip anyway, but halfway through you'll realize you missed something, and then you have to go back and read a part again, fully.
Or you could read very short short stories. If there are only a few hundred words, there's not enough for you to skip anything. Once you're used to reading a very short story in full, you can move on to slightly longer stories, carrying the habit over.
Orrrrr you could try to read webnovels that post weekly. There's only one chapter at a time. It's ridiculous to skip anything, especially because the end doesn't exist yet.
Orrrrr you could read a book out loud, maybe to another person or just to yourself. If you're reading out loud, it's harder to skip anything.
Ultimately, it's just retraining your mind.
Oh! You could try comics. Less text, more pictures. Kind of hard to skip pictures and speechbubbles.
Xan_Winner t1_itg5w1l wrote
Yes, the book is really fun and much better than the movie. The movie changed the characters too much and I feel that took away a lot of the impact.
Xan_Winner t1_j5kj2cl wrote
Reply to Is it ethical to pirate books I already own if I just want an E version? by whydoesyourbedsmell
Until you can get your eyes checked out (and you should, that could be signs of various health issues!), you could stick to reading stuff online that's legally free.
https://www.gutenberg.org/ At Gutenberg you can read thousands of classics for free - legally, because they're so old they're out of copyright or were written before modern copyright laws.
On Amazon, many authors offer books for free for exposure, you could sort by price and download a couple dozen free books to read.