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multiple10-Mar-1999media/entertainmentsupplicant unsorted2633265.9%

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Do you enjoy reading?

I mean leisure reading - not books you are forced to read for school, work etc. Non-fiction counts if it's being read by choice and not required research etc. So basically do you enjoy reading a book you have chosen to read?



VotesAnswer
199Yes, I enjoy reading.
11No, I do not enjoy reading.
6I don't really like or dislike reading.
112I wish I had time to read more.
33I read about the amount I want to.
3I read too much and wish to cut back.
3I don't read for pleasure at all, and I don't want to.
10I don't read for pleasure at all, but I would like to.

Comments (107),   Pages:prev   next1   2  
UserComment
supplicant
posted 10-Mar-1999 12:52am  
This is my first survey - so any comments on both what you liked and didn't like about it would be appreciated.

I used to read several books a week when I travelled on public transport, unfortunately since I stopped taking it I don't get as much reading done as I'd like. I am very much a book addict though.
North79
posted 10-Mar-1999 12:56am  
Love love love love love love reading.
romkey Survey Central Gold Subscriber
posted 10-Mar-1999 10:14am  
I have plenty of time for reading, I just wish I used more of my time that way.
jcdino
posted 10-Mar-1999 10:37am  
I love to read :)
they Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 10-Mar-1999 12:18pm  
I read everything.
Pomeranian
posted 10-Mar-1999 3:42pm  
It is my second favorite thing in the universe.
patty
posted 10-Mar-1999 4:10pm  
I'm always reading books & magazines I would be very board if I could not read I read every day
they Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 10-Mar-1999 4:14pm  
patty- bored :)
steve
posted 10-Mar-1999 4:58pm  
Reading is my #1 activity.
dpolicar
posted 11-Mar-1999 11:36am  
I read fairly compulsively, and it would be interesting to cut back and see what that does to my life... I often say that books are my sole remaining vice.
jettles Survey Central Gold Subscriber Gold Qualifier
posted 11-Mar-1999 2:45pm  
love to read, wish i could do more than i do!!!!
hammergirl
posted 14-Mar-1999 9:54pm  
I love to read! Even in college, I managed to set aside two hours a day to engross myself in a book.
Laela
posted 14-Mar-1999 11:39pm  
I would read a lot more if I didn't have to do so much reading for my college classes. :)
plots
posted 16-Mar-1999 10:02am  
I love to read, but once I am done with one book I have a real hard time to get 'into' an other book. I do not enjoy reading magazines and articles to the same extent as books.
WilliamFaulkner
posted 24-Mar-1999 5:05pm  
I like writing too.
Mozluvr
posted 27-Mar-1999 6:25pm  
What a weird question...
jaff
posted 30-Mar-1999 11:17pm  
it annoys me when people find reading distasteful. how are you supposed to learn things if you don't read?
Hailey
posted 4-Apr-1999 3:06pm  
I love to read, simply relaxing and loosing myself in a well written book.
anonymous
posted 4-Apr-1999 8:14pm  
Loosing yourself? That sounds like it could be pretty gross.
mags
posted 24-Apr-1999 11:05am  
I have so many unread books on my shelves...i want to read them all, but what do I do instead? I sit in front of the computer and answer these surveys!!!
bill Survey Central Gold Subscriber Gold Star Survey Creator This user is on the site NOW (7 minutes ago)
posted 24-Apr-1999 5:00pm  
Hey, it's mags! Welcome mags!
baal
posted 25-Apr-1999 8:25am  
Reading is one of the most satisfying leisure activities around. I tend to read non-fiction style so I improve my knowledge as well as my vocabulary. In fact reading improves your general intelligence dramatically. Kill your television! :)
mandy
posted 25-Apr-1999 5:36pm  
I love it...adore it...can't get enough words...gimme gimme words...sentences phrases paragraphs...more
more...faster...harder...*screams and falls down on top of a pile of books*
anonymous
posted 17-May-1999 4:45pm  
I cain't read.
laylah93
posted 19-May-1999 3:02pm  
I love to read, wish I had time to read more.
taking public transit to work gives me more time to read, but also presents more distractions.
laylah93
posted 19-May-1999 3:02pm  
EEK! another laylah! Doppleganger!
andrea
posted 17-Jun-1999 11:41am  
I love to read. It's like taking a mini-vacation!
Jasmine
posted 10-Aug-1999 12:17am  
I got a Nancy Drew from a friend. Her poem inside the cover went -
Cranes 'n' Chrysanthe m
Short complaint: wom b man who shoes. She walked and she walked Toulouse. She MOURNING. She PINKS 'n' blues, forever and News.
Flowers and Crows.
I'm still trying to figure it out, she left me a message on my phone to stay away from SC and tell my 'Celeste' personality she was beautiful.
Anyhow, the Nancy Drew wasn't nearly as good as i remember. I think i used to read the 1930 editions, not the 1961 or 1989 versions, cause i really doubt she was wearing 'slacks' in the ones i read, and there was a different mood. I'll have to try one of the old ones to compare, or just find something adult to read. i know i like funny stuff like the hitchhikers guide.
gilly
posted 10-Aug-1999 11:53am  
Speaking of Nancy Drew, Mabel Maney has a series of books about Nancy Clue, the Hardly Boys, and Cherry Aimless. Very queer, *very* funny.
Jasmine
posted 10-Aug-1999 7:15pm  
I verified they exist, (ya never know what people are trying to say around here.) I'll look for them.
HalH
posted 5-Sep-1999 9:32pm  
Just recently have realized how much I love reading and miss reading novels.
teacup
posted 18-Sep-1999 9:27pm  
I LIVE to READ. In fact, when I finish a book, I feel I can`t function until I start another.
yorricks
posted 2-Oct-1999 11:44am  
I read sporadically...sometimes i forget to come up for air for days...or i can go for weeks without reading anything I don't have to..
sbush
posted 10-Oct-1999 7:43pm  
Reading is kinda boring when you have the option of StarCraft over battle.net...
Timo_Tschachler
posted 17-Oct-1999 6:07pm  
I have noticed an ever growing concentration on ideas,
not on the way they were exposed. So that I have
found, sometimes, not enough strength to read even
some very good literature until its end, but have
been chasing - ideas, in order to catch their
"vibration" and how it could touch me.
Jeanne
posted 27-Oct-1999 4:56pm  
I enjoy reading the Bible, the best Book in the world, I also like to read about Chinese Medicine. I like history. I like to read primarily non-fiction books. I, at times, will read a historical romance book, but rarely.
Mariah
posted 28-Oct-1999 3:34pm  
Reading is a good escape for me. I read any and everything. If there is a magazine or newspaper lying near me, I have to pick it up and start flipping through it.
ILJ
posted 4-Nov-1999 12:26pm  
I'm of a mind with the late Frank Zappa on this one: I'm glad that books exist, but personally they make me sleepy. I can rarely get through ten pages without becoming irresistibly drowsy, so as a result I rarely read books. When I do read, it's typically short-attention-span stuff like periodicals.
Avocado
posted 6-Nov-1999 1:03am  
I've celebrated the end of nearly every semester in grad school with a trip to the local bookstore to get lots of fiction and humor :)
Lauren
posted 28-Nov-1999 6:56pm  
I like to read, but don't have time.
Skywalker
posted 4-Dec-1999 3:34am  
I love books! I often find myself not doing homework because I am engrossed in my reading.
Maggie
posted 1-Jan-2000 8:52am  
I do like reading but not all the time and I am very picky about the books I read.
Attyatlaw
posted 1-Feb-2000 7:34pm  
I read all day long!
mandy
posted 1-Feb-2000 7:39pm  
CHILTONS!!!!!!!
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 16-Feb-2000 11:55am  
I'm mostly into mysticism like druidism, Jewish mysticism..so on, so forth. I really liked the "Conversations with God" books by Niele Donald Walsh. Those tied a lot of things together for me.
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 16-Feb-2000 12:56pm  
micah: what sorts of Jewish mysticism are you into?
SueBee Survey Central Subscriber
posted 17-Feb-2000 1:25am  
micah - I enjoyed those books, too. I think I need to read them again.
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 17-Feb-2000 11:46am  
*SueBee-It's required to read them all at least 10 times! It's good for you.
Enheduanna- I'm reading a book right now called 'Kabbalah:An introduction and illumination for the world today' by Charles Ponce. It sucks. It's like eating peanut butter with no milk, but it's good for my purpose because it's supercondensed with info. I really enjoy making connections between different systems, like the Golden Dawn has done with magical practices. I've felt like Johnny 5 from Short Circuit lately. More input!
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 17-Feb-2000 11:52am  
micah: Have you read anything by Moshe Idel? He is one of the leading scholars on Kabbalah--I'd recommend anything by him. His work might be hard to follow, too--it will certainly be academic, but he's good and knows what he's talking about. Eliot Wolffson is another good one.
Mozluvr
posted 17-Feb-2000 8:07pm  
I'm just finishing "A Kind of Loving" by Stan Barstow... sheer and utter marvelocity!!!!!
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 18-Feb-2000 12:36pm  
Enhe...Is Moshe Idel a rabbi or something?
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 18-Feb-2000 1:42pm  
micah: nope, a scholar at Hebrew University, Jerusalem.
Maarten
posted 18-Feb-2000 8:14pm  
Donna Tartt and Bret Easton Ellis
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 20-Feb-2000 12:00pm  
Enhe: Have you read his stuff? Is it boring, or have yerky jerky starts and stops? 'Cause the one I'm reading now is not very entertaining. There's no creativity put into it. Usually books keep me awake at night but this one is having the opposite effect.
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 21-Feb-2000 12:16pm  
micah: y'know, I read some of his stuff a few years ago, and I don't remember tons about it. I think probably some parts of it are boring, but some parts are more interesting. Mysticism is not my specific focus, so I'm not that up on it, but I do know that Idel is an expert in the field.
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 25-Feb-2000 11:51am  
Who is this Idel and where can I find (her?)? Bring me to your leader! * smile *
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 27-Feb-2000 10:52am  
micah: He's a him, actually. I would imagine that a good university library would have at least some of his books--are you near UCSD? And/or can you use their library? (I would imagine so.) You could also do a search for some of his articles there. And I'll look to see if I have any references for articles when I get home in about a week.
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 27-Feb-2000 10:57am  
you could also just go to amazon.com and search in books under author "idel, moshe," and it comes up with a whole bunch of stuff. A few things just by him, and some other volumes that he contributed to or helped edit.
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 29-Feb-2000 10:52am  
Enhe-Thanks. UCSD is definitely an option. That's probably where I'm going after Palomar.
Weezie
posted 1-Mar-2000 10:23am  
I can't say "I don't like reading", i just don't feel like finishing it.
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 1-Mar-2000 5:13pm  
micah: Palomar? As in the observatory or what?
Also, if you're at the library at UCSD, you could use FirstSearch or the ATLA religion index (if they have it) to look for articles by him.
mary
posted 2-Mar-2000 12:41pm  
I haven't read a book in ages, I use to love it, I would spend all of my spare time doing it. Not these days, I don't even have time to sleep, let alone read.
nihon
posted 3-Mar-2000 10:39am  
I love reading all kinds of different books, magazines, etc. I read science magazines and books, map books, encyclopedias, science fiction, fantasy, history, how-to, religious, language learning (because I want to, not because I have to). I love reading!  * grin *
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 3-Mar-2000 11:17am  
Enhe- Although Palomar Observatory would be nice, I meant Palomar Community College. Funny coincidence, I'm studying Astronomy right now.
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 4-Mar-2000 2:40pm  
micah: cool--my father's an astronomer, and we used to go to the observatory at Palomar when I was little. They had a guest house where we'd stay while Dad had an observing run.
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 7-Mar-2000 11:02am  
Enhe: Impressive, most impressive. I was told that to get time on a telescope like that, you have to wait months after having your request accepted. You need a really good reason to use the telescope.
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 7-Mar-2000 6:33pm  
Well, he was a staff member at a place that I think basically "owned" some time on the telescope, so it might not have been exactly the same kind of waiting process (I could be wrong about this; it's also possible that he did have to wait to get time--I'm not familiar with the process).
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 9-Mar-2000 11:55am  
Lucky ducky. I've visited the observatory several times but only got into the public rooms. Did you get to see any machinery? If so, what was it like?
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 9-Mar-2000 2:30pm  
Yeah, I've been in the 200" there (and probably others, although I don't remember--we have a bunch of pictures from when phi and I were little, sitting on Dad's lap at one of the telescopes). It's basically a big metal telescope made out of what look like industrial-sized Erector Sets, inside a big metal dome. There are various machine and data rooms housed in the telescope building as well, most of which contain things I didn't understand and hence can't really describe. I haven't been there in a really long time, so the memories are a bit dim, although I do have a cool 8 x 10" black and white of the telescope itself hanging over my desk. The thing I remember most from Palomar, though, is getting dry ice out of the freezer and freezing cherries in it and eating them.
More recently, I've been to Las Campanas Observatory in Chile. My father's working on two new twin telescopes they're building there--6 or 6.5 meters (I can't remember--phi??). The telescope is a big blue mass, with no mirror in it when I saw it, although it's there now, and the dome is made of angled plates, rather than rounded. It also has lots of louvered panels in the walls (for ventilation, mostly) so a lot more light can get inside the dome during the day--it's much more open and airy than other domes. There are big holes near the mirror where instruments get attached, and huge hydraulic cables for moving it, and all in all it's pretty cool.
phi
posted 9-Mar-2000 3:00pm  
6.5 meters. The new generation of telescopes are to the 200" what a BMW is to a Model A -- lots of second- and third-order engineering. So there is all kinds of machinery for maintaining temperature stability in the telescope and the air around it, and for keeping the pointing system from eating itself, and so on.

I remember, around 1980 or so, steering the 200" with a joystick guided by an image from a Reticon (tube predecessor of a CCD) on a television monitor. I think this was part of one of the early galactic redshift surveys, perhaps the one that revealed the existence of the Bootes void. I remember riding up to the primary focus during the daytime in an incredibly rickety elevator -- I don't think anyone has actually observed from the primary focus since. I remember gobs and gobs of very "mad-scientist" computer equipment. Nowadays the instrumentation looks much more mundane.
Enheduanna Survey Central Subscriber
posted 9-Mar-2000 9:44pm  
Yeah, the data room at Magellan (the new 6.5" in Chile) has a bunch of normal-looking computers--no weird stuff at all.
I figured phi would have some more input on this!  * smile *
micah Bronze Star Survey Creator
posted 12-Mar-2000 8:53pm  
CCD=charge-coupled doodad. * smile *
Mozluvr
posted 16-Mar-2000 8:54pm  
Ahhh... Done with A Kind of Loving... Really charmingly English book... I definately recommend it. Now I'm well into DH Lawrence's 'Sons and Lovers'~really good, but you've got to love English literature and reading...
cookiekid
posted 17-Mar-2000 2:32pm  
More people should bother reading, forget about the ones you were forced to read and take time choosing ones you'd like,even that is fun because you can judge a book by its cover! There are books out there for almost everyone.
matty_01
posted 28-Mar-2000 11:07pm  
Wilbur Smith books - :):):):):)
DKN
posted 18-Apr-2000 11:38pm  
I think reading is one of the best things to do, especially when you need some "time off" from life.
Angry
posted 2-May-2000 10:51pm  
I hate reading!!!!! > * frown *
leemanette
posted 9-May-2000 11:59am  
Reading is my first love for leisure time. My mother encouraged us to read and then regretted it because that's all I was ever doing!
Violet
posted 25-May-2000 4:18pm  
I do most of my reading on the bus and subway, so now that I switched jobs and work further from home, I finish a book every 2-3 weeks. I'm so much happier!
drleephd
posted 26-May-2000 2:37am  
I read articles and stuff on the net , but don't really enjoy or have time for novels .
anonymous
posted 18-Jun-2000 5:52pm  
These options suck.
SueBee Survey Central Subscriber
(reply to anonymous) posted 18-Jun-2000 6:09pm  
Your opinion is obviously the minority. The survey has a very high rating. (68.9% at this time)
mandy
(reply to anonymous) posted 18-Jun-2000 10:45pm  
I believe this has been the highest rated survey overall on and off since it's creation. It is one of the best I've seen since I've been here.
supplicant
(reply to mandy) posted 23-Jun-2000 3:28pm  
It has, being the sad little egomaniac that I am I've noticed this  * smile *
Jemmy
posted 5-Jul-2000 5:21pm  
I enjoy reading books that interest me.
boots43
posted 23-Jul-2000 11:04am  
i read anything i see it seems
shiloh
posted 30-Jul-2000 7:01pm  
I find myself reading what the school forces me to read, but this reading is good.
Hotbabe
posted 10-Aug-2000 6:31am  
I don't like reading books, but read plenty of magazines.
Flower
posted 13-Aug-2000 6:03pm  
I just finished reading a book by Boris Starling called "Messiah". It's about a killer. I recommend this to everyone.
JRenee
posted 17-Aug-2000 6:06pm  
I LOVE reading, it's been one of my favorite things to do since I can remember. Some of my favorite books are Lord of the Flies, The Pact, and She's Come Undone. Please forgive me, I can't remember author's names.
supplicant
(reply to JRenee) posted 22-Aug-2000 12:59pm  
William Golding wrote Lord of the Flies. According to amazon.com She's Come Undone was written by Wally Lamb. But at least three different authors have written novels called The Pact plus one writing one called simply Pact and another The Pact: A Love Story, so finding that author could be rather harder  * smile *
JRenee
(reply to supplicant) posted 22-Aug-2000 9:18pm  
Thank you. I am very forgetful.
1phatphord
posted 26-Aug-2000 3:54pm  
I love to read true crime.
kirst
posted 20-Sep-2000 5:28am  
I absolutely LOVE to read. The biggest challenge I have is finding books. English language books are expensive here and there isn't a great selection. However, I buy quite a few books here and also have them shipped over from amazon.com. I also borrow books from the school where I used to teach.
juliep227
posted 5-Oct-2000 5:23pm  
Maarten
(reply to juliep227) posted 5-Oct-2000 6:42pm  
Oh please....
supplicant
(reply to Maarten) posted 20-Oct-2000 8:36am  
"This Survey (6126) has been deleted."

What was it?
Wicksy Bronze Star Survey Creator
(reply to supplicant) posted 20-Oct-2000 9:05am  
It was one in Qulaification

Juliep227 keep linking us to his surveys so we could qualify it!!
Maarten
(reply to Wicksy) posted 20-Oct-2000 12:11pm  
But we didn't because it sucked!  * wink *
Wicksy Bronze Star Survey Creator
(reply to Maarten) posted 20-Oct-2000 12:13pm  
sure did.

I liked the way you said about 10 times

"Oh please....."
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