Tagged: rules for reading novels
Ten Rules for the Reader of Novels

Franzen and I are judging you
With apologies to Jonathan Franzen and, to a lesser extent, Teddy Roosevelt and Lynn Coady.
- The author is not a friend, an adversary, nor a performer. I mean, they might be dead, for one thing. But a book can be a friend. So can other readers.
- Fiction that doesn’t inspire a reader’s personal adventure into the frightening or the unknown isn’t worth reading (unless you’re in the mood for something other than a personal adventure into the frightening or the unknown, in which case, go for it.)
- Cultivate a literary pet peeve. When you see it, underline it and write “UGH” in the margin. Mine is misuse of “begs the question”.
- Read The Catcher in the Rye and other first person coming of age novels while you’re young. Those stories won’t be as interesting when you’re older.
- Wikipedia rabbit holes are fun, but remember, novels are fiction. Even historical novels. Even novels that seem to portray real people.
- You can find yourself in a novel by matching up the author’s or main character’s socio-demographic profile to your own, but try to read novels that “find” you in places you’ve never been or experienced, too.
- You read more sitting still than chasing after. Unless it’s an audio book and you’re involved in a car chase?
- Reading and the internet go together in ways that are difficult for some to imagine. But for real, put your phone away after 9:00 pm and read for the rest of the night.
- Don’t discount novels written in simple language as simple, or assume a novel written in complex language is complex.
- You have to love an author before you can relentlessly make fun of them.