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Ed William's avatar

"It’s something I’ve been struggling with when I write — the push and pull of wanting to get straight to the point and avoid anything unnecessary AND all the good that can come from spending more time on an idea, exploring it from more angles, going for depth and style and playfulness…"

I FEEL SEEN

Sebastian Alvarez's avatar

"Abandoning bad books is good training for dropping bad ideas more generally and avoiding the sunk cost fallacy. The net value of this practice is higher than just recovering the opportunity cost.

Start more books AND stop more books! The result is that you’ll read more AND be happier with what you do read."

But what about books that you can tell are good, yet just don’t seem to click? For example, I’m currently reading Guns, Germs, and Steel, and while I can tell it’s incredibly well-researched and thoughtful, I’m struggling to make my way through it.

Biographies, business books, and psychology are much easier for me to read because there’s either a defined character you’re learning from, or the concepts are directly applicable to today.

Historical books, where the 'characters' are societies from 30,000 years ago and the subject matter is crops they grew, are much tougher reads for me, and I don’t feel as pulled in.

Do you ever experience this? When a quality book doesn’t feel like your cup of tea? Should you still drop it, or is it better to expand your horizons and push through?

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