How I Read and “Digest” a Book
Justin Meats
Outcome-based Product and Engineering Leader enhancing lives through technology | Infinite Learner | Strong Team-builder
Updated: 1/15/2024
According to PEW Research's?Book Reading Survey from 2021, 75% of Americans have read a book in the last 12 months, and the typical (median) American reads 5 books per year, with 42% reading digital books. For a long time, I was lucky if I read one book in a year.?In 2018, with the process I outlined below, I read 51 books, and since then, I have read 30+ books every year. This post shares that process and some background on how it came together.
MY PROCESS
1. Get both the Kindle and Audible Versions of the Book
Books with?Whispersync?allow you to seamlessly switch between listening to the Audible version and reading with the Kindle version. Bookmarks and notes will sync across Kindle, Audible, and Alexa devices if you own both versions.? It’s often cheaper to buy the Kindle version with a discounted Audible version than just the Audible version. If you don't want to buy the book, you can loan books (both Kindle and Audio) from your local library using the?Libby?app, but they will not have Whispersync.
For books without an Audible version, the Amazon Alexa app does a decent job reading Kindle books. I prefer the professionally recorded Audible version when it’s available, but this has let me listen to books I would have had a more difficult time getting through. You do have to have Internet access to have the Alexa app read to you.(I discovered this on my?Appalachian High Points?trip)
2. Listen to the Book
Listen whenever/wherever you can! Driving in the car, walking the dog, mowing the yard, emptying the dishwasher, and doing DIY projects around the house are good times to listen to a book.
While driving, I'll use Audible's car mode, which has three big buttons: Play/Pause, Go Back 30 Seconds, and Add a Bookmark. When I'm not driving, I will listen to the audio using the Kindle iPhone app because Immersion Reading highlights the words in real time as it plays the Audible Companion Audiobook.
I also vary the speed of the reading. 1.5X-2.0X speed is more natural to how I think and read, but this is not for everyone.
3. Bookmark & Highlight
While listening to the audiobook, listen for the book's key points and create a bookmark to highlight in the Kindle version. ?
I am a very visual person, but listening for this “Tweetable” content helps me better focus. ?When driving, I'll bookmark in Audible, which will sync to the Kindle. Later and ideally, when I arrive at my destination, I will go through the bookmarks and highlight content in the Kindle app while it is still fresh in my mind.
The Kindle has four colors you can use to highlight.? This allows you to categorize the content to easily access it by filtering by color.?
Here is the system I use for highlighting:
The Kindle also has a feature called Popular Highlights, which I always like to review and see what other readers are highlighting.
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4. Read to Teach and Create a Document of Main Points
5. Keep and share lists?
I use?Goodreads?to track?books I have read,?yearly reading challenges, and books?I want to read.?Goodreads does a good job of helping me keep track of how many books I have read. I also share all my?highlights on Goodreads?so others can see the main points of the books I have read.?I've also started a?Recommended Books?list on my website to share some of my favorite books by topic.??
6. Re-Listen to Books
It's amazing what you pick up when reading a book multiple times. Over time, our roles and situations change, which can shed a whole new light on a book.?When discussing books,?Pam Springer?has reminded me that it is the quality, not the quantity, and she will often listen to a book 5 times before moving onto the next one.
Sometimes, if I wake up in the middle of the night and can’t go back to sleep, I’ll put on headphones and listen to a book I’ve already read. It helps calm my brain, and I often go back to sleep, but I don’t feel like I’m going to miss out on anything because I’ve already listened to the book.?
This is my ideal process.?I don't always do it for every book, but the better the book, the longer it takes to go through because I am trying to fully "digest" the content.
“The more that you read, the more things you will know.?The more that you learn, the more places you'll go.” -Dr. Suess?
BACKGROUND
I have always liked to read, but I’ll admit I got burned out reading books while in high school and college.? After college, I always wanted to read more but never made it a priority.? As life went on, I only got busier with my work and family of 4 kids.? I’d buy books, but they mostly sat on the nightstand next to the bed to collect dust. In 2009, I discovered the Kindle app for the iPhone and loved the idea of always having my books with me.???My first Kindle book was?Free: The Future of a Radical Price?by Chris Anderson because I couldn’t pass up the price, which was free.??I read a few books over the next several years but still found it hard to find the time to read a book.??A business coach,?Brad Dunnington, suggested I listen to audiobooks to and from work in the car. ?I was quickly amazed at how much of a book I could get through listening to just 15-20 each way to work. I was reading more, but I was not consistent.? I wasn’t hitting my goal of one book a month.
In the fall of 2017, several things inspired an immense love of learning while reading and listening:
I re-discovered Goodreads in the spring of 2018 and joined the?2018 Reading Challenge.?Inspired by Bill Gates, who reads 50+ books a year, and continuing DIY projects around the house, I was on track to read 50 books and set that as my goal. ?It was an ambitious and lofty goal.? I tried really hard to concentrate and have it be quality over quantity.? I was able to finish 51 books while iterating on my process.? Since then, I have read (and re-read) 30+ books a year.
Reading opens your mind to new ideas and ways of thinking, which helps you become a better version of yourself.
I continue to iterate on my process and am always interested in tips and good book suggestions from others.
Hopefully, my process inspires you to read more (and share some good book titles with me)
Originally published in Feb 2019 on justinmeats.com
Guiding Premium Consumer Brands to Profitable Growth through Retail Control - My life's work is equipping brands to unlock command of this complex space.
4 年Awesome advice and system Justin! I’ve got to go and get audible, ??
?? CEO @ Seamless.AI | 5x Best-Selling Author | Top 10 LinkedIn Startups | Over $36 Billion in Revenue Generated For Customers | Helping Salespeople Book More Meetings, Close More Sales, and Make More Money w/ A.I.????
4 年This was good!