Well Read
I don’t know if I read more because I fear my reading days
are numbered or because my curiosity is higher than it has ever been. But,
nevertheless, I read more. Maybe I have more time than I used to, maybe I make
more time than I used to, maybe I have always had time to read as much as I
wished. Whatever, I read more. Cheryl would attest to that fact because she
sees the things I neglect while I am reading; the little things that go undone,
the things I intended to do but never did. The truth is, she reads more than
she used to; maybe it’s just part of growing older.
We don’t read the
same things but we are both completely tolerant of the other’s choices. She
loves to read current and traditional
theories of Bible prophecy regarding the end time and she loves to establish
timelines of major events in Bibical history. She delves into her research to a
level that I will never attain. She wants to explore the latest ideas regarding
major prophecies and how they affect current events. It is all so far over my
head that I sit back in amazement as she tells me her latest revelations. She
is my authority on the meaning and timing of all the world’s daily occurences.
She is fascinated by the implications and wants to enlarge her already
expansive knowledge of the subject. I support her and encourage her to learn
all she can.
My personal interests are varied but totally disimilar to
her goals in reading. I have always been an avid reader of historical novels
and history, but I also love to read pure fiction that is not contaminated with
sex and vulgar language. So many modern writers think that everyone wants to
read all the smut that they can produce, but for me it is a turnoff and results
in a rejection of their story. I have acquired a strong following for tales of
judges and juries and the law enforcement forces that support them, but my long
standing interest has been history; American history and world history because
so much of what we think and believe today is based on the actions of our
ancestors. I throughly enjoy a good
American western story that depicts the west as it was, and is.
I have favorite authors that I have read for over forty
years. I have grown accustomed to their style and even though some have passed
on, I anxiously await others new releases. I prefer English authors for their
style and wit, but I have a list of American authors whom I have followed
zealously. In the past year I have read tales by Frederick Forsyth, Jeffrey
Archer and Ken Follett from across the pond and works of American stylists John
Gresham, Michael Connally, Robert Parker, Tom Clancy, Stephen Coonts, Brad
Thor, Craig Johnson, Jeff Sharra, Rick Atkinson, Burke Davis and David
Baldacci. I’m not sure how much more my brain can consume, but I’m OK with some
of the old stuff getting pushed out to make room for new information. I read at
least one book a month and sometimes two or three.
I don’t know that I am any smarter because I read so much,
but I think I am better informed, because authors keep you aware of how the
latest technology is being used and historians remind you of how we got to
where we are. Few things are black and white and opinions are as numerous as we
are, so we are enriched when we examine the thoughts of others, whether we
agree with them or not. Writers often imbed a bedrock principle of their belief
in the thoughts of their protagonist or they project the opposite of their
beliefs in the thoughts and actions of their villian. Reading is an adventure
of discovery, it is full of ideas and opinions and it is a great escape from
the massive overdose of electronic media that encompasses us in today’s world. I
don’t know where the spiral will stop, but I suspect I will have a hard- bound book
by my death bed. I doubt that I will long retain what I have just read, but
just in case, wake me up and ask me what I thought about it. If you can, I will probably
appreciate it.