Can you judge people on the books they read?
- Mairin
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Every once in a while a mind numbing read is just what I need. I've been known to pull out a Sandra Brown book every now and then just to have a good 1 day quick read that is pure smut and entertainment!GotThatSwing wrote:I think first option is more probable. I guess people read chick lits to realx? (Becuase Gossip Girl is a chick lit, right?) I wouldn't assume someone is stupid for that reason. The other way round probably yes, I would think that a person reading serious book probably is smart.laci_baby wrote: But truly i doubt you'll ever see a genius read Gossip Girl nor an idiot actually reading Clockwork Orange. It just doesnt work. It may be wrong, i admit, but sadly you can't tell your brain to not think such things. I'm a horrible person... i know.
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For one- Fran, i would never think anything ill towards you. It's not possible. You read so much as it is anyway that sooner or later your going to run out of the good reads.

Swing- I have no idea if GG is a chick lit.. that's a good question though. And i wasn't meaning it against chick lit's, i only meant it against the drivel GG stands for. I only meant that, even when not realizing it, my brain does tend to go against it. But as i said... you can't stop your brain from thinking such thoughts. But i'm still having problems picturing Einstein flipping through a brainless book. Ever. But that's just me, i suppose.
Mairin- We have all read our share fair of chick lit, with shame. No worries.

- GotThatSwing
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I have no idea either. We should investigate it. Anyone here who read it?laci_baby wrote:Swing- I have no idea if GG is a chick lit.. that's a good question though.

- StephenKingman
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- GotThatSwing
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- Lonestar
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However in some cases it can be; my last girlfriend for instance. Given what I finally realized about her personality, her choice of such books as Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible shouldn't be a surprise.

As for me...with my affinity for radio-related works would probably brand me in the eyes of many as a geek. Or a mad tinkerer.

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- C0ldf1re
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Even if I was actually reading second-hand science-fiction paperbacks with ragged covers, casual visitors must never see them.
The books on display were selected from those with perfect covers. They must cover sensible subjects, or be "respectable" novels (i.e. authors preferably dead). The Bible always had to have pride of place.


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I really try not to judge people, because I know from experience how misguided it can get.
- Tip the Bottle
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Should you judge people by something as little as what is on a bookshelf or even a gut feeling, yes. Often times those first impressions or gut feelings prove to be true. I read somewhere that people who've been victims of violent crimes state that that their initial feeling about someone was that there was something off about that person but disregarded that feeling.
Just because you judge someone doesn't mean that you can't get to know them better and change your mind. I remember on job I worked at I was told by the manager that he wouldn't have hired me when he first saw me because I looked angry, his assistant manager hired me, but then he got to know me and turns out I was one of his best workers, an angry worker but one of his best.
When you're grateful to them for giving you the things you should already have anyway, ask yourself why."
-Lady in Blue, rebel broadcast
- Hikkomijian
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Although everyone can read light books, the people who read them are determined by them. And not necessarily it means, that someone is too foolish to read other kind of literature. No, It shows his character in the first place.
But it seems undeniable that intelligent people aim for ambitious literature. What doesn't mean that they read only this kind of books, it is enough (/ok) to read them from time to time. First of all it shows that they need a dose of something profound, of something demanding. As for me the reaching for this sort of books distinguishes the reader interested in knowledge from the one who lives only some cheap novels.
In my opinion the vital factor is if the reader is discriminating. The less he is, the worse is a quality of reading books by him- hence I deem he is limited. On the other hand high demands reflects on his high taste- that, he is not pleased by some novel, where one fact confuses with another. No this reader searches for some epic story, which will be remembered for a long time.
To summarize. Yes, it's possible to estimate a person from the books he reads. And as a reading literature determines his character (e.g. if he likes laughing, dreaming etc.), so does requirements in relation to the book reflects on his intelligence.
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It does not mean we're bad people.
People should be judged by their actions but the again it's ok to make mistakes ... as long as you don't repeat the same mistakes all the time

- Fran
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I hate to see those shelves of leather bound books that you just know have been purchased because they make good looking shelf fillers and have probably never been opened much less read. I'd be more impressed with a few shelves of well thumbed paperbacks.
A world is born again that never dies.
- My Home by Clive James