This post contains spoilers for The Princess Bride by William Goldman.
I haven’t kept a reading journal for a long time, and I feel like I really want to start again. So, this’ll be a post for fondly remembering all the things I liked about documenting my reading, and hopefully doing that and hearing new ideas from you guys will properly motivate me to work this particular practice back into my life.
So, here’s my journal 🙂
It’s a pretty basic set-up. When I start a new book, I put the title and author at the top, and dates and page numbers in the margins. My notes were sometimes plot summaries, but more often just things that occur to me while I’m reading. Like, if I find an exchange of dialog particularly emotional, I’ll document exactly what I’m feeling for the characters and hypothesize about why the words were so well-chosen.
For example: when I was reading the Princess Bride, I was really struck by the father saying, “Westley dies.” Somehow that scene was a more direct emotional hit than an actual death scene. So I explored that a bit. Was it the just the fact that the phrase was in the present tense, and that’s a departure from the ordinary? Was it the intimacy of having someone else say without any doubts that it’s happening? Was it because when they speak about book characters, the events are immovable and therefore sadder?
If I hadn’t been keeping a reading journal at the time, I probably would have just carried on, and later forgotten that the scene had touched me so much. It makes me wonder if I’m missing other chances for growth, and that’s the main reason why I want to start again.
Okay. So, that’s my reading journal experience. Who else out there has done or is doing something similar? As you may have noticed, I have a keen fondness for the unique processes and methods people use to organize their thoughts.