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I agree with stewart and beer god. Counting pages cannot tell you the quality of what you've read. I've read some really long clunkers and some really short gems. And vice versa. So really, length has nothing to do with value.
For me personally, I found myself forcing my way through clunkers just to get the page count...it became a pride issue. Not healthy for me. If I could manage to keep the page count thing light...just for fun, that would be ok. Definately a case of milage varying here.
I didn't say anything about measuring the quality of what you're reading. What I mean by progress is your comprehension speed and the overall volume of content taken in. I find that the more I read, the better I am at reading and can comprehend and decode information a lot faster.
For example, at the beginning of the year, I started to read From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas Friedman. Not a particularly difficult book at all, but I had some trouble comprehending certain ideas Friedman was attempting to get across and some of the relationships of events in the book. I quit about 80 pages in. I picked it up again about a day or so ago after having read those 15,007 pages and find that understanding and comprehension comes much faster and ideas Friedman is presenting are clicking like they weren't before; it's actually holding my interest this time.
I didn't say anything about measuring the quality of what you're reading. What I mean by progress is your comprehension speed and the overall volume of content taken in. I find that the more I read, the better I am at reading and can comprehend and decode information a lot faster.
For example, at the beginning of the year, I started to read From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas Friedman. Not a particularly difficult book at all, but I had some trouble comprehending certain ideas Friedman was attempting to get across and some of the relationships of events in the book. I quit about 80 pages in. I picked it up again about a day or so ago after having read those 15,007 pages and find that understanding and comprehension comes much faster and ideas Friedman is presenting are clicking like they weren't before; it's actually holding my interest this time.