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Arif

arifrohman@bookwyrm.social

Joined 5 months, 1 week ago

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2024 Reading Goal

11% complete! Arif has read 2 of 18 books.

Mortimer J. Adler: How to read a book (Paperback, 1972, Touchstone Books) 4 stars

How to Read a Book, originally published in 1940, has become a rare phenomenon, a …

Review of 'How to read a book' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Of all elements this book has, the most striking one is perhaps its title. A rather simple, descriptive title, yet, ironically, attractive enough to spark curiosity for some, including myself, leading into a question: why should someone read a book about reading a book?

The answer itself reveals that the said title is actually a bit misleading. What the author means by "read" is not its meaning in a general sense, but a specific kind of it, which, if I try to rename the title of this book, it would be: "How to learn something from an expository book (and make sure you really understand it)".

Some readers, who expecting a more general or leisure type of reading, would feel being deceived; but then, such readers are unlikely to have interest in a book titled "How to Read a Book" in the first place. This is a book for those …

William Morris: The Well at the World's End (Paperback, 1975, Ballantine Books) 4 stars

Review of "The Well at the World's End" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I picked this book because i read that this book inspired Narnia and The Lord of The Rings series.

The first thing I notice about this book is the language. The author uses old-english like style that are somewhat challenging to read, especially for new readers. But in my case, I became used to it and after read the book, i understood that it is needed to compliment the themes and settings of this book.

This book has 3 part. And follow the story of a young Prince that seeking for adventures, and how he overcome the obstacles.

The story itself is slow at the start. The beginning of the book reads like a sort of fairytale or children story, but then at the later part, it become more mature plot-wise. The boring part is in the second half of the first part and I almost abandon this book out …