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I was reading a book yesterday named 'Reading power' by Linda | 🄱🄱🄲 learning

I was reading a book yesterday named "Reading power" by Linda Jeffries and came across some good advice
on choosing what kind of books to read. Anyway, I read a lot but I am not an expert to give advice, so here is some good tips by Linda Jeffries:

1. Choose a book that interests you. Your teacher and classmates may have good suggestions, but choose the book that is best for you, not for them.

2. Choose a full-length book, not a collection of articles or stories. Reading a whole book by a single author allows you to become comfortable with the writer's style and vocabulary.

3. Avoid a book whose story you are already familiar with because you have read it in another language or have seen the movie made from it. Knowing what will happen may make it less interesting for you. (Well, I don't agree with her right here, because I read Harry Potter books in spite of knowing what will happen)

4. Evaluate the book. To find out about the author and the genre (type of book), read the front and back covers. Read the first few pages, to find out about the style and subject.

5. Check the level of difficulty. If a book is too easy, it may be boring; if it is too difficult, you may become discouraged and stop reading. To find out how difficult the book is for you, count the number of unknown key words on a typical page. Five unknown key words on one page means the book is difficult for you. No unknown key words means the book is easy.

If you don't know where to find books, look on pdfdrive.com for titles that might interest you or just go to library. In the future, I am hoping to form a group with my subscribes to share each other's reading experience, for asking
questions about books etc. Well, I hope this was useful. Take care. Read.
Doctor English