h a l f b a k e r yThink of it as a spell checker that insults you, as well.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
You're reading a Chekhov play and it's in the middle of a dialog between Piotr, Katya, and Nikolai. You're reading and reading, and suddenly Vitaliy pops in with a line. You're like, "Oh, no! I didn't know he was still in here. He's been listening to all of this? I thought he was off stage."
Now
you have to go back and read, starting wherever, with this new perspective.
The StageTracker is a little metal dooey with, oh maybe 10 sliders on it. One for each character. It looks like your graphic equalizer on your stereo. Slide them up for "on stage" and down for "Exeunt" as you are reading.
[link]
|
|
You mean it's manual? Bleah. Can't you integrate it with the book somehow so it's automated? |
|
|
Not if you've got a brain that can store a number. |
|
|
// hardly anything integrates with them // |
|
|
As an indication of my process rather than goal oriented nature - I often read books without book marks. I open it to the general place where I was and start reading. If I've read it before and wasn't daydreaming when I read it, I read a bit faster until it looks unfamilar, otherwise I end up rereading sections and find interesting new tidbits that I missed the first time. |
|
|
I get lots of deja vu experiences this way and it prepares me for a day when Alzheimers sets in. More to the point, I've found that books with lots of pictures tend to solve the problem. |
|
|
Tosses bun at author, exits. |
|
|
<whispers aside> they're all quite mad. |
|
|
<divers alarums>Arooga! Too Deep!. Have a Soggy Croissant.</divers alarums> |
|
| |