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Every day he read for hours.
He read for thirty minutes, pacing forward and back.
He read for about twenty-five minutes, from "Virtual Light".
He read for another half hour, then stood up and paid his bill in cash.
Johnson did not work systematically from a word list but marked up the books he read for copying.
While waiting for demobilisation in 1946, he read for the bar, and began practising as a barrister.
Similar(29)
What changed was that he was forced to detail and rationalize the way he reads and what he reads for.
The only work he reads for himself is the "Work in Progress".
He of course does have the requisite copy of Yeats by the bedside, which he reads for sustenance.
President John T. Casteen III of the University of Virginia says that he used to read for eight or nine hours a day when he was primarily a scholar; now, he says, he's lucky if he reads for more than two.
The "common reader … differs from the critic and the scholar … He reads for his own pleasure rather than to impart knowledge".
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com