>Tfw I can't remember anything from most books I've read other than a vague summary of the plot, if I liked it and why I did or didn't enjoy it.
Why even bother?
I know this feel. I wouldn't feel like I wasted so much of my life on books/film/TV if I could at least remember more of it. And my memory's actually pretty good in general.
I do not remember what I ate yesterday, yet it still fills me. Books are the same way.
>>9461985
You treat books as if they were consumable goods? Lol what a loser.
>>9461978
Better than me.
I generally can't even explain why I like or don't like a book. I am indifferent to most books, anyway. I don't have strong opinions about anything, really.
I hate myself.
>>9461978
Do you take notes on what you read? Do you ever speak about the book or read it aloud?
>>9461990
Not him, but you are borderline brain-dead.
You're not even trying to remember them. Either write it down as a mental note or learn to skim read your favourite books if you want to remember them better. An attribute that can help familiarize yourself to your development could help fix it.
You have to work for your hobby and let it work for you, so expand a bit to find out why you enjoyed reading without sounding like a burnt out drunk.
Satisfaction is fleeting
The fun is reading a book not reminiscing
Read and move on
>>9461978
If all you remember is that you enjoyed it, it's a perfect re-read. Some books are better on the second or third read.
You remember it better the more you read it too.