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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 16th, 2023

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  • Handyandy58BtoBooks@metacritics.zoneReviews or Ratings
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    1 year ago

    Neither. I don’t find much value in reviews from anonymous strangers, and even less from contextless star ratings. As such, I don’t feel a necessity to contribute that kind of information to any particular site. I have considered making a book blog as a personal exercise, but I have never really summoned the effort to get it going.




  • You are confusing the significance of average and median. To illustrate, consider a sample of three people. If one reads 1 book, one reads 5, and one reads 50, the average person in that group has read 18.6 books. The median person has read 5 books.

    In the same way, the average skews higher than the median for all Americans because the average is brought up by a relatively small number of people who read an enormous amount of books. So even though the median American only reads like 6 books a year (i.e. most Americans read 6 or fewer books), the average is brought up to something like 12-15 (depending on the survey) on behalf of a decent number of readers that are reading 40+ books a year.










  • I don’t think it’s odd that a child wouldn’t have a particularly diverse book diet. Kids are often pushed towards commercialized series because it’s considered just good that they’re reading, and a series usually provides parents with a reliable source of new books they can draw on to provide their child. Most people don’t really start approaching well known “classics” until high school or maybe junior high at the earliest. And even then, their exposure is limited. Most people who seem to have read “a lot” and widely have done so of their own volition, as the number of books you can read as part of a HS curriculum is necessarily limited.