I read at talking seed – reading “to myself” as if I were reading out loud to someone else. I see no point in speed reading. Many of the best-selling non-fiction books (Future Shock, Peter Principle) you can get the entire idea from the dust jacket, and reading the whole book adds nothing at all to your comprehension of the topic.
Thee was a joke about a guy who took a speed-reading course, read “Huckleberry Finn” in 45 minutes, and never laughed once.
I’m the same way. I like to take my time reading fiction. Really absorb the story. I read about 200 pages in 4 to 5 hours. That’s the longest I like to read at one sitting. 5 days to finish King’s book.
I can speed read. Skim through paragraphs to get the gist of what’s being said. Did it frequently with my textbooks. I always read the chapter quickly then went back to focus on the areas we covered in class.
For kicks and grins, here is an online reading test that measures words per minute and a quick 3 question comprehension test. Going at my normal recreational reading speed I got about 500 wpm at 100% comprehension. Per that site, I could get through War and Peace (1,200-1,300 pages) in just over 22 hours of non-stop reading.
I took the test three times. (There seems to be three different text samples used in the test.) My average was 588 wpm with 89% comprehension. This felt like I was racing, and was faster than I felt comfortable with.
Then I took it three more times, reading at my normal reading pace. This time, I got an average of 470 wpm with 100% comprehension (which was helped by the fact that I was now reading the same three selections a second time).
So referring back to my 2009 postearlier in this thread, it would have only taken me about 3.5 hours to read The Hobbit (95,356 words) at a reading speed of 470 wpm. This means that reading this book in a single sitting should have been easily doable.
Reading The Source (500K words) in a single sitting is a much more daunting task. At a pace of 470 wpm, it would have taken me nearly 18 hours. This seems like a stretch, but could have happened. I remember some long summer days home by myself. For what it’s worth, it was my second time reading the book.
Reading isn’t a “words per minute” thing. Some writing is meant to be read quickly, like page-turner thrillers, or grocery lists. Some writing is meant to be read quite slowly and closely, like math papers and legal codes.
I could read (and have) a >1000 page Stephen King book in a couple of days. Try that with a dictionary sometime.
“Atlas Shrugged” took about 2 hours because so much of it was obviously repetitive meth-addled drivel. “The Instructions” took me about 3 weeks the first time, and it’ll take longer the next time.