B

Book Club

— Reading together, one book at a time
77 members Created May 2026

How I learned to DNF without guilt

I want to address the 'listening isn't really reading' argument one more time, because I keep encountering it in reading communities and I think it's worth engaging seriously.

The argument usually goes: reading requires the conversion of visual symbols to meaning, and listening bypasses this conversion, therefore they're different cognitive activities. This is empirically true — fMRI studies show different activation patterns. But different doesn't mean lesser. Oral tradition predates literacy. Humans are exquisitely adapted to process meaning from spoken language.

The more interesting question is: does the medium change what you get from a text? And I think the answer is sometimes yes, in ways worth acknowledging. Dense lyric prose reads differently than it listens. Poetry almost certainly needs to be both heard and seen. But a plot-driven novel, a memoir, a linear argument — these translate to audio with almost no loss. The medium matters, but not in the absolute way the gatekeeping crowd suggests.

19

Report thread

Why are you reporting this thread?

Restore the redacted content?

This will make it visible to everyone again. The clear action is logged in the mod log.