Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
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Opinions on REREADING books - not only related to Harry Potter



I reread more often than I read.



Exactly!

i love re reading book. especially ones ive read as a kid.


The Outlander series, the Clan of the Cave Bear series, Game of Thrones series, Harry Potter, all of Jane Austen, all of my Stephen King, and all my Nora Roberts and Julie Garwood get massive re-reads. When I first read Game of Thrones, I read all five books straight through, then started over again!
The only books I have a hard time re-reading are mysteries. Once I know "whodunnit," I can't read very many more times. But even saying that, if it's been a few years, I'll still pick it up and read again!
I always find something new and enjoy them all over and over. Currently, I'm re-reading Harry Potter and The Haunting of Hill House along with The Mortal Instruments series. Yes, three books at a time! I'm a total book nerd.

The Outlander series, the Clan of the Cave..."
I am always rereading something as well! About the Clan of the Cave Bear series..i still haven't finished the last one, to my desmay..i got stuck after 50 pages :( and i read all the other books in a flash! I think it's too descriptive. Also, i tried Nora Jones and i didn't like it - didn't think it brings anything extraordionary. Of course, i only read 2 of her books..should i give it another try?


I recommend these three trilogies to get you started in Nora Roberts, then you'll be used to her style and see that her stories are quite good.



The Circle Trilogy is my favorite. Nice blending of supes and magic and romance.
Then you can move along to the futuristic cop books by J.D. Robb (Nora Roberts in disguise!)
More editing: Skip anything that is mother's song or cave touring in the last CotCB book and you get about 100 pages of readable material. It was very disappointing to me, but I still can't get enough of Ayla!

I reread the Eragons before the last one.
I reread the Hunger Games and Catching Fire to remind myself why I liked Katniss after Mockingjay.
I reread Graceling, Fire and even Bitterblue (which was just out in may) a few times now. I can pick up Fire anytime and be entertained by it.
I tried to reread the Mortal Instruments but couldn't figure out what I saw in them in the first place so I abandoned the endeavour.
Reread the Infernal Devices with success along with my other fluffiest steampunks.
Basically I tend to reread the more action oriented, funny or the ones with a well crafted romance that appeals to me, I tend not to bother rereading the drier or clumsier books I enjoy on a single reading - I lose interest on the second attempt.

I recommend these three trilogies to get you started in Nora Roberts, then you'll be used to her style and see t..."
Thank you!!
Reading books is brill and it is definitely educational



Divergent
Hunger games
Harry Potter (of course)
Graceling, Fire, Bitterblue
Uglies series
Evernight
Switched series
Mortal Instruments



Anyway, I read a lot and have a list of new books I'd like to read so I don't only just re-read the same books over and over. I always try to read a couple of new books in between so that I am not missing out on new favorites. Which is how I discovered that I adore Alexandre Dumas, especially The Three Musketeers stories.
In some ways I'm lucky and in some ways I'm not. My mind can't seem to hang on to enough details of a book (sometimes even major plot events and characters) beginning about a week after I finish it. Rereading is always a great adventure for me, sometimes if it's been long enough it's like reading a book for the first time. Oddly enough, I can't watch too many movies more than once :)

Obviously, I re-read the book in a series before reading the new book: I re-read all the four books of Game of Thrones before reading A Dance with Dragons, and I plan to do that again with The Winds of Winter (plenty of time to do that), I'll do it with Outlander, once I finished it (I'm still at fourth book).
Maybe I'm a nerd too... I'm always reading two or three books at a time!


That's pretty much my exact criteria for rereading, if I'm terribly fond of a character it feels like I'm spending time with them.
Keri wrote: "I just enjoy coming back to the same characters and the same places, don't really know how to describe it. I just recently re-read LotR after a few years without and it felt comforting to be back in Middle-earth again, probably sounds silly. "
I understand completely. I feel this way about the Harry Potters and the Graceling series most I think, but certainly about a few others. I think perhaps it might be part of the reason that I although I do love dystopic fiction I often find I simply don't feel like reading it.
This quote seems quite apt for the topic though:
"Wherever I am, if I've got a book with me, I have a place I can go and be happy. ... somewhere you can go that you love and be safe" -- JK Rowling
Occasionally I'll find myself digging in my heels against reading new books - as if someone is trying to force me to go to a party where I don't know anyone. Most of the time I can't seem to find new books fast enough to satiate myself but every once in a while I just get petulent and don't want to. I want to go where things are familiar and predictable. And of course once I indulge this I go back to new things :P

This is one reason I love JD Robb's books about Eve Dallas. Each time I read a new one it's like revisiting old friends. The plots are different but the characters are pretty much the same.
As a kid I read The Chronicle of Narnia several times but don't find myself doing a lot of re-reading as an adult.







I re-read books a lot. Actually I prefer re-reading to catch anything I missed the first time.



Exactly!


I re-read books after a loooong time. Most of the books that I have re-read are books that I used love as I child. But most of the times, I don't re-read because there's a huge number of books that are waiting to be read for the first time. I love the feeling that you get when you read a book for the firt time. That's why I wait for years to pass to re-read a book, so I can feel the same way I felt when I read it for the first time.

I read Eragon when I was in Year 4 (around 8/9) so I got back it in Year 7 and then again in Year 9. I feel as if I understood it more with every read? Also, I have the worse memory haha..

Harry Potter
The Hunger Games
Percy Jackson and the Olympians
and a few other individuals.
I reread series when a new book comes out to refresh my memory. Sometimes I reread books I really enjoyed like HP ;). You always discover something new.

I have read all the Harry Potter books at least 3 times, numbers 1-3 a few more. I've also read most of the Artemis Fowl books more than once, and I'm planning on re-reading some of Tamora Pierce's books as well. In the case of most of these I have only read them in Danish, and one of the reasons why I want to read them again is that I want to read them in English, because I think books are usually better in their original language.
I could definitely also see myself reading the Hunger Games again.
I know other people who re-read as well, so I'd say it's quite common. I'm also looking forward to read some of my own favorites aloud when I have kids.. :)
On the other hand, I also think it's wonderful to be able to get caught up in something completely new and unknown. I usually re-read when I have nothing else to read, or if I'm reading a rather heavy book and need something lighter to switch to once in a while.
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Is rereading common? Or do you prefer to find new books and explore unknown terrain?