Two Types of Readers: Which Are You?

Hint: it has nothing to do with taste.

In his book Experiment in Criticism, C.S. Lewis argues that there are two kinds of readers: the few and the many.

What distinguishes them?

It’s not simply taste, that the few like Shakespeare while the many like Louis L’amour.

In short, the few:

  1. Reread books
  2. Look for chances to read
  3. Have transformative experiences while reading
  4. Think often about what they’ve read

The many:

  1. Read a book only once
  2. Only read when pressed
  3. Forget about a book after reading it
  4. Don’t think books are worth much of a fuss

Lewis points out that while the snobs are downstairs trying to gain status through a discussion of James Joyce, the only real reader in the house may be upstairs reading Treasure Island in his bed. The few are not necessarily professionals, nor does being a professional who reads qualify you as a member of the few. Love, not duty, motivates the few.

Finally, the few are not—simply by virtue of their love of books—morally superior to the many. You can be a good person and not care about books. You can be a bad person and love books.

So, are you part of the few?