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How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading Paperback – August 15, 1972


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With half a million copies in print, How to Read a Book is the best and most successful guide to reading comprehension for the general reader, completely rewritten and updated with new material.

A CNN Book of the Week: “Explains not just why we should read books, but how we should read them. It's masterfully done.” –Farheed Zakaria

Originally published in 1940, this book is a rare phenomenon, a
living classic that introduces and elucidates the various levels of reading and how to achieve them—from elementary reading, through systematic skimming and inspectional reading, to speed reading. Readers will learn when and how to “judge a book by its cover,” and also how to X-ray it, read critically, and extract the author’s message from the text.

Also included is instruction in the different techniques that work best for reading particular genres, such as practical books, imaginative literature, plays, poetry, history, science and mathematics, philosophy and social science works.

Finally, the authors offer a recommended reading list and supply reading tests you can use measure your own progress in reading skills, comprehension, and speed.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“It shows concretely how the serious work of proper reading may be accomplished and how much it may yield in the way of instruction and delight.” The New Yorker

“These four hundred pages are packed full of high matters which no one solicitous of the future of American culture can afford to overlook.”
—Jacques Barzun

“‘There is the book; and here is your mind.’ Adler and Van Doren's suggestions on how to connect the two will make you nostalgic for a slower, more earnest, less trivial time.”
—Anne Fadiman

About the Author

Dr. Mortimer J. Adler was Chairman of the Board of the Encyclopedia Britannica, Director of the Institute for Philosophical Research, Honorary Trustee of the Aspen Institute, and authored more than fifty books. He died in 2001.

Dr. Charles Van Doren earned advanced degrees in both literature and mathematics from Columbia University, where he later taught English and was the Assistant Director of the Institute for Philosophical Research. He also worked for Encyclopedia Britannica in Chicago.

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
7,544 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find this book a must-read that provides important advice and outlines a framework for reading, helping with deep reading skills and understanding. Moreover, the book offers deep insights into education and trains the mind, with one customer noting it serves as a gateway to metacognition. Additionally, the writing style receives positive feedback for being exceedingly well written. However, opinions on readability are mixed, with some finding it an interesting read while others find it boring, and similarly, opinions on wordiness are divided between those who find it comprehensible and those who find it verbose.

252 customers mention "Readability"227 positive25 negative

Customers find the book highly readable and consider it a must-read, with one customer describing it as the "bible for reading."

"Great book, written in the 70's so a bit out of touch. But timeless knowledge in here definitely." Read more

"Good book but incredibly long considering it's a book on how to read a book quickly" Read more

"This is a great book. This book can make a big improvement in how effective you are in reading. It mostly focuses on how to master a book...." Read more

"...to judge the book that were given in it, I would qualify it as a good book, but the reason I gave it three stars is because most of us looking for a..." Read more

187 customers mention "Information quality"174 positive13 negative

Customers find the book informative and helpful, describing it as a good guide and teaching tool that provides important advice.

"...Shocked face. Just kidding, lol. This really was very informative and helpful. Would definitely recommend." Read more

"Informative and Insightfull.....For readers of 1940s..." Read more

"...How to Read a Book is a book for everyone and no one. It is a practical book that deserves a slow read...." Read more

"Very informative, will definitely help read those pesky college textbooks faster and more accurately." Read more

140 customers mention "Reading comprehension"137 positive3 negative

Customers praise the book's approach to reading comprehension, highlighting its basic skills of analytical reading, four levels of reading, and guidance on how to choose and read books.

"...Van Doren, introduce the concept of four levels of reading: elementary reading, inspectional reading, analytical reading, and syntopical reading...." Read more

"Good informative read." Read more

"...It may be hard to implement fully, but its good to know how to read thoroughly if one wishes regardless." Read more

"A great book elaborating on how to read...." Read more

53 customers mention "Comprehension"53 positive0 negative

Customers praise the book's effectiveness in boosting comprehension and understanding, noting that it trains the mind and helps develop a strong curriculum. One customer mentions it helps focus thoughts and questions while reading, while another reports improvements in math skills.

"...It was enlightening, useful, and easily grasped. The principles have provided invaluable insight into some of my other reading...." Read more

"...I am currently working on the book. it is enlightening...." Read more

"...of involvement that hopefully makes for a more satisfying and enlightening experience...." Read more

"...and Doren give some good advice about how to read in a way that expands your mind...." Read more

50 customers mention "Insight"42 positive8 negative

Customers find the book insightful, particularly appreciating its deep understanding of education and peripheral topics, with one customer noting how it serves as a gateway to metacognition.

"Insightful, intriguing, and empowering book..." Read more

"I needed this for a class and I must say it was insightful...." Read more

"This book is a liberal arts education all by itself...." Read more

"Great insights..." Read more

39 customers mention "Writing style"34 positive5 negative

Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it exceedingly well written and noting that writers are almost invariably great readers, with one customer highlighting its highly quotable nature.

"...seem very obvious; however, the vignettes are well-selected and well-written. They make me want to read the books he references!" Read more

"...You learn to read expository, poetry, math,fiction and so own. Book teaches you how to outline and pick out what the author is trying to convey...." Read more

"Mortimer Adler and Charles van Doren are great authors. Book is very well written." Read more

"...This is worth owning and spending some time going through. The book is well written and it is not heavy stuff. Anyone can understand the principles." Read more

39 customers mention "Reading enjoyment"20 positive19 negative

Customers have mixed feelings about the book's readability, with some finding it an interesting and enjoyable read, while others describe it as boring and tiresome.

"This is an interesting book, but I can't imagine anyone following the tedious methods set forth to read a book...." Read more

"This book is so slow and uneventful. I had a hard time reading it and staying focused...." Read more

"A classic. This book is practical, and surprisingly, a joy to read...." Read more

"It is a challenging book!!" Read more

33 customers mention "Wordiness"15 positive18 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's wordiness, with some appreciating its ability to help comprehend complex text, while others find it sometimes too wordy and verbose.

"Wanted to like it but couldn't handle the style; wordy, verbose, long-winded. 10 words where 3 would do. Not knocking the ideas just the delivery...." Read more

"...Still, this book is an easy read because it is not erudite and full of words that only scholars would know...." Read more

"...That being said, the book remains highly readable, if somewhat verbose." Read more

"...teaches with practical exercises of increasing reading speed and comprehension...." Read more

Don’t Let the Title Fool You—This Book is a Game Changer!
5 out of 5 stars
Don’t Let the Title Fool You—This Book is a Game Changer!
When I first heard of How to Read a Book, I thought, “I know how to read a book—why would I need this?” But I’m so glad I gave it a chance! Recommended by Jim Rohn, this book is far more than its title suggests. It’s a masterclass in deep reading and understanding complex texts. The authors introduce methods like analytical and syntopical reading, transforming how you absorb and interpret information. If you’re serious about expanding your knowledge and becoming a more effective reader, don’t let the irony of the title stop you from picking this up. It’s a must-have for any lifelong learner!
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2016
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    I have always had a nagging feeling that I didn’t know how to read well. This book showed me that I was right. But it also showed me that I wasn’t expected to know how to read well (not with the kind of education most of us receive) and that I wasn’t alone in my ignorance. Reading well involves hard work and precise skills. This book provides the latter — the former is up to us.

    We take reading for granted because we are supposed to be fully alphabetised at around tenth grade. We are not told that this is just the first level of reading — Elementary Reading (Part 1, Ch. 3) — when you learn to recognise the written symbols and to convey meaning from them. You learn how to grow your vocabulary on your own and to transfer and compare concepts from different reading materials. But most of us stop there. And from there we live the rest of our lives treating books in undeserving ways, wasting too much time on the bad ones and granting so little time to the good ones. The great ones, we hardly read, because they scare us.

    The problem of wasting time can be drastically diminished by applying the second level of reading — Inspectional Reading (Part 1, Ch. 4). This level means “skimming systematically” to grasp as much as you can from a book in a limited time-frame (possibly just a few minutes). That was an important skill on Adler and Doren’s time when libraries were the norm, but it is even more important now when you have digital previews of a plethora of books in services such as Amazon. If “Customer’s Review” sections existed during their time, I am sure they would also have devoted a portion of Chapter 4 to provide insights on how to better profit from them.

    The problem of spending little time on the good (or great) books can only be solved by the third level of reading — Analytical reading (Part 2). Without it, you either refrain from reading a good book altogether (specially a great one) or you read it badly. “Reading badly”, the book explains, is to read passively. Reading analytically is very active and it is hard work. To help us in this endeavour, the book provides extensive advice on how to physically mark the books we read (Part 1, Ch. 5). These note-taking techniques are indispensable to read well and the reader is advised to experiment with them and adapt them to his own style of understanding and to the new types of media now available.

    To read analytically you have to ask yourself a number of questions while reading and you must make your best to answer them yourself. The authors present these questions in sequence, but they are quick to explain that in practice (and with experience) we should try to answer them mostly simultaneously.

    First, you need to know what the book is about as a whole (Ch. 6 and Ch. 7). This means first categorising the book, then expressing its unity in as few words as possible. You should then proceed to outline its main parts, each of which should be treated as a subordinate whole and have its unity also expressed. This process could continue ad aeternum, but “the degree of approximation varies with the character of the book and your purpose in reading it”. At the end, you should have identified what questions the author wants to answer himself.

    After this more “descriptive” stage, you should now try to grasp the author’s message (Ch. 8 and Ch. 9). This means first reconciling the grammatical and the logical aspects of what he writes by matching his chosen words with the terms they express. Only then you can identify the important sentences and paragraphs (the grammatical units) in order to establish the author’s leading propositions and arguments (the units of thought and knowledge — the logical units). Once you have reached actual understanding by identifying and interpreting the author’s terms, propositions and arguments, you can now evaluate if the author has answered the questions (the problems) you identified earlier.

    You and the author are now peers and the best thing you can do now is to praise him by criticising his book (Ch. 10 and Ch. 11). However, in order to do so, there are rules, just like there are rules to reach understanding — there is an intellectual etiquette grounded on rhetorical skills the reader must possess. You should understand first and only then criticise, but not contentiously or disputatiously. You may disagree based on the author’s lack of information, misinformation or reasoning fallacies. You may also judge the author’s completeness as faulty. But the most important maxim is to do so with the sole intention of conveying and discussing knowledge, not opinions. “Knowledge consists in those opinions that can be defended” and “opinion is unsupported judgement.” You must be sure to distinguish between both.

    So you have described the book, you have understood it and you have criticised it — now what? This is the last (and possibly most important) question you should make. If the book has enlightened you, even if just a little, you must go further — you might even have to act upon it. I like what the authors say about this question applied to historical books: “The answer to the question lies in the direction of practical, political action.” History shows what has been done, so it is a lesson of what we can do or avoid doing. In the same way, whatever the kind of enlightenment you had by reading the book, you have had a glimpse of truth — you can’t ignore it now that you know it.

    Part 3 is useful in that it provides some interesting aspects of specific types of reading material, namely practical books, history (including biographies and current events), imaginative literature (including plays and poems), science and mathematics, philosophy and the social sciences. While a pleasure to read, it is not imperative that you do so if you have fully grasped the analytical reading process. There is, however, a lot of value in this part of the book, specially in the later chapters, and the reader is strongly advised to read it. One thing I should say is that, while they detail interesting aspects of reading imaginative literature, their techniques mostly apply to expository works. I think their best advice with respect to the former is “don’t try to resist the effect that a work of imaginative literature has on you”. This means allowing the work to show you “a deeper, or greater reality”. And this reality is “the reality of our inner life”. We don’t need any more rules than this one.

    The last part of the book presents the fourth (and highest) level of reading — Syntopical reading — or reading two or more books on the same subject. By reading syntopically you are not concerned with understanding each book in all its details — in fact, you won’t read any of the individual books analytically (not at the present syntopical reading effort, at least). Here you are reading each book for what it may contribute to your own problem, not for the book’s own sake. Furthermore, you are not reading to find the truth or to establish your own voice — you would be only one more voice in the conversation. You are simply trying to understand the controversy itself, to establish the many voices you hear in a pure exercise of dialectical objectivity. This is a fantastic topic, which the authors have materialised in their greatest contribution to mankind, in my opinion — the Syntopicon, volumes II and III of the Great Books of the Western World. The reader is very much advised to check it out.

    The book ends with two appendices. The first one provides a fascinating list of great books — the “endlessly readable” books. The list may seem overwhelming at first glance (and it is!), but the authors are prompt to address the reader and explain that the list does not have any time frame attached to it. I say it should just be begun — even an ignorant reader like me will be so flabbergasted by what he will learn that he will never stop reading it. This is a project for your life as a whole — to never stop reading these books. For a much more restrictive (but also magnificent) reading list, the reader is referred to the 10-year-reading plan provided in Adler’s Great Books.

    The second appendix provides exercises and tests on all four levels of reading. I must admit that I hadn’t read them until I got this far in my review. I then decided to do it and now I tell you this: just read it. If you have had literature classes as an undergraduate or graduate student, you might find it slightly commonplace. But if you haven’t, like me, you will be glad you read it. Like they state at the beginning of the appendix, the selected texts are "themselves worth reading", so you can’t lose much by doing so. It is a delightful taste of what awaits you in your future exploits of the Great Books — if you do well and accept the challenge, of course.

    On my part, simply put, this book has changed my life. It not only showed me "how" to read a book, but it also showed me "what" to read. I’ll be forever in debt with two of the greatest absent teachers I’ve had, Dr. Mortimer J. Adler and Dr. Charles Van Doren.
    623 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2016
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Reading is something many people find valuable, whether it be for recreation or education—most people in today's world know how to read. Loads of people are likely satisfied with their current reading abilities, and perhaps even more do not have any intention to increase the amount of reading nor the intensify the difficulty of the books that they choose to read. In fact, many people have the ability to read but simply choose to not exercise it. However, for those of us who enjoy reading and wish to improve our reading skills, I cannot recommend How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading highly enough.

    The book was originally published in 1940, and the most recent edition was published (with updated and timely content) in 1972. It aims to provide a guide for comprehensive reading for the general reader—"from elementary reading, through systematic skimming and inspectional reading, to speed reading. You learn how to pigeonhole a book, X-ray it, extract the author's message, criticize. You are taught the different reading techniques for reading practical books, imaginative literature, plays, poetry, history, science and mathematics, philosophy and social science." (From the publisher's blurb.)

    The authors, Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren, introduce the concept of four levels of reading: elementary reading, inspectional reading, analytical reading, and syntopical reading. The levels are cumulative, which means that each gradation includes the techniques and skills of the lower levels.

    Elementary reading is essentially the baseline ability to read that is taught at the pre-school/kindergarten, elementary and junior high school levels. These reading skills include reading readiness, word mastery, vocabulary growth and the utilization of context, and the ability to read almost anything (albeit in a relatively unsophisticated manner). This is the level of reading that perhaps the majority of the population has achieved. What is truly outstanding about reading is that once one has developed the elementary reading skills, she can teach herself to learn the skills involved with the higher levels of reading.

    Inspectional reading involves two main concepts: systematic skimming or pre-reading, and superficial reading. Skimming or pre-reading involves looking at a book's title page, preface, table of contents, index, publisher's blurb, apparently-pivotal chapters, and true skimming of its content. Superficial reading is comprised of trudging through a book's content in its entirety for the first time, without ever stopping to look up or ponder the things that one does not understand right away. At this point in reading a book, one should start asking herself the four basic questions of reading:

    What is the book about as a whole?
    What is being said in detail, and how?
    Is the book true, in whole or part?
    What of it?
    These questions are thoroughly fleshed out in the book, and I do not wish to focus too much on them in this review. It would be much better for you to check out this book for yourself, although I must warn you that to read it honestly is more like working through a workbook than an easy read. It takes a fair amount of effort on the part of the reader, but she is handsomely rewarded at the end of her journey.

    Moving on, the book discusses note-taking techniques, which were very lacking in my own personal wheelhouse—it had been since my days at university that I regularly took notes in books, and even then, I didn't have an efficient education that demonstrated how to mark a book so that I would increase my level of understanding and retention. However, How to Read a Book certainly fills in where my formal education was lacking in this department. Even this brief section alone was worth reading the entire book, for me.

    The next section of the book—the main bulk of it, in fact—covers the third level of reading: analytical reading. This part is incredibly valuable for readers wishing to improve their overall skill set, including full chapters on the following topics: pigeonholing a book, X-raying a book, coming to terms with an author, determining an author's message, criticizing a book fairly, agreeing or disagreeing with an author, and aids to reading. Again, I do not intend this review to fully explore the book's contents, and will leave it at that.

    Following the section covering analytical reading, the authors explore another tangent: the various ways to approach different types of reading matter. From practical books to imaginative literature, history to science and mathematics, and a few more, this section adapts the four questions that must be asked when reading anything so that they are more applicable to specific types of reading. It was quite interesting for me to consider various types of books and reflect on my reading history and consider what I would truly like to spend my time reading in the future. The final chapter in this section discussed the reading of social science, which often requires reading multiple books about a topic. Because that is essentially the concept behind syntopical reading, it serves as a perfect segue into the next section of the book.

    The final section of the book, "The Ultimate Goals of Reading", focuses on syntopical reading and the concept of reading and the growth of the mind. Syntopical reading is truly an interesting concept for me. It involves creating a tentative bibliography (generally including hundreds of books) of a central subject, quickly inspecting each book, re-inspecting all of the books that are specifically pertinent to the topic to identify the relevant passages within, creating a neutral terminology that can be used to discuss the opinions of multiple authors, establishing a set of neutral propositions by framing a set of questions to ask each author, defining the major and minor issues and assigning authors to the various sides of each issue, and providing an analysis of the discussion of the topic. This is a highly-advanced level of reading that one would embark on to do true work in a field, with the hope of providing an unheard analysis of a topic's discussion that many authors have participated in over time. It is possible that one's syntopical reading of a topic could culminate in a book that would push the discussion of a topic even further—in fact, this is indeed often the ultimate goal. The final chapter of the book offers a recap of the previous sections and discusses what good books can do for us, the various classes of books (with regard to what one can get out of reading and re-reading them), and the growth of the mind.

    There are two appendices included, the first being an extremely valuable "Recommended Reading List". I must admit that this list makes my mouth salivate in anticipation of many more years of reading excellent books and the possibility of furthering my personal reading ability. The second appendix includes exercises and tests at the various four levels of reading. This is the one section of the book that I have yet to read—I may choose to explore these exercises in the future, although it will involve reading several other books from the aforementioned reading list, so it is likely to be a longterm project.

    Overall, this is one of the best books I have read in the past several years. I am confident that the advice contained within it will help me improve my reading skills while simultaneously increasing the level of enjoyment that I get out of my reading practice. I must admit that when I first started reading the book, I was a bit disappointed that it is heavily biased toward non-fiction reading, when in the past I have reaped so much enjoyment from reading fiction. However, the skills that I have learned from How to Read a Book will only serve to improve my relation to non-fiction books, something that has been somewhat lacking for me previously. This is one book that I do plan on working with further in the future, whether it is simply picking it up from time to time to skim through the notes I took on its pages, choosing my next book from its impressive reading list, or working through the second appendix's reading exercises and tests.

    5/5 stars. 424 pages.
    67 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • VOLKAN HAN
    4.0 out of 5 stars Kitap Okumaya Anlam Katmak İsteyenlere
    Reviewed in Turkey on June 30, 2025
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Kitap okuma verimliliğini artırmak isteyenler için kavramsal açıdan gerçekten değerli bir kitap. Kitap okuma eylemine daha fazla anlam katmak isteyen herkese tavsiye ederim.
  • Andy Fairchild
    5.0 out of 5 stars Understanding things more deeply
    Reviewed in Canada on December 1, 2024
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    There are many things you will learn from this book that you didn’t know you could learn — and these things have to do with how to read a book.

    I’m not go to summarize it. I’m going to give you 3 things I learned.

    1. Every genre you read — legal document, fiction, non-fiction — uses its own terminology and definitions. Here are some examples I can think of: a scab to a doctor is different than a scab to a union rep; pork to a religious person means something different than pork to a pig farmer; you get the idea. When you read a book, look for the key words and how they are defined.

    2. When you find the key words, memorize and understand their meanings; they will be used throughout the piece — they are the glue that holds the work together. I’m currently reading through Criminal Law by Kent Roach, and knowing the primary importance of mens rea (intent to commit a crime) and actus reas (the violation of an offence) is instrumental in reading through how defences are built against charges for an offence.

    3. One would be wise not to read a book like running into a house to save someone from burning. There is no rush to read a book. Review the cover, table of contents, flip through each chapter to get a sense of the whole. Get a journal or open a word file and take notes as you read. Make your own outline of the book you’re reading. Write out key definitions — anything to help you better understand what you are reading.

    I suppose one could say How to Read Book teaches one how to deeply understand what one is reading. 5 out of 5 stars.
  • Craxxle
    5.0 out of 5 stars Bringt das Lesen auf ein neues Level
    Reviewed in Germany on May 17, 2018
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Dieses spezielle Buch richtet sich vorrangig an solche Leser, die aus Büchern lernen wollen. Es bietet eine klar strukturierte Herangehensweise an das Lernen aus Büchern, dir mir seitdem sehr hilft möglichst viel aus Sachbüchern o.ä. mitzunehmen. Dabei wird zunächst eine grundsätzliche Unterscheidung der Arten des Lesens (zur Unterhalten, zum Lernen, ...) vorgenommen und sich später auf eine fokussierte Auseinandersetzung mit dem analytischen Lesen konzentriert.

    Für mein Studium weiterer Bücher hat mir die hier dargestellte Vorgehensweise enorm geholfen und ich nehme mittlerweile viel mehr Wissen mit als vorher. Persönliche Vorlieben beim Lesen bzw. durcharbeiten von Büchern sind dabei natürlich und die Autoren geben hier ein anpassbares Grundkonzept, dass ich für sehr gelungen halte. Ich vermute, dass jeder der gerne und viel liest sich aus diesem Buch hilfreiche Aspekte aneignen kann und das persönliche Lesen nachhaltig verbessern kann.

    Einige Passagen des Buches sind sehr ausführlich und könnten im Kern sicherlich gekürzt werden. Teil der Lehre des Autors ist allerdings auch eine persönliche, nach den eigenen Interessen gerichtete Auseinandersetzung mit Büchern, die dazu einlädt bestimmte Kapitel oder Bücher nur sehr schnell oder oberflächlich zu lesen, wenn dies für die eigenen Belange ausreicht. So habe ich beispielsweise den dritten Teil des Buches, in der spezielle Tipps für verschiedene Lesequellen (Sachbuch, Drama, Roman, Philosophie, ...) gegeben werden, ausgespart und für später vorgemerkt, da dies für mich aktuell zweitrangig war.

    Ich freue mich, wenn meine Rezension hilfreich für Sie war. Fragen beantworte ich soweit möglich gerne.
  • ousmane magatte kane
    5.0 out of 5 stars great job by adler and doren
    Reviewed in France on July 18, 2014
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    This book it's like you are going to a specific place in ny (because let's suppose you have a Meeting or an interview), you have a car but you Don't have a GPS. You might miss the Meeting or the Interview because you keep looking for the place. This book is a GPS
  • Norma
    5.0 out of 5 stars Me encanta!!
    Reviewed in Spain on August 15, 2025
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Aún no he empezado a leerlo porque estoy leyendo 'How to Read Literature Like a Professor' pero en cuanto termine seguro que me encantará ya que es información útil y me han hablado muy bien sobre este libro.