The relationship between re-reading and memory is one of the most interesting things about reading as a practice. Books I've read and not re-read have a certain quality of presence in memory — I know what they're about, I remember key moments, I have an impression of the whole. Books I've read multiple times are different. They're present in a way that feels less like memory and more like knowledge.
My heavily re-read books — Housekeeping, Gilead, Blood Meridian, the Earthsea cycle — feel like places I can go rather than things I can remember. The difference is hard to articulate but real. The re-reading creates a kind of intimacy with the text that single reading doesn't produce.
This is why I think re-reading is worth the opportunity cost of new books. You're not just reading the same thing again. You're building a relationship with a text that exists differently from any single encounter.
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