Submitted by Potential_Crisis t3_zusnhj in books
I've cleared out my nostalgic older books, and have started picking up new titles. I noticed that new books seem to be way faster and rushed than older books. Characters aren't given enough time to develop, plot points seem to be squished in without any integration or foreshadowing, and it's like the author is running a marathon in writing. The most recent decently paced book I've found was written in 2003. It might be that Im a faster reader than I was as a kid, or maybe reading older books means they withstood the test of time and are better quality.
Is anyone else experiencing this? If so, why does this happen?
gnatsaredancing t1_j1ldsmx wrote
>Is anyone else experiencing this? If so, why does this happen?
Because times have changed. A lot of older books were written for people who lived slower lives. For a lot of them, books were the only look at the greater world they got. So far more time was spend on explanations, descriptions of people, objects, locations and so on.
People today are use to being a high speed information sponge that never turns off. You'd bore them with descriptions like that.
Along the same lines, a lot of 19th and early 20th century novels were written as serialised content for magazines. The writers intentionally padded it to keep their pay check going.