Are you a passive or active reader? Take the quiz!


I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become. – Carl Gustav Jung

Hi Reader,

ever wondered why some books stick with you while others fade from memory? The way you read might be the reason. Passive readers simply consume words, while active readers truly engage with the material—making connections, asking questions, and applying ideas.

But which type of reader are you? Take this quiz to find out:

1. How do you prepare before starting a book?

A) I don’t—I just jump right in.

B) I skim the table of contents or read the introduction.

C) I set a clear purpose for why I’m reading it and what I hope to gain.

2. How do you decide which books to read?

A) I pick whatever’s trending or looks interesting.

B) I choose books that align with my interests or goals.

C) I select books that address a specific question, problem, or skill I want to improve.

3. While reading, how often do you pause to reflect on what you’ve just read?

A) Rarely—I just keep going to stay in the flow.

B) Sometimes—I pause if something really stands out.

C) Often—I make it a habit to stop and summarize key points or questions.

4. How do you handle new or challenging concepts in a book?

A) I skip them and move on, hoping it’ll make sense later.

B) I reread the section to try to understand.

C) I take notes, research, or write down my thoughts to explore it further.

5. What’s your approach to note-taking while reading?

A) I rarely take notes or highlight—just read and enjoy.

B) I highlight passages or jot down a few interesting ideas.

C) I take detailed notes, write questions, and summarize key points.

6. What do you do after finishing a book?

A) I move on to the next one.

B) I think about the main takeaways or key insights.

C) I write a detailed summary, review my notes, and decide how to apply the ideas.

7. How often do you revisit the books you’ve read?

A) Almost never—I prefer to focus on new books.

B) Occasionally—I’ll skim through highlights if I remember a book being useful.

C) Regularly—I revisit notes or reread sections to reinforce the ideas.

8. When reading nonfiction, how often do you try to connect the ideas to your life or work?

A) Rarely—I read for general interest, not specific application.

B) Sometimes—if an idea resonates, I try to think about how it applies.

C) Often—I actively look for ways to use what I’m learning in my life or work.

9. Do you share or discuss the books you read with others?

A) Hardly ever—I don’t really talk about books.

B) Occasionally—I’ll share interesting ideas if they come up.

C) Regularly—I love explaining what I’ve learned and discussing key takeaways.

10. How do you reinforce what you’ve read over time?

A) I don’t—once I finish a book, I rarely revisit it.

B) I’ll glance at highlights or notes every now and then.

C) I use systems like spaced repetition, summaries, or teaching others to reinforce the ideas.

Results:

Mostly A’s: Passive Reader
You enjoy reading but might not be fully engaging with the material. That’s okay! Start small by highlighting key ideas or pausing to reflect after each chapter. These little changes can help you retain more and truly benefit from your reading.

Mostly B’s: Engaged Reader
You’re already taking steps to engage with nonfiction books. By being a little more intentional—like summarizing what you’ve learned or revisiting notes—you can unlock even more value from your reading.

Mostly C’s: Active Reader
You’ve mastered the art of active reading. You approach books with purpose, engage deeply with the material, and apply what you learn. Keep refining your methods and consider helping others improve their reading habits!


Before we dive into next week's book releases, I have a quick announcement!

I'm starting a book club on Fable, and if you enjoy reading nonfiction and sharing your thoughts, you're welcome to join. It's completely free—all you need to do is download the Fable app.

Our first book pick is Courage Is Calling by Ryan Holiday, and discussions will begin on February 1st. Hope to see you there!


Next week's book releases

Taiwan is now a flourishing democracy and an economic success story: just one of its companies produces over 90 per cent of the semiconductors that power the world’s economy. It is a free and vibrant society. For the United States and the West, the island is a bastion of freedom against China’s assertive presence in the region. And yet China, increasingly bellicose under Xi Jinping, insists Taiwan is part of its territory and must be returned to it. Should China blockade the island and mount an invasion, it would set off a chain reaction that would pitch it against the US – escalating a regional war into a global one.

A sequel to Michael Walsh’s Last Stands, his new book A Rage to Conquer is a journey through the twelve of the most important battles in Western history. As Walsh sees it, war is an important facet of every culture – and, for better or worse, our world is unthinkable without it. War has been an essential part of the human condition throughout history, the principal agent of societal change, waged by men on behalf of, and in pursuit of, their gods, women, riches, power, and the sheer joy of combat.

If you aren’t suffering, you aren’t creating. Right?

Wrong!

Writing can and should be joyful, fulfilling… even fun! Applicable to writers in all genres and disciplines—from screenwriters to novelists, journalists to picture book authors, aspiring to many-times published—The Happy Writer is a heartfelt and optimistic guide that will show you the way to a happier writing journey.

Global Peace Ambassador and New York Times bestselling author Prem Rawat asks us to pause and take a moment to revel in our breath, to wake up to this miracle of shared human experience. Only when we do so can we open ourselves to the possibility of peace—both inner and outer.

The Gambling Animal offers a revelatory retelling of the human story. Drawing on their unique research into the management of risk by humans and other animals - including our most impressive compatriots, elephants - Glenn Harrison and Don Ross reveal the hidden logic of our rise. But with an ecological crisis on the horizon, how long can our winning streak continue?

Tech visionary Reid Hoffman shares his unique insider’s perspective on an AI-powered future, making the case for its potential to unlock a world of possibilities.

Superagency offers a roadmap for using AI inclusively and adaptively to improve our lives and create positive change. While acknowledging challenges like disinformation and potential job changes, the book focuses on AI’s immense potential to increase individual agency and create better outcomes for society as a whole.

As the American Revolution broke out in New England in the spring of 1775, dramatic events unfolded in Virginia that proved every bit as decisive as the battles of Lexington and Concord and Bunker Hill in uniting the colonies against Britain. Virginia, the largest, wealthiest, and most populous province in British North America, was led by Lord Dunmore, who counted George Washington as his close friend. But the Scottish earl lacked troops, so when patriots imperiled the capital of Williamsburg, he threatened to free and arm enslaved Africans—two of every five Virginians—to fight for the Crown.

Interracial marriage was already illegal in some American colonies as early as the 1690s. But long before the Supreme Court declared that interracial couples had the right to marry in 1967, these families were far from rare. It took decades of hard work by Southern lawmakers and judges to create the illusion that they were, as Tangled Fortunes reveals in this new history of the rise and fall of the domestic color line.

We are entering a new era of global cataclysm in which the world faces a deadly mix of war, climate change, great power rivalry, rapid technological advancement, the end of both monarchy and empire, and countless other dangers. In Waste Land, Robert D. Kaplan, geopolitical expert and author of more than twenty books on world affairs, incisively explains how we got here and where we are going.

Scientists, engineers and philosophers alike warn us that without a radical shift in our thinking, we are on track to be the last generation of pure humans that the world will know. Within a single generation we will devolve into a hybrid species of synthetic bodies, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and computer chips that limit our ability to think, to love, and to adapt to the conditions of the emerging world in a healthy way. In doing so we will also lose our capacity for emotion, empathy, intimacy, and forgiveness—the very qualities that we value and cherish in our humanness.

We all feel it—the distraction, the loss of focus, the addictive focus on the wrong things for too long. We bump into the zombies on their phones in the street, and sometimes they’re us. We stare in pity at the four people at the table in the restaurant, all on their phones, and then we feel the buzz in our pocket. Something has changed utterly: for most of human history, the boundary between public and private has been clear, at least in theory. Now, as Chris Hayes writes, “With the help of a few tech firms, we basically tore it down in about a decade.”

Does it feel like everyone you know is thinking about starting a business? That's because they are. In the last few years new businesses have been launched in record numbers, with more of us than ever deciding to go it alone or become entrepreneurs.

Fuelled by new technologies like artificial intelligence and automation, this trend is only just beginning, with traditional firms due to be automated in the same way that farms and factories were in the last few decades.

Fifty years ago the interior of Borneo was a pristine, virgin rainforest inhabited by uncontacted indigenous tribes and naive, virtually tame, wildlife. It was into this 'Garden of Eden' that Robin Hanbury-Tenison led one of the largest ever Royal Geographical Society expeditions, an extraordinary undertaking which triggered the global rainforest movement and illuminated, for the first time, how vital rainforests are to our planet. For 15 months, Hanbury-Tenison and a team of some of the greatest scientists in the world immersed themselves in a place and a way of life that is on the cusp of extinction.

In the early years of the twentieth century, Mississippi County, Arkansas, was a brutal and profitable place. Home to starving, landless farmers, the county produced almost 2 percent of the entire world’s cotton. It was also the site of two rape trials that made national headlines: an accusation that sent two Black men, almost certainly innocent, to death row; and the case of two white men, almost certainly guilty, who were likewise sentenced to death but who would ultimately face a very different fate. Braiding together these stories, Scott W. Stern examines how the Jim Crow legal system relied on selectively prosecuting rape to uphold the racial, gender, and economic hierarchies of the segregated, unequal South.

The Dead Sea is a place of many contradictions. Hot springs around the lake are famed for their healing properties, though its own waters are deadly to most lifeforms—even so, civilizations have built ancient cities and hilltop fortresses around its shores for centuries. The protagonists in its story are not only Jews and Arabs, but also Greeks, Nabataeans, Romans, Crusaders and Mamluks. Today it has become a tourist hotspot, but its drying basin is increasingly under threat.

Described by Bryan Stevenson as “the center of the quest for environmental justice in America,” Catherine Coleman Flowers has dedicated her life to fighting for the most vulnerable communities—rural, poor, of color—who have been deprived of the basic civil right to a clean, safe, and sustainable environment. Both deeply personal and urgently political, the essays in Holy Ground draw on history to illuminate and contextualize the most pressing issues of this moment: from climate change to human rights, from rural poverty to reproductive justice, from the notorious history of Lowndes County, Alabama, to the broader crisis of racialized disinvestment in the South.


What I've been reading

I'm slowly getting through The Bill Gates Problem, and I'm enjoying it a lot. I think Tim Schwab did a very good job researching a variety of topics while writing his book, and I appreciate that he interviewed different sources to support his statements. Have you had a chance to read this book? I've noticed that my stories on Instagram featuring snippets from it have been quite popular. The controversy surrounding Bill Gates seems to intrigue many people.

Sometimes, I like to pick up a thriller to balance out my reading. Nonfiction books can be quite heavy at times, so to keep things light, I enjoy a fiction book now and then. I just started reading The It Girl by Ruth Ware. This is the second book I've read by her, and I really enjoy the pacing in her stories.

Sometime in autumn last year, I started reading Goddesses by Joseph Campbell and Psychological Types by Carl Jung, but I haven’t made much progress with these books lately.


Thanks for reading! I'll be back in your inbox next Sunday. Let me know what you'd like to see explored in future issues.

Talk soon,
Elena


Learned something new today? Consider buying me a cup of coffee ☕️


P.S.: Don't have time to read an entire book but still want to soak up the key insights? Head over to my online shop for expertly crafted book summaries that give you all the wisdom in a fraction of the time! Perfect for busy readers who crave knowledge on the go. Special discount of 50% on all products – limited to the next 10 sales. Use discount code missnonfiction50:


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Miss Nonfiction

I'm a reader who loves to talk about nonfiction books and all things personal development. Subscribe and receive weekly news on the latest book releases, my reading updates, and more!

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