<p>I love writing in my books :)</p>
<p>I feel like i’m talking to the author and the characters by doing so lolz</p>
<p>I love writing in my books :)</p>
<p>I feel like i’m talking to the author and the characters by doing so lolz</p>
<p>I hate writing on my study books… it makes them ugly and used. Lol. I like keeping them nice.</p>
<p>It depends, I hate highlighting in my most books but my copy of Riverside Shakespeare is jam packed with notes and writing. My copy of The Great Gatsby and Lolita is missing so many pages because I have ripped a lot of them out and put them on my wall. I love the writing in both of these novels.</p>
<p>OMG, I love Lolita. It took me forever to read though.</p>
<p>Dont worry, it took me about a long time too (about 2 or 3 weeks). The writing is incredible but the story is quite slow until part 2.</p>
<p>I also hate creasing! I hate it when my parents fold my paperback books in half when they read them; it drives me absolutely crazy! When I study for the ACT, I use pencils to mark my books, not highlighter. I circle the important things and, if color is necessary, I use erasable color pencils. That way I can erase all my markings when I’m done (all my test prep books are from the library).</p>
<p>YES! This is actually a bad habit as I refuse to write in novels even though it would cut down my paper-writing time significantly.</p>
<p>It really depends on the book.
If it’s a textbook, I don’t like writing in it.
If it’s a book I have to read for school, I will definitely annotate every living line.
If it’s a book I bought for my own pleasure, it depends on how much I enjoy just reading the book itself.</p>
<p>I’m the type that listens to lectures without jotting a note, and read books without pausing to think. I absorb everything.</p>
<p>But come time to study, I’m goin to have to scramble for something.</p>
<p>I hate writing in books, but it helps some immensely. I’d rather take notes elsewhere. Besides, that way I can sell it back. ;)</p>