
This page i have to go explain about how to select a book? This will save you a lot of time.You have to read the book is one of the way to improve your skills and imagination thinking are growing every reading of books, it’s great things! For example if u watch one movie, that movie screenplay and story is only for director point of view but if u read that same story before you are watching your thinking is different then the director’s screenplay, this imagination thinking only grows reading books only.
Yes! we have to move on the topic…
☆ make independent choices
☆ Develop literacy preferences
☆ Understand their own reading ability
☆ choose books for specific needs

Helpful Questions on How to Choose Books to Read?
Ask you once the following questions to support making appropriate book choices. Encourage to verbalise and explain the choices of books to gathering.
- What type of book are you looking for?
Are you looking for fiction or nonfiction?
- Are you looking for something funny, scary, adventurous…?
- Does the cover provide any clues to the theme of the book?
- Does the blurb make you want to find out more about the book?
- Does the topic or theme of book interest you?
Is the book part of a series?
Do you think you would want to read more about the characters?
- Do you know the author?
Have you read any of their other books?
- Does the length of the book seem a good fit for you?

Don’t judge a book by its cover:
The book cover and the content hiding inside are two different entities.What really matters about a book is its content. A book containing only fillers but has an attractive cover will just make your reading obnoxious. I’ve read so many books that aren’t necessarily engaging at first glance, but have re-echoed with me perfectly.

“When in doubt, go to the library”- that’s what our witty witch does. Well, a library is literally the best place to find the right book. You can find the right book, pick it and read it in that very place. And if you can’t find one, the librarian will surely be helpful to you. Remember what Albert Einstein said once? “The only thing that you absolutely have to know, is the location of the library”. it’s true!

Getting to know the brain behind the book works wonders, at times. I’ve tried that on a few occasions when I was not so sure of the book, and trust me it has always worked. My first encounter was with Jhumpa Lahiri and God knows, I have chased each and every one of her books, her interviews, and her social media pages.
I guess, once you know what the author’s style is, where they derive their inspiration from, their thinking process, the genre they explore, etc. it becomes easier to understand what their books may or not promise. It’s like when you’re using a black pen, you know what ink to expect on the paper. Makes sense?

I am an adamant believer of what Murakami said, If you only read the books that everyone else is reading, you can only think what everyone else is thinking. I tend to away from popular titles, from preferred authors.
I am a reader who goes digging with a spade, for the underrated ones, the untouched titles shouting out from behind bookshelves, for the unfamed beauties of the literary world. For unless you try what the masses haven’t, how can you suggest differently?
Finally:
I loved putting this list up, because I feel it will help a lot of readers in stream lining their reading choices.