Julian Northbrook sends daily email tips for speaking better English – Click the button on the right, sign up, and you'll get a new email every day packed with ideas and tips for speaking better English.

Filed Under

Are non-fiction books as good as fiction ones to learn English?

September 23, 2019 , by Dr Julian Northbrook
This came up on a Q&A call a while ago: “Which is more effective for learning English ー reading fiction or non-fiction books? Good question.” To answer the question, it depends on what you're doing. If you're trying to improve conversational English, fiction is going to be better because it'll give you more exposure to dialogue and conversation English. BUT Honestly? If you're choosing the books you read based on how effective they are for learning English... YOU'RE CHOOSING THEM FOR THE WRONG REASON. https://vimeo.com/361709103 Read books because you want to read them. Studying English is important. But so is letting go of the need always be learning, always studying English and just DOING things with English. Using it. I tend to read books written in English in English. And books written in Japanese in Japanese. I mean, I don't read translations. Not often, anyway. There are exceptions (like Haruki Murakami's book, simply because they read much better in English... Murakami writes for translation, which makes his Japanese kinda clunky). But I never read Japanese books because I want to learn Japanese from them (there are far, far more effective study materials available). I read them because I want to read the book... and it just happens to be in Japanese. Mastering a language is simple ー Learn, do, repeat. And yes, there is an optimal ballance of these stages. I call this the “Two Track Approach”, and you can learn all about that (for free) by going here and checking out my free training. [Julian]

P.S. To learn about my “Rocket Launch” method, go here.

Subscribe to Dr Julian Northbrook's Daily Emails for Speaking Better English & get FREE access to the Doing English App, packed with free lessons:


More Shizzle on the Blog:

What pilots can teach you about fixing your mistakes in English

Here’s a random Airline fact for you: The number of plane crashes are constantly going down. Compare 41 crashes in 1972 with just 3 in 2015. Bearing in mind that around 100,000 flights go out every day now (far more than 46 years ago). That’s a tiny number. Why are they going down? Because every

Read More

Your English Grammar and Spoken Skills: A Beginner’s Guide

Do you struggle with English grammar while speaking? This beginner’s guide will help you improve your spoken English skills with ease. Understand Your Challenges: Improving grammar in spoken English starts by understanding your specific difficulties and reasons behind them (and they’re not normally what you think). Focus on Spoken English: To speak fluently, shift your

Read More