Since I started working in Tanjong Pagar, the central business district of Singapore, my commute to and from home has become longer. Four more stops, or at least 15 more minutes, have been tacked on to my old MRT route. Sometimes I even end up taking the bus (which I don’t normally do). And because my work hours are no longer always in sync with the hubby’s, I end up commuting alone more than I used to
So I started reading books on the train. They sure beat the intellectual pambalot ng isda that is the local free paper. I’ve managed to finish five books purely while commuting. All of them are short; the longest is Ian McEwan’s Black Dogs at 221 pages.
The thing with reading on the train is that I like whatever I’m reading to be light and uncomplicated. I always see people reading heavy instructional or self-help tomes on the train to work and I always wonder how they can absorb the material properly. That said, I tried to pick books that were brief and light without sacrificing quality. So if you’re looking for some light reading, all these books are highly recommended!
The first book I read on my solo commutes was this one.
I’ve been a huge Vonnegut fan since I first saw a battered, yellowed copy of Galapagos in my mom’s bookshelf almost 10 years ago. This used copy from Green Apple in San Francisco is my latest purchase in my efforts to own all his books. It’s told from the first-person perspective of Vonnegut himself, in a fictitious attempt to use controlled near-death experiences to nab interviews with dead people. He never fails to crack me up, which can make one look a little silly on the train.