# How I read books better with AI

> Using AI to read deeper, not just faster.

_Published July 13, 2025 by Vinicius Brasil._

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Generative AI is everywhere now — from automating work tasks to becoming your
personal tutor. The options for using AI keep expanding, and more importantly,
they're becoming increasingly personalized. That's when it hit me: if AI can
do all that, why not use it as my own personal reading assistant?

## Chat with the author

This may sound strange, but you can use ChatGPT to talk to your favorite
authors. Dostoevsky, Shakespeare, Dickens, Tolstoy, Kafka. This isn't magic,
it's the power of statistics and patterns. Large language models (LLMs) have
been trained on almost all public content available online, meaning when you
ask about Jane Austen, it has probably read all of her works and what other
people wrote about her.

However, you should know one key limitation of generative AI: while it has
read almost everything, it retains only a hazy, generalized memory of texts —
it generates answers from patterns, not exact recall. This is one reason you
may sometimes see ChatGPT confidently produce incorrect facts, technically
known as hallucinations.

To fix the problem of vague memory and reduce hallucinations when chatting
about a book, you can send ChatGPT the chapter or excerpt of what you're
reading as a PDF, photo, or even plain text. That revives the LLM's knowledge
on that subject, producing better results.

> You are Fyodor Dostoevsky. I'm reading *Crime and Punishment*. I'll share a
> passage from Chapter 2. [Paste PDF or text here]. What advice would you give
> modern readers about understanding Raskolnikov?

The possibilities are endless. Not only can you "chat with the author," but
you can discuss ideas that broaden your knowledge and help you better
understand the intentions of the text.

## Create smart reading lists

I've always wanted to read Jonathan Edwards's most intricate works — like
*Freedom of the Will* and *Religious Affections* — but those aren't the kind
of books you just crack open on an afternoon. At least, I can't. I know I need
to lay the groundwork first if I want to truly grasp what the author meant.

> GPT, suggest 10 books to read to get mentally and intellectually ready for
> Jonathan Edwards. Include a mix of subjects. Keep the list gradual from easy
> to deep, and briefly explain how each book helps.

![A gradual, AI-generated reading list building up to Jonathan Edwards](/images/how-i-read-books-better-with-ai/reading-list.png)

I've been using generative AI to prepare me for reading a particular author,
topic, or book. You can change that prompt to your needs, or keep chatting
with your assistant to make sure the list is tailored for your use.

## Get essential context

I recently started reading Fyodor Dostoevsky's *Notes from Underground*. Three
pages in and I was like: what am I reading? I had no idea. Then I asked my AI
buddy:

> GPT, what should I know before reading *Notes from Underground*? I've just
> started reading it and I understand nothing.

![Background context for Notes from Underground, generated on demand](/images/how-i-read-books-better-with-ai/essential-context.png)

Generative AI gave me all the background that only Russians in the 1870s knew.
This helped reduce my frustration and keep going with this wonderful read I
would've given up on without AI.

How is generative AI helping you become a better reader? Get yourself out of
the underground, and know your tools.
