Thank you so much for the advice
I do enjoy using smart.fm (or Iknow as it is now [and used to be] called). I really get a lot out of this. I just wish I could practice my reading more. I’ve bought so many books and yet I’ve found it hard to keep up with any of them for different reasons.
‘A guide to reading and writing Japanese’ – merely used as a reference (though I haven’t touched this book in years)
Heisig Vol 1 – really helped me recognise the kanji though obviously not how to read them. I dip into this ever so often.
みんなの日本語 Kanji Workbook - not really used
Basic Kanji Book vol 1 – started this but stopped when I had no idea when each reading should be employed.
250 Essential Japanese Kanji Characters – a new purchase so I haven’t tried this yet.
First 100 Japanese Kanji Characters – dull drill exercises (yeah, I know it’s important but really doesn’t make me enthusiastic)
In a number of these books I can see the different readings but am unsure as to when each should be used. The thing I liked about ‘Reading Japanese’ was I could see a pattern with the readings (when each one would be employed). I’m not sure if this ‘ease’ is a false confidence on my part and that the rest of the book wouldn’t follow such straightforward ways of reading all words. However, this is the first book I had where I could follow the kanji, practice writing and actually read around 20 words/phrases per kanji. Sadly, though I’m now a bit wary as all readings don’t seem to accompany each kanji and I’m at a loss! I was really enjoying the book too.
Doing drill exercise or mnemoics doesn't keep me enthusiastic, I suppose I just need a balance and feel as though I'm progressing.
Barbara