Funnily enough, I somehow find myself being able to go through a book quicker with a lot of short chapters, as opposed to a few long chapters. Tom Bergeron's autobiography has like nearly forty chapters, but each one is like maybe two, four, six pages long or so, so it's like you can fly through them without even trying, lol. It's like when I attempted to read the entire Bible from beginning to end with one book a day a few years ago: it practically took almost an entire day to read some of those Old Testament books because they were so long, but by the time I was winding down the New Testament, I found I could read multiple books in a single day, since some of them were so short they were barely half a page long.
I'm pretty sure I mentioned this in another thread a long time ago, but I've been noticing a lot of books lately have been going the route like Brian Jay Jones's book in being really super long (ranging from 600-800 pages) and loaded with so much detail, which I find interesting because it seems like much of the public today has such an anti-book mentality that why would anyone want to pick up something 600-800 pages? But then again, I'm wondering if this might be some sort of an attempt from authors and publishers to try and get more people to buy books, as opposed to Kindles and tablets and such?