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NEST

The Plot Detective

You follow clues, connect details, and find satisfaction in seeing how every piece fits together.

Reading Tendency (Concept vs. Narrative)

Engages most when the story unfolds through a clear, step-by-step plot. This reader enjoys tracking how events connect, following cause and effect, and piecing together clues that form a satisfying resolution.

2

Comprehension Style (Evidence vs. Possibility)

Processes meaning through verification—matching actions with consequences and finding textual evidence for every conclusion. Prefers clarity over ambiguity and structure over speculation.

3

Topics Drawn To (Combination)

Mystery, adventure, detective fiction, and linear quests that emphasize logic, puzzles, or real-world problem-solving. Books with strong pacing and traceable clues—like The Westing Game or City Spies—sustain attention best.

4

Comprehension Challenges (Evidence vs. Possibility)

May struggle with abstract or theme-driven works that don’t provide concrete answers. When messages are implied rather than stated, comprehension can stall or remain surface-level.

5

How to Approach Books (Text vs. Multi-sensory)

Best served by text-based tracking tools—plot maps, character charts, and quote hunts that connect events to motives. To stretch, reflect on “what the author wanted you to notice” beyond the literal plot after each section.

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