I prefer endnotes, because I hate footnotes that interrupt the text flow. Sometimes it's only half a page of genuine text, the rest is footnotes. Or the footnotes even extend over several pages, and I have to flip back to find the text passage where I was coming from - that is most annoying.
So you finish a chapter and then read the notes? Sounds like a great way of how to reduce flipping back and forth and still read the notes in conjuncture with the actual text. I'll have to try that for myself. Thanks for the idea!
I'm doing that all the time. I have a very good annotated edition of my favorite 19th century author Theodor Fontane. He was writing novels that require a pretty good knowledge of the places he describes and the events that took place in his time setting. Places and background events are very meaningful for understanding his intentions, those who don't know them miss important details. Not to disturb the storyline too much, there are not even small numbers or markers or anything, but a huge section of endnotes and comments referring to almost each page of the novel. So first I do enjoy the novel, then I do enjoy the endnotes and comments and sometimes flip back to the original text to put them in context. They explain the text to me and help me appreciate the metaphors or interpret small details in the text I would have not noticed without being guided by annotations.
And I know I will be killed for this and publicly reveal my utter ignorance, but as a reader I personally could do completely without footnotes or endnotes in non-fiction books. I would so much prefer if an authour could just tell what he wants to tell within his text, not making deviations. I want to read non-fiction like I read fiction, becoming immersed in what is described and not constantly stumbling over small numbers or asterisks or whatever and their notes, which distract me from the original text. If I see a number, I feel compelled to follow it, it's hard for me to just ignore it, and sometimes I just hate to be yanked from the description of an event or a character, only to read about some detail that would have been part of the text, had it been of immediate importance.
A good bibliography at the end of the book is mandatory for me, though. Although it always gives me chills to see what I will have to miss because of a simple lack of time! So many books, so little time!! On the other hand, if I discover that I have read a good deal of the quoted sources already … that is really satisfying...