Super reader’s tips for reading more books: skim, quit books you don’t like

A lot of people set a book goal at the start of the year. So at the end of the year, we see all the posts on social media about how close they came to completing their goal. I love to read but other than work, I usually read for my own enjoyment, so I don’t set these goals. I let myself down in enough ways, I don’t need books to be another source of disappointment. But, maybe you did have “read more” on your list of New Years Resolutions. If so, here’s a list of tips from a super reader named Tyler Cowan. He’s an economist, blogger and author who wrote an article on how to read as many books as possible. I should preface this by saying that the numbers this article is dealing with are anywhere between 50-100 books a year, which sounds like a lot more than just trying to clear those books off your nightstand. But if you want to pull in those numbers, here you go.

Tip #1: Be ruthless. Not captivated by a particular book at a particular time? Then on to the next. “Just stop reading, put them down,” Cowen advises. A boring intro, bad design, or hard-to-read font is enough to persuade Cowen to chuck a book. There are countless amazing books out there. Don’t settle for less than good.

Tip #2: Go ahead and skim. At least in the case of nonfiction, if you already know the material, feel free to skip ahead. “When you go to read actual books you’re like, ‘I know that, I know that, I know that,’ and you keep on going, and you read much more quickly. And that’s really the way to read a lot,” says Cowen. (This also creates a virtuous cycle in which the more you read, the more you’ll know, and the more you can skip.)

Tip #3: Read to solve problems. “The best reading is focused reading, when you’re trying to solve some kind of problem,” Cowen believes. You could aim to answer a specific question, investigate a given author, or scratch an itch of curiosity. “You want to start with a problem or question when you’re reading,” he insists.

Tip #4: Read in clusters. This naturally follows on from the point above. If you arrange your reading around questions or areas of exploration, you’ll end up reading multiple books about the same topic. That allows you to “do a kind of cross-sectional mental econometrics and see which pieces start fitting together,” says Cowen.

Tip #5: Read fiction. Gathering a stack of non-fiction titles to explore a topic is great, but don’t neglect fiction. “Reading fiction is important to understand the cross-sectional variation in humanity, to understand how difficult generalizations can be, to just get a sense of how different social pieces fit together, and to get a sense of different historical eras — and plus, reading fiction is often just plain flat-out fun,” explains Cowen. Amen to that.

Tip #6: Read books about topics you know nothing about. “Every area you don’t give a damn about you probably should read at least one book in. Because the very best book in that area is superb, and you’re not going to know what it is. So if tennis is something you don’t know anything about, well, read Andre Agassi’s memoir. That’s a wonderful book. You don’t have to know about or care about tennis,” claims Cowen.

Tip #7: Have fun. “Take reading seriously, develop a passion for it, and view it as part of your practice as a knowledge worker to get ahead, but along the way, having fun doing so,” Cowen concludes.

[From inc.]

I probably do stick with far too many books I should just quit. Most of the time it’s titles that everyone is raving about and I’m trying to figure out why they love it so much. If I’m hating it but unwilling to give up, I’ll do the skimming Cowen suggests in Tip #2 just to get through the book. But if I am trying to learn something, like in the case of non-fiction, skimming doesn’t work for me. I retain virtually nothing if I skim, so that’s a waste of everyone’s time.

Most of these don’t apply to me since I read very little non-fiction. I’m curious about Tip #6, though. Reading something you know nothing about would keep monotony at bay. And if you adhere to the book dumping in Tip#1, what’s the harm, right? I’m not familiar with this term “super reader”, which I think just reinforces that I am not one. (I had to laugh because the whole first page of hits I get for ‘super reader’ are from Scholastic as, “a child who enters a text with purpose.”) Honestly, I think I’d prefer to hear about people aggressively going after a books-read goal than a weight goal or a money goal – you know, shake it up a little. As long as I don’t have to compete, because I’ll hand you your ribbon now. I’ll stick with my single target of being a regular reader who adheres to Tip #7. Oh look! I already hit my goal.

Photo credit: Jamie Street, Monstera, Yaroslav Shuraev and Ksenia Chernaya of Pexeles

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65 Responses to “Super reader’s tips for reading more books: skim, quit books you don’t like”

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  1. Snazzy says:

    The one that was the hardest for me that I finally implemented last year was to quit a book. I used to be really stubborn about it, one of those things that if I started I had to finish, no matter what. Now, to hell with it, I just just shut it if and when it starts to irritate me.

    • BeanieBean says:

      Same here! Why do we do that? On the plus side, I’m usually pretty good about selecting books to read, checking out the interior cover & maybe skimming a few pages to see if I like the writing, so it wasn’t often that I wasted my time finishing a book that really did nothing for me. Now, finally, I’ve set myself free!

    • Agreatreckoning says:

      @Snazzy, felt that way about Ken Follet’s Pillars of the Earth. Love that book. Initially, getting through the first 50 pages seemed like torture. I’ve quit books before. My MO involves flipping to the middle looking for a few sentences that intrigue me. The first longest book I’ve ever read (been a long time reader since I was a wee one and Covid messed with me and I couldn’t read for a while). was Pat Conroy’s Lords of Discipline. Read it when I was 13. Judy Blume’s Forever-I’ll admit was a big favorite then too. Keeping an open mind regarding books is a good idea. Shutting out some books is a good idea too. One of the worst books I’ve tried to read and quit after 10 pages is The Dead Father’s Club. It was praised at the time-still can’t figure out why.

      There was a time that I may have felt embarrassed about enjoying romance novels. Love Catherine Coulter’s. Thinking about it now, the Duchess of Sussex kind of epitomizes the heroine of Coulter’s books.

  2. LaraW” says:

    Clearly this dude doesn’t read poetry.

  3. AmyT says:

    Nancy Pearl, librarian extraordinaire, has a 50-page rule for fiction. If it hasn’t grabbed you by then, stop. The rule changes at age 50. For every year after 50, subtract a page. So if you’re 55, you give it 45 pages to catch fire ( not literally!) before moving on to something else.

    Aside/recommendation: “Matrix” by Lauren Geoff. Badass 12th century nuns. I’m about halfway through. The writing is gorgeous and it’s a savor/ read slowly rather that a “I can’t stop reading until I know what happens!”

  4. Becks1 says:

    I do a lot of these. I do track my books and I set an annual goal on goodreads, but I don’t sweat it if I don’t hit that goal. Looking over the past 5-10 years, some years my goal was 25 books and I only read 10, and some years my goal was 35 books and I read 70. A lot does depend on the type of books I’m reading. If I’m reading a lot of romances on Kindle Unlimited, those are usually pretty fast reads for me and I can read 5 in a week. If I’m reading a self-help kind of book, I can usually read that pretty fast. If I’m reading a denser biography or history book, that’s going to take me longer (like Obama’s memoir took me a few weeks to read.)

    Anyway putting down a book I just am not into is definitely something I do regularly. If I think I’ll actually like a book or I actually want to read it, I’ll keep it on goodreads as “currently reading” lol and I’ll get back to it at some point, maybe, lol. For example i just couldn’t get into Michelle Obama’s memoir, but I do want to read it, so its still there as currently reading. If it’s a book I’m actively disliking, I’ll skim just to see what happens and to move the book, so to speak.

    I do think there is a line between reading just to read and hit your goal and actually enjoying what you read. my 2022 goal is 60, which is about the most I can read in a year while still mixing up the genres and reading some longer/denser books and some lighter/faster books. I could read 100 books, but I probably wouldn’t remember what I was reading.

    • LadyMTL says:

      I’m right there with you as far as putting down a book goes; I have no qualms stopping right in the middle of something if I don’t like it. I also skim but only if I think sticking with it will be worth it in the end.

      That said, I’ve never really set ‘reading goals’ and I consider myself to be a near-voracious reader (everything from fantasy and horror to history and bios…I just finished Transcendent Kingdom and am currently reading Midnight in Chernobyl.) I find that putting pressure on myself to read X number per year kind of sucks the fun out of it, especially since some weeks I might read only 5-10 pages and then the next tear through 300. I honestly have no clue how many I read last year, and I’m okay with that lol.

      • Becks1 says:

        I have to track on Goodreads in general because I forget that I’ve read some books, especially if it was a few years ago, LOL. or I’ll forget what books people have recommended etc so I have to add them to my want-to-read list. So once I’m doing that its pretty easy to just track year by year.

        I enjoyed Transcendent Kingdom, thought homegoing was a lot better but TK was still pretty good. I’m finally reading Shadow and Bone after we discussed the Netflix series so much here lol.

      • BeanieBean says:

        I just don’t track the total number of books I’ve read, it’s irrelevant to me. Time is a more important unit of measure to me; how much time do I have for this? I listen to a podcast called ‘Happier in Hollywood’ in which one of the writers said she gave herself a goal of reading 21 minutes a day in 2021 & her new goal is 22 minutes a day in 2022. That doesn’t look like nearly enough reading time to me! But for a lot of folks it seems this pandemic has screwed up so much & set people so off-kilter that even something enjoyable like reading got dropped along the wayside, so she set herself a goal of reading 21 minutes a day thinking that’s at least achievable. Which is important in goal-setting, making your goals achievable.

  5. mellie says:

    I don’t read a lot of non-fiction either, and I agree it is hard to quit a book, but I’ve done it.
    And, something I like do after reading something really hard is follow it up with an easy to read, such as a book that I can almost read in a day, some kind of smut of something…I don’t care who is judging me on my GoodReads page. It’s like “bitch, I just read ‘Beloved’, let me have my regency novel”….

  6. manda says:

    I read all the time and don’t really need to try to read more, but I will say, I put the kindle app on my phone and took facebook and twitter off my phone, and I did read more and scroll less. And I know that social media makes me unhappy at least half the time, so it was something I needed to do. This means I usually am reading at least one real book and one kindle book at the same time. Usually I am reading a few things at once

    Also, I don’t mind putting a book down if I don’t like it, but I use goodreads, which doesn’t have a “didn’t finish this” choice, so I have some books on my currently reading list that will never come off, lol. I don’t want to mark it as read but I want the record to show that I gave it a shot

    • Headintheclouds says:

      Goodreads does have a ‘did not finish’ shelf and it’s exclusive so all the books from your ‘want to read’ shelf will move over if you select it.

  7. Valentina says:

    I set a goal every year to read 52 books and normally I do manage to hit it. I would give two bits of advice if you want to read more:

    1) Carry a book with you wherever you go, it’s amazing how often you can get some reading in at random times during the day.

    2) Make reading part of your routine. Before home office, I read on my way to and from work, for 20 mins during my lunch break and for half an hour before bed. If you just do one of these things you’ll get through so much more and it takes out any “ugh I really should read but because I feel like I have to, it makes me not want to” feelings.

    • mellie says:

      yes, I always have a book in my purse, that way if my hubs wants to stop and go in a store that I have no interest going in, no problem! He knows that I don’t mind one bit to sit in the car and read a few chapters while he browses about.

    • BeanieBean says:

      Me, too! I always have a book with me, just in case. I also like to listen to audiobooks as I drive to/from work.

  8. North of Boston says:

    I’m done trying to “optimize” my performance at things I do for enjoyment. That was so 2018-19. And I get enough of that at work, I don’t need to feed that monster on my own time.

    And reading more books for the sake of reading more books, getting tips for how to plow through more books, faster seems like one of those performance optimization for the sake itself things that can add stress, pressure, focus on quantity, and a focus on doing something just to tally it or check it off your list than can suck the fun, soul out of a leisure activity.

    • BeanieBean says:

      I know, that seemed crazy to me, too. If you need to do all these things in order to increase your books-read count, you don’t really like reading & maybe you should find something else you do like to do.

    • J says:

      God I’m so with you. For years I have tried to optimise and track way too many things and it has led to more stress. I kept track of the films/tv shows I watched and books I read. I’ve used the goodreads challenge for the past two years. I timed my runs and feel bad if I wasn’t running near my PB pace. I tracked all the exercise, language learning and music practice I did each day.

      Not this year. I’m tired of measuring everything and always trying to be ‘better’. I just want to be me. I recently read an article called ‘letting go of the stress of measuring’ and it gave me the permission I needed. Feels like a weight has been lifted off my shoulders. I’m sure this sounds stupid to some people but I’m also sure some other anxious type-a types will get it.

  9. Zan says:

    I love reading, and am a fast reader. I don’t hesitate to ditch a book if doesn’t appeal to me. I also reread books I love. Reading is a pleasure for me, and I don’t want it to be a tortured slog.
    Just by simply logging my reading for the past few years, I’ve managed to increase the amount I read each year. I think being mindful of it helps keep me going at a pace that works for me. Hard number goals might stress me about something I don’t need to stress about, even just a little.

  10. MerlinsMom1018 says:

    I am swooning…yes SWOONING over the picture of all the books and the good boi doggo is adorable! ❤ I am a huge reader and I have 2 bookshelves that MerlinsDad made for me. I am never without a book. As I write this I have 3 sitting next to me. I have a kindle fire loaded with books and that’s what I take with me whenever I have an appt and I know there’s a chance I will be waiting awhile.
    I can’t begin to imagine my life without books and I am ever grateful for both of my parents for passing their love of reading down to me.

  11. wildwaffles says:

    I read between 40-70 books a year, mostly all fiction. I read for enjoyment, escape, and entertainment. I definitely agree with the concept of giving up on a book you are not enjoying, guilt-free. A few things I have discovered:
    – Use the library. When it is free to try a book, I end up taking a lot more risks with my reading. Also, it is much easier to stop reading a book if I didn’t spend money on it. When I read books I love from the library, I often go out and buy a copy in the bookstore to support the author.
    – Audio books allow me to read during the day while doing chores or some of my other hobbies. I often won’t take the time to sit down during the day and dedicate time to reading but audio books allow me to be reading off and on all day. Also, if I have an audio book going, I find I am more likely to pick up a physical book to read at night vs. scrolling or watching tv.
    – Find a group of friends who are readers and swap books around with each other. I like this way more than an official book club.

    I am always looking for book recommendations so I really appreciate it when CB has a book post up. Thank you for doing that!

    • equality says:

      Agree about the library. It makes it easier to give up on a book if you haven’t paid a lot for it. Also used book stores where you can trade books in for credit are nice. I don’t tend to keep fiction books anyway so those are the best options.

    • notasugarhere says:

      I’m big on the library too. You’re already paying for the collection so you might as well use it. That and the neighborhood Little Library collections. You can drop off a few of those titles you didn’t want to finish while finding a few others to try for free.

      I do audiobooks while crafting, driving, cooking. I’ve enjoyed lots of history, politics, science titles that way. I recommend the Great Courses lectures/audiobooks if your library has those.

      Older titles, but I’ve enjoyed most of Arturo Perez Reverte’s books if you haven’t read them.

  12. Erica says:

    I read about 200 books a year and I agree with a lot of those tips. It’s taken me a long time to ditch a book if I don’t like it, but I think he’s right- life is too short. I’m currently reading a 1000 page tome on Ulysses S Grant that I think I’m going to give up.
    Carry a book with you everywhere, have 3-4 audiobooks on your phone at a time, get recommendations from goodreads, and find what you enjoy.

  13. Willow says:

    I’ve never heard of this. Reading goals? Just sounds like a way to make reading a chore.
    I LOVE LOVE LOVE reading. I don’t what a super reader is, but I am definitely a speed reader, and I also do the skim reading thing.
    I now check out all my library books electronically. Awesome!
    AND now that my eyes are old, ebook readers are the best because I can change to larger font and brighter light.
    Seems like I already do most of these tips. I’m going to try the few I haven’t. But no way am I doing a book number count.

    • Becks1 says:

      LOL a reading goal isn’t that serious. Like I said above I’ve been setting a goal for years now and I still love to read. I guess it depends on how you approach that goal though.

      • Headintheclouds says:

        Ha, same! I started doing the Goodreads challenge in 2020 during the pandemic and have read 81 books altogether in 2020 and 2021. It has stopped me from scrolling through Facebook etc and I’m now doing buddy reads with some lovely people from all over the world. I LOVE marking a book as read, rating it and looking at my stats.

  14. Cessily says:

    I read a lot.. average 25 books a month. My dream home would be a library with a kitchen and master bedroom. 💞📚🤓

  15. HelloDolly! says:

    I came here to say that this post on reading is so refreshing! The tip that most resonated with me was to have fun. Reading for leisure should be a joy, not a task.

    I read alot for my job, but I would suggest playing with form and genre. Read short fiction collections, for example. Read some new and old classics of a genre, like Mexican Gothic and The Yellow Wallpaper. Read novels, travelogues, short stories, poetry, etc. or even read a novel then watch its cinematic adaptation.

  16. Jessica says:

    I definitely need to work on putting down books that don’t interest me, I rarely DNF a book. I do set a goal on Goodreads every year, but I don’t stress if I don’t meet it. 2020/2021 I read 20 books, so this year I set it at 25. I’m definitely trying to make more of an effort recently. For the last month or so I’ve been really trying to read a little every day, even if it’s just a page or two at night before bed. I’m kindle only at this point, but I do have a few physical books I’ve been meaning to get to.

  17. observer says:

    Curious to know: How many CB’ers have a GoodReads account?

    • Cessily says:

      I do, along with a kindle unlimited account, iBooks account, Barnes and noble account, accounts for local libraries and thumb drives filled with pdf books from decades ago. I gave up television a long time ago🤣

  18. ItReallyIsYouNotMe says:

    I Love reading and I have been a lifelong reader. I go through phases. For years I couldn’t get into anything besides non-fiction unless it was in the YA field (Harry Potter, Hunger Games). It just seemed like the most interesting stories were coming out of YA and everything adult was chick lit (just not my bag, sorry) or was super-depressing or had a violent sexual assault as character development and I just couldn’t take the trauma. Now I have been getting back into fiction but non-fiction is still my first love. I am about to have an operation next week with 4-6 weeks of recovery. So I took a trip to the library and currently have 15 books sitting on my bedside table just waiting for me. Some of them are a little deep (rereading The Passage series because I felt like I had trouble following the story the first time), but I made sure to get some light stuff too (been meaning to read crazy Rich Asians for the longest but it’s always been on waitlist at my local library so I ended up reading China Rich Girlfriend first). I am actually excited to have loads of time to read during the recovery.

  19. Doodle says:

    I love audiobooks because I can combine my love of reading and my love of painting – my two favorite hobbies. I also write fiction and hate the idea of someone skimming through the words I’ve deliberated so long and hard over. I’d rather someone nope out of my book altogether if it’s not working for them than half ass it and miss a lot of what’s going on just to hit some random goal, miss a bunch of details then decide my book wasn’t that great because they weren’t really paying attention. His advice seems odd in that regard.

  20. Feeshalori says:

    I’ve always been a voracious reader and have never set goals. If a book doesn’t grab me in the first few pages, l don’t waste my time. And I’ll skim if sections bore me but l want to complete the book. The mark of a good reader is knowing when to stop and not wasting your time. I’m a former librarian, so l was like a kid in a candy shop indulging in my favorite vice. All through Covid, l used e-books and while they can never replace the real thing it’s been a lifesaver. And l carry a book with me always to appointments or even waiting on line for Covid testing. That’s been my practice all my life.

  21. doxie says:

    I read between 40-60. books a year, and what got me to bump up the ##s was to have an underlying goal. So last year my goal was that +50% of the books I read needed to be written by BIPOC authors. The year before that, it was +50% women. This year is not as intentional–I’m just trying to read all of the books on my list that were added in the before-times, prior to 2020.

  22. Cee says:

    That dog is so cute!

    I used to read a lot but then depression hit me and I just couldn’t bother and 2020 just depleted what was left of my attention span. I am now back to reading and realised I love crime/thriller books. They keep me hooked and wanting to read more and more. I just finished reading “the woman in cabin 10” by ruth ware and this book literally gave me back that feeling of joy that reading brings. I felt like my old self again.
    So, any recommendations?

    • Becks1 says:

      I really liked her book, The Death of Mrs Westaway. (the lying game was crap though.)

      Also “The Last Thing He Told Me” was good, its a thriller but slightly different than the other books out there.

    • Doodle says:

      The Silent Patient is REALLY good, one of mg favorite psychological thrillers. Kind of a slow burn but stick with it! Behind her eyes is really good but only if you haven’t watched the Netflix show – it’s really good if you go in blind, if you know anything about it it’s ruined. Sometimes I Lie is good as well… these aren’t really “crime thrillers” but more psychological, but I enjoyed them. I guessed Ruth Ware’s twist pretty early on but still enjoyed it and listened to it twice so maybe you’ll like these as well.

    • notasugarhere says:

      If you like cozy Victorian mysteries, you could do either of the long series by Anne Perry (Charlotte and Thomas Pitt, or the William Monk set).

      Ian Rutledge series by Charles Todd (mother and son co-authors)

      Donna Leon’s mysteries set in Venice

      The Martin Beck series by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö, one of the original Scandinavian Noir series.

    • BeanieBean says:

      I’m really hooked on Fredrik Backman right now, so anything by him. Ditto anything by Marian Keyes, she’s tops. Cozy mysteries: anything by Carlene O’Connor; they’re fast reads & lots of fun.

      • Cee says:

        I just bought Beartown and it’s a bit slow for my taste but I like his prose, so I’m gonna keep at it!

  23. Eurydice says:

    I’ve been reading pretty much non-stop since I was 4 years old. But the way I’ve found to read more diverse works is by joining a reading group. Other members suggest works that I wouldn’t have thought of – we’ve read Chinese writers, Japanese, Egyptian, South African, Latin American. I’ve pushed them to read science fiction and children’s books and European writers who aren’t British or French. We’ve built a lot of trust and I’ve learned a lot, even from books that I’ve hated – it’s interesting to know why I hate something. And for difficult works like Proust, I’ve found a directed reading group helps a lot – without the group it’s like climbing Mt. Everest without a team.

  24. pottymouth pup says:

    While I understanding setting and wanting to hit targets for reading new books, I really don’t understand why anyone would just skim a book in order to be able to hit a target for # books read instead of actually reading it to enjoy it and missing that goal. If being able to say you read X # of books/year is that important to you, just skim really short books since the goal is for bragging rights instead of reading to learn or for the sake of enjoyment.

    That said, I definitely agree that you need to learn when to give up on a book that you’re just not enjoying. That was a hard lesson for me to learn.

  25. Amy Too says:

    I’m not really sure how you can say you’ve read whatever number of books if you’re mostly skimming them. The bit about how the more you know about something, the more you can skim, and thus the faster you’ll finish books and the more you’ll read seems like cheating to me. Does it really count as a book you’ve “read” if you’ve skimmed most of it? I guess it doesn’t really matter if you’re only reading for fun and not to get to a certain number, but if you really want to brag that you’ve read 100 books this year, then skimming through large portions of many of them seems dishonest.

    I also feel like this would be dangerous because people will skim thing that they *think* they know, and then they’ll never learn that they were actually wrong because they refused to read the book. And for so many different non-fiction subjects, what we know changes over time. New facts are discovered, new context is given, the facts are interpreted in new ways, or some facts (or stories or tidbits) that we’ve considered true and correct for decades end up being disproven.

    • Eurydice says:

      Yes, this reminds of suggestions on how to read Proust without actually reading all of Proust – the 1st 80 pages of the first volume…the last 200 pages of the last volume…” Might as well just read a synopsis and forget the whole thing.

      I think the skimming thing is odd, too. In a way, nothing is totally non-fiction (except maybe instruction manuals), every book is written with the point of view of the author (even cookbooks), so it’s interesting to see what is included, excluded, presented with a bias this way or that. If you’re just looking for information on a subject, you can just google it, and even then look for the slant.

  26. Surly+Gale says:

    i have enjoyed the Lee Child ‘Jack Reacher’ books and been dedicated to them until…..the last two books have had a different style, etc and for my first time ever, I did not finish the last one. In fact, I pulled The Sentinel off my shelves and Better Off Dead (the one i didn’t finish) are now both in my ‘give away’ bin. The series, since Lee’s brother Andrew took over, just doesn’t work for me anymore.
    My point is I will now not finish books with ease, as opposed to struggling through hoping it will get better, or that I just have to finish what I started. No more, so I’m grateful for ‘permission’ and the release I feel just knowing I can move on to another book I’m looking forward to reading (the new Rita Mae Brown ‘Sister Jane’ series..combines love of dogs with murder mystery).

  27. BeanieBean says:

    Wow, competitive reading, who knew? Way to take all the fun out of it fella. I read for pleasure, so any more it’s mostly fiction with the occasional biography or autobiography or memoir. My most recent book’s read include Fredrik Backman’s ‘Anxious People’ followed by ‘House of Gucci’ (midway through that one); in neither case was I reading to ‘solve a problem’. I will say, when I read for work, it’s at work & it’s frequently just skimming. And I only recently came to the point in the last few years where if I didn’t like a book, I’d just stop reading it. I don’t know why I’d plow through something I wasn’t really enjoying but I have learned to stop wasting my time like that. Most of the rest of this makes no sense to me & reminds me again that I’m glad I never created any social media.

  28. Concern Fae says:

    Took a workshop in college on speed reading. One note, the skimming tends to be when you are reading books in a field you are familiar with and you are reading to see what new information might be in there.

    If it’s a non-fiction book you basically want the information from, read the introduction and the conclusion, then go back through the chapters, reading the first paragraph, the first sentence of every paragraph, and the concluding paragraph. After the skim, go back to anything you want to read closely and do so. If you feel you are getting lost, go back and read a bit more closely.

    This isn’t what most people who read for pleasure think of as reading, but when you are in a profession where you are supposed to keep up with all the new writing in the field, it’s what you have to do. Honestly, there are so many books where skimming is all they deserve.

    Note: this doesn’t really work for fiction, although I’ve found the first sentence tactic can help when a book is getting slow. Although I invariably find there was something I missed.

    • BeanieBean says:

      I took a similar class in high school & this is my approach to work reading, whether books or journal articles.

  29. Bird says:

    I guess I’m a super reader as I average about a book a week. I get 90% of them from online library so makes it easy to stop reading or to skim. Glad to hear this is recommended as some friends thought this was nuts. Life is too short and there are so many good books out there. Reading is an escape which helps me cope with life. I get recommendations through book reviews in NYT and others or on Twitter goodreads account. I’ll have to look more into goodreads website. Sounds like a good way to manage it all. Just finished ‘first fifteen lives of Harry August’ recommended through Twitter goodreads. Loved it!

  30. LawyaGal+of says:

    I usually read around 100 books per year. Reading is one of the great pleasures of my life and it brings me so much joy. I am a fiction author, so some reading is work related, but most is nonfiction and things I’m generally excited about. I agree with what has been said – don’t make yourself read a book that’s not grabbing you. In the book world we call it “DNF” and I do it all the time. There are too many good books to read in a lifetime, dont waste your time on something that’s not for you.

  31. Case says:

    I was always an “aspiring avid reader” — I’m a writer and I love BUYING books, but would only read *maybe* five a year. Last year, I read 51 books for the first time ever, and it’s something I’m personally very proud of. I do set goals, but only because it’s something that personally motivates me, not because I’m making it a competition. I’m going to keep my goal at 50 moving forward as I feel it’s manageable for me. I don’t want to feel stressed about not reading enough.

    I don’t speed-read or skim. But I am ruthless about quitting books I don’t like and I let my mood decide what I’m reading next instead of forcing anything on myself. Personally, my top tip for reading more is AUDIOBOOKS! I love audiobooks and always have one in rotation. That is a huge reason why I read so many books last year. You can listen to one while doing chores or driving, it helps pass the time, and you feel immersed in the story because someone (or sometimes a whole cast) is reading it to you.

    • Eurydice says:

      I envy you. I’ve tried audio books, but after a while it all sounds like “wha, wha, wha” to me – like the teacher in the Peanuts cartoons. I think I’m very visual – I need to see the words. And maybe because I have a bit of a photographic memory – I can remember whole pages as a picture. But I can’t remember as well if I just hear something.

      • BeanieBean says:

        🙂 I’ve actually missed my freeway exits while listening to audiobooks, I’ve been so engaged. Probably a safety issue….

  32. Hmmm says:

    What interests me is that some people seem to treat reading as something they do to prove to others that they are smart. As if people can’t tell pretty easily? Also if someone claims to have read and loved a classic book and really just watched the movie — yeah I can sense that, you know?

  33. Justplainme says:

    I love to read. There are some good tips if you need to make time to read. Reading is the endgame for me however, not a goals list. Finding a great book is the biggest challenge, I really hate to waste time on something that I end up putting down.
    Also whoever above said the tablet is wonderful for older eyes is spot on.

  34. Christine says:

    I’m trying to be better at #1. I used to justify reading the entire thing if I were close or past the halfway mark, but that just leads to hate-reading. I don’t know that I fully agree with #2. Maybe in nonfiction, but I can’t imagine skipping large chunks of a fiction book while still claiming I’m enjoying the story or writing.

    Hard pass on #6. “Every area you don’t give a damn about you probably should read at least one book in.” Yeah, that sounds like homework. High school killed reading for me for a long time because the books we had to read were SO BORING and I had zero interest in. No thank you.

    I agree with an earlier comment from @Valentina that carving out some time to read works wonders. I read for about 15-20 min as part of my morning routine and 30-60 min before bed, depending on how into a book I am. And I always, always take my ereader (or read on my phone) if I’m on a trip during travel time or have a long wait, like a doctor’s visit.

  35. dreamchild says:

    I love to read so much. I’m kind of a vagabond so I’ve moved a lot in my life and I can tell you the first thing I do in a new city is join the library. I can read a book in a day if I have time. The down side is I read so many books that I sometimes don’t remember it until prompted. I remember going to see the movie The Help and I told my friend while we were watching it that I’ve already seen this. She’s like we are at a premiere for the movie. Took a minute to realize I had read the book years ago. Of course I went back to read again. Lol. I also read fiction books based in cultures other than American and it’s the best way to get insight into other cultures.
    Best read lately – Sooley by John Grisham. So good.

  36. Wilma says:

    I only follow no. 1 and 7. Throughout my career and then having a kid I started to read less and less until 3 years ago I managed to read just one book. It bummed me out, because reading always was such an amazing escape from everything, like a little mental vacation. Two years ago I challenged myself to read 30 books and then I got my ereader and actually managed 180 books this year. Almost all read purely for enjoyment. Books really were a treat for my mental health during all that covid stress.
    I track on StoryGraph which isn’t Amazon owned like Goodreads.

  37. Imara219 says:

    I’m 15 books in since the beginning of the New Year. My reading goal is 100 books for 2022. I most definitely will stop a book when I’m not feeling it. I’ve stopped at 14%, 45%, etc. I have also fallen into 90 min reads or 2 hr reads. Changed the game with my reading. I use the Kindle app almost exclusively.

  38. Lila says:

    That was a fun read, thanks! I need to be more ruthless about walking away. I feel committed once I’m past the first couple chapters. I average about a book a week. I’ll be curious to see if my numbers change by employing those tips! (And now I just need to remember to update my Goodreads so I actually have data on that by year end.)

  39. Talthor says:

    I read a lot, last year I tracked 356 read books on Goodreads.

    There are, unfortunately, a lot of books I DNF. I am too old to waste my time on books that do not resonate on some level. And no, those are not counted as read.

    I do skim some passages when it is obvious they are not advancing the storyline/plot.

    I also re-read books; too much.

  40. caela says:

    Yeh this seems like such weird advice. Would we give it for an other art form? See more art by not walking around the whole art exhibition, or listen to more music by skipping tracks! It just makes me eye roll and sigh. Books are art too. Anyway lots of people here seem to like the advice so more power to them. But I’m sick of everything needing to be competitive or optimised or tracked. Some things are just fun and that’s ok.