How many hours a day/week to you read books?
And has that changed over the years? If so, how and for which reasons?
Personally, I try to read physical books 30-60min a day on average and most of the time do so (more on weekends and holidays).
I haven't read much literature until I was ~24 years old. As a struggling young adult self-help literature somehow guided me towards ancient philosophy. The logic and simplicity of language in Aristotle's "Nicomachean Ethics" blew my mind and from then on I started reading more and more primary source philosophy and related articles online, which then also lead me to "philosophical" literature from great authors like Dostoyevsky, Huxley, Orwell, Steinbeck etc.
I am now 27 and low-key addicted to reading great minds. Being occupied in science, reading great non-technical books vastly expanded my horizon and has been having a significant impact on my worldview.
I try to always read a chapter of my book before bed every night. Most of the time I enjoy it, sometimes it feels like a chore, very occasionally I'm just too tired and it doesn't happen.
I used to read more. The most obvious culprit is devices; I watch too much tv, play too many games. Work also has an impact, after a day of hard concentration it's just easier to watch mindless tv.
I’m going through a reboot right now. I’ve removed virtually all social media apps from my devices, and cancelled all subscription media except for Spotify. No more TV, streaming shows etc.
Replacing all free time with reading has been a big adjustment but I feel like I’m absorbing knowledge and improving myself. I’m also finding that I can express myself better through writing.
I read about 70+ books in a year (mostly fantasy and sci-fi novels). I usually finish a book around weekend and spend about 2 hours during weekdays. If a series is short and good, I'd usually just binge them together (am self-employed with not so strict timeline, so not an issue to take a few days off).
I've started listening to audiobooks while playing American Truck Simulator weekends and evenings. It's like going on a road trip without leaving the house.
I'm a pretty solid 1-2 hours per day. This increased a lot after I had children and needed a healthy outlet. Some things to consider:
- Audiobooks were pretty transformative for me. I like to run and I like to read and listening to an audiobook while running is pretty close to Zen for me. I have found that I am a lot less intimidated by "hard books" when in Audiobook form because I know I can grind my way through. I did War and Peace training for my first marathon. Audiobooks also made my commutes a lot more educational (though my children usually despise my book interests, so your mileage may vary with kids in the car).
- Delete your social media. It's the new smoking and reading is a healthy habit to replace.
- Whispersync between Audible and Kindle can help you blaze through a book. Read a bit at bed, listen while you do the dishes, repeat.
I'm currently reading about an hour every day. Next year I'm going to double that.
To motivate myself to read more non-fiction and retain more, I've decided to launch a paid newsletter in which I'll share my summaries abd insights: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/dsebastien/members
It should be a win-win: more incentive to read and take notes, and useful content for my audience ;-)
Usually 30-60 minutes day during the week, and more on the weekends. I've become more disciplined over the last few years. Prior to the pandemic, I was involved in several reading groups (reading a wide range of subjects, from theology to fiction), and that required a different approach to the material to keep track of what I was reading, and get the readings done "on time." Prior to that, I was still reading multiple days per week, but I tended to read in fits and bursts, rather than consistently, over the course of a year.
Zero, despite trying to change it. Reams and reams of code to the point I feel like my eyes have burn in but no books. I'm not sure if this needs to change.
I read on average about 30min a day after my kid goes to sleep. Sometimes a bit more if I'm engaged in a book. I find that if I force myself to read at least 1 page per day, that is the best way to make progress.
I started a newsletter (https://hundred.substack.com/) with book summaries for my friends to read what I'm reading.
I only started reading books again recently, (3 months ago).
I spend about 5-8 hours a week reading. The reason I started again was because I was watching a lot of YouTube on a particular topic, and the creators were all pulling their content from a book. I figured I might as well read the book so I can get the content from its source.
Now I read for other reasons that are work related, imagination stimulation, and pure recreation.
Honestly, like many the answer is not enough.
I’m a binge reader, I’ll buy a book and consume >1/2 the book, relatively quickly, but struggle to come back to it regularly and finish.
I tend to take notes and try to implement some learning / make it actionable, from reading but I struggle to carve time when there’s so many other distractions (work, side projects, Netflix, games)
Any tips and tricks welcomed!
Lately, I have been reading the Wheel of Time series, so it’s probably upwards of 20. I do it as a way to avoid doomscrolling. For a long time, when I thought about reading midddlebrow stuff, I figured it was a waste of time and I should be reading e.g. Middlemarch instead. But today, anything that keeps me off my phone is a treasure.
4-5 hours/week if the weather is nice (I like to sit in a park nearby and read). Half that during colder months. Not because I don't want to read, but I usually fall asleep after a few chapters when I'm in my recliner with a blanket on.
I read to sleep, so it depends on how tired I am. Usually it's in the 1h±30m range.
I'm 80% audio books these days. And while they take numerically longer to read than paper books I can listen just about anywhere. I tend to read/listen about 2 hours a day. That adds up REAL quick.
Usually I read every night before going to bed. Once I'm done with everything else, I go to bed an read until 23h. Then, 10min of meditation and sleep :)
Occasionally, I read the entire Sunday afternoon.
Usually read something to learn for 15 mins while eating breakfast, and about half an hour of fiction before falling asleep. In addition a few pages here and there on my phone if I need to wait for something.
Between listening and reading physical books, probably average 1.5 hours a day. It has increased from about zero in the last 2 years since I've taken my reading interests more seriously.
The end of commuting and work travel (at my current job) took away one of my largest and favorite times to read. I'm probably at 2-3 hrs/week on books now but trying to step it up.
I used to do 400 books per year but it has dropped to 200 (excluding technical content). I usually read in bursts with ebooks on my phone and tablet. Weekends are heaviest in reading time.
0. :)
I'm not sure why, I've never enjoyed long reads. If there's something interesting suggested to me I often find decent summaries in blog post/audio or video format.
1 hour per day, as it’s the only thing which helps me fall asleep. I read until falling asleep and then again whenever I wake up during the night. Two birds one stone.
About two hours a day. Also once every month I spend a whole Sunday reading books, for like about ten hours. So I'd say in average 60-70hrs/monthly.
zero, lately. guess what my new years resolution was.
I try and read for an hour or so a day before I get started with work. I've lapsed hard on that, but I'm clawing my way back.
I try to read 20 min a day. With kids it becomes a challenge to dedicate any more time than that.
30 minutes a day on average for the last few months. It changes depending on what I have to read. Sometimes I won't read any books for half a year, sometimes I'll read a whole book in one weekend. Right now I'm finishing a very long web novel, nothing amazing, but it's pretty good for reading for half an hour before going to bed.
I also listen to podcasts/audiobooks when I'm walking and that's probably more "reading" on average than the real "reading".
When I was +- 13 I'd been reading about a book a day, tried to read literally every book in our village library (and finished more than half of them). I've even tried reading "Selected arts" by Lenin (sorry no idea how to translate that - it was a book that communists bought for every library in Poland and nobody read it ever).
But that was before we had internet so it's not like I had anything better to do. Nowadays I don't have the attention span and there's too many distractions.
It depends on the mood, one hour a day seems a good pace for me.
slow reader:
2hrs per days.
a ~600-page nonfiction book a week.