» Hi. My name is Chrissie and I have a reading problem.
Not that my problem is an overindulgence of reading. I mean, would that even count? (No. The answer is no.) My reading as I once knew it has been broken and getting there at a steady rate over the past couple of years. In the second half of 2024, I completely burned out. I got mad at my past self for requesting or accepting so many galleys (a habit I’m super thrilled to report has not improved; more on that in a mo’), I got mad that I kept buying books to not read, and I couldn’t seem to stop piling on to my ever-growing, nonsensically hopeful TBR.
Last year, in the middle of my reading life falling apart to whatever degree before the dust settled, I purged my TOO BIG TBR. It was over 1000 books optimistic on Goodreads and apparently about 200 owned books languishing on my shelves. {Insert sad trombone}.
So, I cut a slit into the roof and let a little light in — I spent a not insignificant amount of time wiping it down to 50 books. I left my owned books alone, with the near ridiculous notion I’d be able to mentally prioritize them. (Spoiler alert: This has not happened yet.) But still, I’ve made progress. The light is peeping through.
I did realize earlier in 2024 that I am NOT a book subscription person — I have a whole shelf of Book of the Month and Aardvark books forming part of the support group of languishing literature. Clearly, I cannot be told what to read…. I am a nincompoop about taking recommendations, I should not be trusted to ask for or receive books as gifts, and yet…I remember a time when I read books as I bought them. As they came into my house, whether to stay a short while on loan or to live with me, I did this thing and actually read them. Do I get to say I prioritized them? I don’t think so. With nothing to have prioritized them over — I think that’s out.
Not ten years ago, I read books with no real TBR. Spontaneously. Enthusiastically, even. But I haven’t felt that for a while. There’s this push-push-push to my reading these days. And I’m realizing it’s making me unhappy. I’ve allowed invisible and absolutely made-up delusions to dictate my reading. I’m reading for a future that’s unshaped, rather than reading for now. Rather than reading for me.
I promised myself last year that I’d stop requesting or accepting so many galleys, but — while I remained strict for a few months (I had this big dream that I’d limit myself to one published book a month), that restriction didn’t stick. So, I fell off the wagon, but I’m not even sure jumping onto a wagon like that was a valid response. Restricting myself is the way it felt to begin with. Maybe I was looking at that all wrong.
Is there a way to “fix” it? Or do I need to accept that this is the new me? Learn to live with it? Nah, that can’t be right.
Then, this past Sunday, I could not find what to read for my next audiobook. I spent, minus sleeping and eating times, most of Sunday and the morning of Monday hunting for a book. I sampled. I started and then DNFd. I honestly don’t know how many. And…in this process, I managed to skinny down the ol’ TBR a bit more. That reminded me that I need to leave space for the spontaneity that I’m craving to get back to. I also was reminded of the reason I started allowing myself to abandon a book that wasn’t working for me. (I didn’t start DNFing until 2020.) It’s a waste of my time and a disservice to a book that works for loads of other people.
So, where does that leave me? I’m not entirely sure, but this feels like continuing down that path that I started on last year when I whittled the absurd list of over 1000 books down to an ambitious, but surprisingly reasonable 50. As I type this, my TBR sits just under 30 books. We are generously ignoring my 200+ owned but unread books, because that’s not a TBR…that’s a situation for another stage. However, I am finally starting to feel the pull of those blessed books on my shelves.
Who knows? I might even pick one up and read it one day. One day soonish. Right now, I’m thinking I want my TBR around 20-25, leaving room for unreleased books I want to remember or the next book in a series, so it stays in my line of sight. Maybe one day I’ll nix the entire thing. But I want that list to not even come close to overwhelming me. I want to gently nudge myself to my owned books and leave plenty of space for other books to find me. Something like it used to be.
I’m not one for a question of the day to end on (I also cannot be counted on to answer them), but as we near the mid-year check-in onslaught, I do wonder how everyone else’s reading is going. I know a lot of people who hit similar brick walls last year, whose reading suffered, and who are struggling with the notion of chasing that feeling of having finished a book, rather than the act of reading one.
So, join me for a reset and jump on the struggle bus — there’s room left. Let’s hope we figure all this out and then maybe we can get back to our regularly unscheduled reading.
—C.
I am floundering. I go from great reading (say 3 books in a row) to being in the midst of 3 different books and finding that while all are fine stylistically, they're subject matter is making me tense. Anything alluding to any kind of authoritarian or dystopian environment is like sandpaper on my brain. Pretty soon I'm going to be left with Westerns and historical romance.
I, too, feel like my reading is broken and I don't know how to fix it. Reading your post was like a peek into my own thoughts, and it's nice not to feel alone in the overwhelm. I'm reading MUCH less than I used to (is it because I can't put my phone down? is it because I'm not loving what I'm reading? is it because of the pressure and therefore my inability to decide what to read next? I think it's probably all of the above). The requesting too many galleys is real. Because with those requests comes the pressure and guilt to actually read them, whether it's what's calling me in the moment or not. I think the first step is like you said, trying to rid myself of this feeling of obligation. I'm REALLY hoping that starts to fix it. Almost 1/3 into the year and my reading is incredibly unsatisfying.