Reading Slump Emergency Kit: 15 Surefire Ways To Break Out of a Reading Slump!
Do you find yourself stuck in reading slumps often? Are you caught in one now? Would you be found Googling “how to get out of a reading slump?” This handy-dandy guide will help you to break out of that nasty reading slump and get back to reading right away!
There's a couple of things to keep in mind before you crack open the emergency kit:
Learn to let go
First and foremost, if the book just isn't working out, learn to let go and read something else. Take the pressure off yourself to finish any novel that isn't bringing you joy or fills you with dread when you think about reading it. I did this last year with a novel that just couldn't keep me hooked no matter what I tried. I had to let it go
Don't set unrealistic expectations
Most of the unnecessary pressures we put on ourselves as readers comes from out lofty reading goals that we take on each year. However, these goals aren't meant to bog you down or make you feel like a failure when you don't reach them—they're just for fun! So don't set unrealistic reading goals and instead, set a few, manageable and achievable goals and just have fun with reading.
Without further ado—onto the list!
Make special time for reading
If you're really loving the book or reading in general, but you just can't bring yourself to sit down each day and read, then you need to intentionally carve out time for reading. This 30 minutes to an hour should be sacred. Figure out where you can cut down time on other activities to read. (Don't forget to take the dog out and feed the kids, though!)
If you're a mood reader
I used to think I'd never be someone who reads daily, that I was a mood reader and if my life was stressful, I would have a hard time sitting down to read and keeping my mind engaged. I think this is true for everyone—it can be hard to get immersed when your life is tumultuous. If you're not able to read for escape then combine the first trip, reading every day with this: set the mood. Make a playlist of songs that remind you of the book your reading or the people, places, or things contained inside it. Play the playlist every day before you scheduled reading time, and you'll start to train your brain to want to read regularly.
Try different genres
My go-to when I get stuck in a reading slump is to put my book down (if I am currently reading one) and pick up another in a different genre, specifically romantic thriller or horror. Even though fantasy is my favorite genre to write in, it can be so hard for me to read fantasy because it's a genre that is typically not very fast-paced.
However, the exact opposites are romantic thrillers and horror novels. These are usually short, action-packed, page turners that kick the pacing up a notch and are usually all I need to pull myself out of a reading slump. When I plan my reading goals each year, I make sure to leave room for the emergency thriller novel after every fantasy novel, just to keep myself on track.
Try reading differently
If you normally just read in silence, I urge you to try out immersion reading—the act of reading a tangible, hard copy book (or e-book) and listening to an audiobook simultaneously. This employs two senses—sight and sound and can make a world of difference in your reading experience. Likewise, you can listen to that playlist you made on page two, or you can listen to ambient sounds from YouTube or websites like Ambient Mixer!
Re-read an all-time favorite
Do this especially if you have an all-time favorite series. This will help you build up the habit of reading while you get back in touch with a familiar story. Every fall, I whip out Hush, Hush by Becca Fitzpatrick. It never gets old, and it always keeps me reading. (And what do you know—it's a romantic thriller!)
Turn off your phone
I know this can be easier said than done for most in the digital age, but just hear me out. We do TONS of reading daily on our phones, but it's lazy, cheap writing that doesn't provide us with any literary gains. Swap out phone reading time for proper book reading time and see how easy it is to maintain a reading schedule when your phone stays out of the way.
Swap fiction for non-fiction
This is similar to tip number 3, but next time you find yourself stuck in a reading slump, try reading the opposite of the (overarching) genre you read most. If you typically reach for fiction, switch it up by grabbing a self-help novel or memoir. I really love reading contemporary entrepreneurial books when I need a break from fiction. These books are super inspiring and motivating and they help me in the creative parts of my life when I just feel like spending time in the real world for a while.
Skip the TBR pile and grab something else
If you have more than one bookshelf filled with books you've never read, perhaps you should skip this tip, but if you find you aren't reaching for books on your TBR shelf, look elsewhere for your next read! Check out books from the library so you don't have to feel bad if you don't finish it (the way you would if you'd spent money on it). Or if you're not in immediate danger of TBR-Mount Everest, stop by a new bookstore and pick up a new book that speaks to you. Sometimes, we just get tired of saying we'll read the same books every year and not following through, and all it takes is a fresh face—or well, cover to encourage us.
Do some easy reading
Even if it's a super short book, graphic novel, or magazine, reading something—anything at all can steer you back in the right direction for reading. No matter how easy the read is, the sense of accomplishment you get from completing the read is usually enough to keep you reading and inspire you to tackle bigger reads.
Watch a bad movie adaptation
Sometimes stirring up a little righteous indignation is all it takes to get a reader back in between the pages. Watch the reeeeally crummy ones and remind yourself why books are usually always superior to their movie counterparts.
Get connected
Okay, trying really hard to not contradict myself here, but phones are permitted for this step. Get engaged with the bookish community online or join a book club in real life! Being around like-minded individuals will only encourage you to level-up your reading game and re-inspire your love of books.
Create a cozy reading nook
Of course, don't make it so cozy that you'd fall asleep there, but create a special space away from other activities so that you can read comfortably, without distraction. By doing this, you're assigning that task a specific location which helps the brain understand, when I'm here, I read.
Reorganize your bookshelves
If you're a bookish individual, then you know bookshelf porn is definitely a thing! There is something so powerfully motivating about having a gorgeous, aesthetically pleasing bookshelf to story all your little bookish babies. You can organize them by author, alphabetically, by color, genre, or whatever organization method you chose! You can also decorate your shelves with flowers, dragons, crystals, action figures, or any other gadgets or gizmos that bring you joy!
And that’s it for my 15 tips to break out of a reading slump! Comment your thoughts below and don’t forget to download the free PDF so you can be ready when the next reading slump strikes!
—Payton
10 Tips For Planning Your 2020 Reading Challenge
Not into New Years resolutions? Think you’d do better with a challenge? Well the good news is there’s something that works for everyone! This list of 10 tips will set you on the right track for you 2020 reading challenge!
Make time for reading
First and foremost, carve out a special time each day to read. Even if it’s for only 30 minutes at first, you will find yourself more interested in reading that you initially thought possible. Us the pomodoro technique to read in 25-minute intervals, to break the looming task down just a little. The easy part is setting the goal and doing the planning, but the follow-through is where it really counts, and unfortunately that part isn’t quite as easy. Set alarms to go off when you’re supposed to start and stop reading and make sure your reading area is conducive to relaxation and enjoyment.
Pro tip: Don’t forget Audiobooks! They totally count as reading and are a multitasker’s best friend! You can listen to audiobooks at the gym, in the car, or doing little chores around the house, to name a few activities.
Outline your own reading challenge
Reading challenges appear in many different forms: monthly Bookish bingo challenges, pre-made monthly lists, or like the Goodreads challenge, a set number of books you will try to read by the end of the year! Pick an existing challenge to participate in and figure out which books you want to read in 2020. Make them their own little list or shelf and be sure to leave room for extra books that you might need to get you out of reading slumps.
Pro tip: I always read romantic thrillers or horror novels to get me out of reading slumps! Usually it’s fantasy that puts me in a slump (even though I love the genre to death). Figure out what your go-to genre is and line up an reading slump emergency kit!
Get creative with your goals
Just because Goodreads has the yearly reading challenge and helps you keep track of the amount of books you read, doesn’t mean your goals have to strictly be a number. Consider what other goals would be helpful for your growth as a reader or writer. For example, one of my goals this year is to write a review for every book (or series) I read. I want to get into doing book reviews regularly and this is an excellent way for me to build the habit while challenging myself in a new, fun way. Another couple of examples is to only buy a new book when you’ve read one you currently own, join and IRL book club, or to get into reading audiobooks by reading one each month!
Organize your TBR
We ALL have that one shelf where we’ve boughten all kinds of books that we may or may not have the intention of reading. Whether you’ve got an actual bookshelf or your Goodreads virtual bookshelf, your amazon wishlist, or a handwritten list of books, keeping your TBR organized is key to accomplishing your reading goals in 2020.
Join a read-a-thon in 2020!
Read-a-thons are reading challenges that happen year-round and are hosted by book bloggers, booktubers, bookstagrammers, and bookish brands such as Owl Crate and Book Box! Joining the bookish fun is a great way to get involved, stay motivated, and make new friends along the way!
Prep your shelves
If you are in fact hoping to reach your goal of reading a certain number of book in 2020, you’re going to need to not only plan out your reading list, but also your shelves. See if you can find a reading challenge you’d like to participate in and pair the books on your shelf to the prompts in the challenge. You’ll get a good idea of your reading challenge this way and if you’re having trouble matching books to the challenge, it might be a good sign it’s time to pick a different challenge.
Track your progress effectively
Find a tracking method that works for you. I find the Goodreads reading challenge to be a great motivator and a great way to keep track of the books I’ve read. Plus, it gives you all sorts of statistics at the end of the year , like what books you read, longest to shortest in page count, most and least popular from your books, and it even keeps track of your reviews! However, you don’t have to use Goodreads. You can take the old-fashioned route and design a pretty progress tracker for 2020 that will inspire you to complete it!
Pro tip: Pintrest is a fantastic resource for finding any kind of habit tracker out there! Just type in “reading tracker” or “book tracker” in the search bar and you’ll be met with a plethora of fun designs you can use to track your own reading progress!
I SO look forward to this goal all year long and it continues to motivate me each year, even when I find myself in reading slumps or lacking motivation.
Connect with the bookish community
Reading brings people together! Get involved in the bookish community online and in real life to build strong connections with like-minded people and keep yourself motivated throughout the year and the reading challenge. Having a bookish BFF is an awesome way to keep yourself reading all year long! There are all kinds of fun, bookish things you can do in real life as well. You can start a book club together, buddy-read, host silent reading parties, or trade book recommendations!
Pro Tip: Bookstagram and reading groups on Facebook are both great ways to get engaged with the online reading community! See if your local library or community college has a book club you can join or start!
Set up a rewards system that works
If you read my guide on how to cure writer’s block for good, then you might know what I am about to say. Don’t neglect your other goals (saving money, losing weight, quitting smoking etc) by rewarding your good bookish behavior with toxic behavior. Set up a sustainable rewards system that doesn’t interfere with your other goals.
For instance, I am trying to cut out sugar AND stop impulse spending. So, what kind of reward can I set for myself? Weekly watch time for my favorite shows, nights out with friends, and every time I hit a major milestone for my reading challenge, I’ll allow myself to get ONE new book. This doesn’t interfere with my goals of consuming less sugar or saving money because my smaller rewards such as the nights out or TV time, effectively get me to my bigger milestones and better rewards.
By setting up a tiered rewards system, you keep steadily increasing motivation to finish out your goals and reach those rewards, all year long!
Pro Tip: If you chose to track your progress with Goodreads, they show you all sorts of fun statistics at the end of the year! This on it’s own is pretty exciting for me!
Check in an evaluate your reading challenge
Keep your reading challenge flexible and open to change if needed. Set monthly reminders or as often as you need them, to check-in and reevaluate your reading challenge. Don’t be afraid to raise or lower your book count goal accordingly, if you realize the current one just isn’t a good fit. Sometimes I just don’t meet my goal and instead of feeling sad about it, I just scale it down to something more pragmatic. Sometimes I easily surpass the goal, and likewise, I have to scale it accordingly. Remember the main goal of the challenge is to have fun so don’t get hung up on goals and deadlines, and just enjoy reading.
If you made it this far, I have an awesome freebie for you! Sometimes reading slumps are inevitable, but you can pull yourself out of your next reading slump with these surefire tips! Click here to get your FREE Reading Slump Emergency Kit!
What are your reading goals for 2020? Did you make your Bookish New Year’s resolutions yet? Comment below and let me know what you thought of this list and if there’s anything you’d add to it!
Click here to read my 20 Bookish Resolutions for 2020 blog post.
—Payton
20 Bookish Resolutions for 2020
I know around this time of year EVERYONE makes new year’s resolutions, but I can’t stop myself from jumping on the bandwagon and neither can you. There’s something so fun about bookish resolutions and goals and how they take the pressure off writing goals. So without further ado, below are my 20 Bookish Resolutions for 2020. The first few items are specific books I want to read but I promise it’s not just a list of books. I have real resolutions here, people!
1. Read 30 books.
This year, my goal was to read 20 books and I read 23 so I think it’s safe to say I need a little more challenge in my life. However, I don’t want to make it too difficult that I fall into a reading slump—so 30 it is. Check out the books I read in 2020 here.
2. Finish the Lord of The Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien
In the summer of 2019, I started The Lord of The Rings Trilogy and burned through the first two books rather quickly. However, when it came to reading the Return of The King, I’ve gotten sort of stuck in the pages following the battle of the Pelennor Fields. I’d like to finish it early in 2020 to complete the series and officially check it off my list!
3. Read Harry Potter by J. K. Rowling
This is the year. This is it—I can feel it in my bones. I am going to read the whole Harry Potter Series this year. I’ve spent my life avoiding spoilers but this year I am going to read it a joint the wizarding world once and for all! I think I might also watch the movies—you know, for good measure.
4. House of Night Series by P. C. and Kristin Cast
I have all the books and I’ve only read three. I think it’s time to cross this beast of a vampire series off my list as well. I remember enjoying the story but somehow, we got separated and I think it’s time to go back to it. It was particularly special because it’s set in Oklahoma, the state I currently live in, so it hits kind of close to home—in a good way.
5. Angel Fire Series by L. A. Weatherly
I started Angel Burn a while ago but have yet to finish it. The premise was awesome and totally up my alley—angels that have gone rogue, angel hunters, and a condition called angel burn—what’s not to love about that? It’s a new, refreshing take on the overdone angel story and I definitely want to read it in 2020.
6. Starcrossed Series by Josephine Angelini
Wow, can I just start this one off by saying her name is so perfectly fantasy? I mean if she was named that by her parents, then she’s super lucky and unique (what can I say, I love unique names) and she already fits in her genre, but if she came up with that name as a pseudonym, then I think she’s even more genius than we give her credit for.
Also, I would really love to read this series. I started it when it was more like a choose-you-own-adventure game on Figment.com. Yeah, remember that site? The good ole days. Anyways I already know I’ll love it because I’ve read part of it before and I hope to pick it back up in the new year.
7. Grisha Saga by Leigh Bardugo
I have a love hate relationship with this series because 1) I genuinely do love it and 2) I hate that I’ve somehow manage to get all the way through the second book before realizing I was reading it out of order. No wonder I was so confused! Why do I keep doing this? I read the Barney the Bear-Killer series by Pat Sargent out of order in third grade and the Heroes of Olympus by Rick Riordan (mostly in order) in the eighth grade. Even so, I’d still like to read this series because the world building and premise is so beautifully and expertly done.
8. Classics
Good, now that we’ve gotten through the particulars, I’d like to include some odds and ends. I plan to read more classics, starting with the ones I have on my shelf and was supposed to read in high school and college. Professors, don’t come for me, please. Anyway, I think there is a lot to learn from classics and controversial or not, I’d like to read more of them for my own growth as a writer.
9. Sarah J. Maas
I think it’s finally time I jump on the hype train and find out what all the fuss is about when it comes to Sarah J. Maas Novels. I’ve heard of the Throne of Glass Series and the Court of Thorns and Roses series and I just think it’s time to pick them up and give them a read. The covers are so lovely and there’s a badass female protagonist, so what’s not to love?
10. Review more books
If you’ve been around this blog for any period of time, you can tell my book review section on the book blog is severely lacking. In 2020 not only do I want to read more books, but I want to review them as well. I think thinking critically about novels is important to understanding the bigger picture part of them and not getting completely wrapped up in the little parts of the story.
11. Across the Universe by Beth Revis
I reeeeeally really want to read this series. I’ve been admiring it on other bookish people’s shelves for a couple of years now and I think it’s about time I not only picked up the series but read it. The covers are stunning and the premise just gets me every time. I need to read this series now!
12. Killer Unicorns by Diana Peterfrund
Earlier this year, I read Errant by Diana Peterfrund from the Kiss Me Deadly YA Supernatural Romance Collection and I was blown away. Hello? Killer unicorns, badass girls in pants and skirts taking down the toxic men in their lives, and the theme of following your heart and standing up for yourself? These are all things I love in a YA fantasy novel, only I didn’t realize it until I’d read Errant. The story is phenomenal—the world building is so perfectly done, I felt instantly transported to Munich.
13. Join an irl book club
I know there’s a psychology book club at my school but this might be the year I charter and star up the official book club there, or at least join a club if I can find one. I’ve always wanted to be part of a book club and be around like-minded individuals where we can just nerd out about books and reading.
14. Stay up-to-date on bookish current events
This year, I’d like to read more books that were recently published and better yet, 2020 published novels. I’d like to do better job of keeping up with the current bookish trends and reading what everyone else is reading so I can be part of the discussion too!
15. Get another bookshelf
As you can see, where I am lacking in books, I make up for it in dragons. If I am going to complete half of these resolutions, I am going to need another shelf and more books. The question is…where do I put it?
16. Read from a genre I don’t enjoy
Treading carefully around a reading slump, I’ll say this doesn’t exactly entice me, but I know it’s good for something. I’d like to read more from a genre I don’t particularly enjoy to broaden my horizons.
17. Give myself permission to leave a book unfinished
I don’t mean leaving half-read novels lying all over the place, but I think it’s important to know when to put a book down and to know it’s okay to do so. I haven’t put a book down since 2018, when I read Elusion by Claudia Gable and Cheryl Klam. I had to stop reading this book because after months, it just wasn’t pulling me in. I’d made several attempts to get into the story, but I just couldn’t. I don’t blame the authors—I know this is just a fact of the bookish world that we can’t love everything we read. I think this year, I’d like to take that freedom to let books go with me into my reading practice.
18. Read a book to buy a book
Okay, so maybe I got ahead of myself by saying I am going to need more books and another bookshelf because this year I’d like to read more books than I buy. I’d like to make a considerable dent in the bookshelf I currently have as well. I am notorious for having a mile-high TBR List and continuing to buy new books. In 2020, I’d like to set up a rewards system so every time I read a book I can buy a new one.
19. Participate in a reading challenge
I think it would be fun to take part in a reading challenge such as the gargantuan Gilmore Girls Reading Challenge, where you read the 339 books referenced in the early 2000’s TV show, or booktober where you read one spooky book every week throughout October.
20. Develop better reading habits
And last but not least, I’d like to develop a better relationship with reading. I want to get out of the mindset that I can only read when I am in the mood for it and I want to make time to read regularly. I’ve made peace with the fact that that means I might have to let some things go—move over, Netflix. But I genuinely do want to make reading a priority in my life in 2020.
And there you have it! Those are my 20 Bookish Resolutions for 2020. What do you think? Do you have any bookish resolutions for the new year? Comment below and let me know what you thought of my list!
Further Reading
—Payton