The Joy of Reading Books
There’s something timeless about sitting down with a good book. Whether you prefer the smell of worn paperback pages or the convenience of a digital reader, books have a unique power to transport us to other worlds, expand our thinking, and help us understand ourselves a little better.
Why Reading Matters
In a world of endless scrolling and short-form content, books offer something increasingly rare: depth. A great book asks you to slow down, to sit with ideas, and to follow a thread of thought further than a tweet or article ever could.
Regular readers tend to have stronger vocabularies, better focus, and higher levels of empathy — simply from the habit of inhabiting other perspectives through story.
Finding Your Reading Style
Not everyone reads the same way, and that’s perfectly fine. Some people devour a book in a single weekend; others read fifteen minutes before bed every night. Some keep meticulous notes; others just let stories wash over them.
The only rule is this: read in whatever way keeps you reading.
Where to Start
If you’ve fallen out of the habit, don’t start with the book you feel like you should read. Start with the one you actually want to read. A gripping thriller, a celebrity memoir, a cosy fantasy — it all counts.
Great books have a way of leading you to more great books. Trust the process.
A Few Recommendations to Get You Going
Short reads: Any short story collection by Roald Dahl
Fiction: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
Non-fiction: Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari
Classic: To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee