Delivered: The permission you needed just to let it go….
Hands up if your bedside table is stacked with books you’ve taking months to read?
Trendy winners of highbrow literary awards that you felt shamed into reading by your more cultured colleagues.
Old classics you missed in high school, without knowledge of which you feel robbed of a bunch of cultural references.
Non-fiction epics that, you’re sure, would enrich you with all of the knowledge about guns or steel or freakonomics, if only you could get past the first chapter.
You know you should sit down some rainy Saturday and just finish that book you were given for Christmas. But the truth is: you’re not enjoying it all that much. You keep finding yourself checking your Facebook news feed instead, then re-reading each sentence until you lose your thread in the narrative.
Yep, whether it’s a hangover from the days we had to plow through lengthy tomes for school assignments, or whether we should blame our parents’ lectures about following through on commitments, many of us feel a solemn duty to read every last sentence of a dull book.
We Need to Talk About Kevin author Lionel Shriver has admitted to falling victim to this particular brand of reader guilt: As she writes for The Guardian, the “dumbest childhood vow” she ever made was to finish every book she started.
“Maintained well into adulthood, this policy turned reading the first page of any volume into a miniature death sentence,” she writes. “I imagined my compulsive completion a sign of adult seriousness.”
But here’s the thing: pushing through with a book you’re just not feeling is not helping anyone; it’s not proving anything impressive; it’s taking up time that you could be spending on something that speaks to you; and — if you’re zoning out every third paragraph — it’s probably not even teaching you very much.
“In truth, (my vow to finish every bood) was a vanity – a poorly thought-out and typically adolescent caprice,” Shriver admits.