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What to Do When You're in a Reading Slump

4 min read
A woman staring out a rainy window in a cosy reading nook, a book resting unread on her lap

A reading slump is when you want to read but can't make yourself do it. The book sits on the nightstand. You pick it up and put it down. You stare at the first paragraph and nothing sticks. It happens to every reader, including prolific ones. It's not a character flaw. It's a sign that something in your reading setup needs adjusting, and the fix is usually simpler than it feels.

First: don't force it

The worst thing you can do in a reading slump is treat it as a discipline problem and try to power through by sheer willpower. Forcing yourself to read a book you're not connecting with at a moment when reading feels hard makes reading feel like punishment. That association lingers. The goal isn't to read today's pages no matter what. The goal is to stay in a relationship with reading. Sometimes that means putting the book down and doing something else, and coming back tomorrow with a lower bar.

Lower the bar dramatically

If your daily goal is thirty pages, drop it to five. Not as a punishment, but as a permission. Five pages is so small it feels almost meaningless, which is exactly the point. You remove the weight of the goal and remind yourself that reading is the thing, not the number. Many readers find that once they start reading without the pressure of a target, they end up reading more than five pages anyway. The bar isn't the obstacle, the decision to start is. Make starting so easy it can't be avoided.

Switch books without guilt

Reading slumps are often just book-specific slumps in disguise. The book you're reading isn't the right book for right now. It might be the right book in three months. Put it down and pick something from your to-be-read list that you're actually excited about, not the one you feel you should read. Dropping a book isn't failure. It's editorial judgment. Your reading time is finite and valuable. A book that isn't holding your attention in a slump is unlikely to start holding it.

Change the format or setting

Sometimes a slump is environmental. The place where you normally read has become associated with distraction, or the format you're using (a heavy hardcover, a bright phone screen at night) is adding friction. Try reading in a different room. Try a different time of day. If you usually read physical books, try an e-reader. If you usually read at night when you're tired, try morning. The book is the same but the context changes, and sometimes that's enough to break the pattern.

Let the streak protect you

If you've built a reading streak before the slump hit, it becomes an ally. Reading five pages to protect a thirty-day streak is a much easier psychological sell than reading five pages because you want to. The streak doesn't care how you feel about the book. It just needs the pages. And if you've already missed a day, Leaf lets you backdate: log yesterday's session today and keep the streak alive. The habit you built before the slump is what carries you through it. Your reading stats will show the slump as a dip, but they'll also show the recovery. And if the slump hits right when you finish a book, Leaf pauses your streak automatically until you're ready to start the next one, so the gap between books never costs you your count.

Switch genres completely

If you have been reading literary fiction and you are in a slump, try a thriller. If you have been reading non-fiction, try a novel. A genre switch works because the slump is often not about reading itself but about the specific kind of reading you have been doing. The brain responds to novelty. A book that feels genuinely different from what you have been reading can re-engage you where a similar title would not. Give yourself full permission to read something you would normally consider a guilty pleasure. Slumps are not the time for ambitious reading projects. They are the time for books you actually want to read.

Try rereading a book you already love

Rereading a favorite book during a slump works because you have removed the uncertainty. You already know the book is good. You already know how it makes you feel. There is no risk of disappointment, no activation energy required to get into an unfamiliar story. Many readers find that a reread during a slump is exactly what reminds them why they love reading in the first place. Pick the book that made you a reader, the one you return to in your memory most often, and read it again. The slump often lifts by chapter three.

Audiobooks as a bridge

Audiobooks count as reading, and they can serve as a bridge when a slump makes holding a book and focusing on a page feel impossible. The listening format requires less visual attention and can reach you when you are tired or distracted in a way that physical reading cannot. Put on an audiobook during a commute, a walk, or while cooking. If it draws you in, you may find yourself reaching for the physical book to continue when the commute is over. Audiobooks are not a lesser form of reading. They are a different access point, and during a slump, access is what matters.

When to give up on a book

There is a specific kind of slump that is really just a book-specific problem in disguise. If you have been reading the same book for two months and dreading every session, the book is the issue. Put it in your dropped shelf in Leaf and move on. Some readers have a rule: if a book has not engaged them by page fifty, it goes. Others give it a hundred pages. Whatever your number, the principle is the same: your reading time is limited, and spending it on a book that is not working is a choice, not an obligation. Books you abandon are not failures. They are books that were not right for you right now.

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Frequently asked questions

How long do reading slumps last?

Most reading slumps last a few days to a few weeks. The ones that drag on are usually caused by continuing to read a book that isn't working rather than switching to something more engaging. Switching books is almost always the fastest way out of a slump.

Is it okay to stop reading a book in the middle?

Yes. Life is too short for books that aren't working for you right now. You can always return to a book later. Dropping a book doesn't mean it's a bad book, it means it's not the right book for this moment. Most readers who give themselves permission to DNF read more overall because they stay engaged.

Why do I suddenly not want to read anymore?

Common causes include reading a book that isn't engaging you, mental fatigue from a stressful period, a reading habit that has become associated with obligation rather than pleasure, or simply a disruption to your normal routine. Usually the fix is adjusting one of these things rather than pushing through.

Should I take a complete break from reading?

Occasionally. If reading has started to feel like a chore, a few days off can reset your relationship with it. But a complete break is rarely necessary. Lowering your goal to the minimum, five pages, even one page, usually accomplishes the same thing while keeping the habit alive.

Is it okay to abandon a book?

Completely. Life is too short for books that are not working right now. Dropping a book does not mean the book is bad or that you failed. It means you made a judgment about your reading time. Most readers who give themselves permission to abandon books report reading more overall, because they stay engaged with books they actually want to read rather than grinding through ones they do not.

Why do reading slumps happen?

Slumps usually have a specific cause: a book that is not holding your attention, mental fatigue from a stressful period, a routine disruption that broke your reading habit, or the natural post-book hangover after finishing something exceptional. Identifying the cause helps you treat it. If it is the book, switch. If it is fatigue, lower the bar. If it is a routine disruption, re-anchor your reading session to a new trigger.