The real problem isn't speed, it's time
Most people who say they want to read more aren't lacking speed. They're lacking protected time. Reading gets squeezed out by things that feel more urgent: email, scrolling, television. The solution isn't to read each page faster, it's to make reading the thing that happens in a specific window of your day, consistently, before something else displaces it. The readers who finish the most books aren't fast readers. They're consistent ones.
Reduce the friction of starting
The single highest-leverage change most readers can make is reducing the gap between "I could read now" and "I am reading now." If your book is in another room, charging, or buried under a pile, you will read less. Keep a physical book where you spend time. Keep the app open on your phone. The goal is to make starting so easy that there's no decision to make. You don't decide to read. You just do it because it's already there.
Use the gaps you already have
Ten minutes in a waiting room. Fifteen minutes before a meeting. The twenty minutes before you fall asleep. These windows already exist in your day. Most people fill them with their phone. A reader fills them with a book. Twenty minutes a day at an average reading pace gets you through roughly a book a month. You don't need a dedicated reading hour. You need to make different choices about the small pockets of time you already have. A daily page goal as low as ten pages is enough.
Keep your TBR list honest
One underrated reason people read slowly is that they're reading books they don't actually want to read. A long-overdue classic, a gift from someone whose opinion they respect, a book they feel they should read rather than want to. Reading slows to a crawl when it becomes obligation. Your to-be-read list should be full of books you're genuinely excited about. When you finish a book, the next one should be something you're looking forward to, not something you're dreading. Enthusiasm is the most underrated reading accelerator.
Track what you read
Tracking your reading does something subtle but important: it makes progress visible. When you can see your reading stats for the week, how many books you've finished this year, and how your reading streak has built up, the habit gains weight. It becomes a record worth protecting. Many readers report that the simple act of logging pages, which takes ten seconds, is what keeps them returning to the book each day. The log creates a small ritual around reading. The ritual reinforces the habit.
Give yourself permission to abandon books
One of the most underrated strategies for reading more books is finishing fewer of them. That sounds backwards, but it works because it eliminates the hidden cost of obligation reading. When you feel duty-bound to finish a book you are not enjoying, that book consumes your reading slots without delivering the enjoyment that makes reading sustainable. Dropping a book is not failure. It is curation. Mark it as dropped in Leaf, move on, and use that slot for something you actually want to read. Readers who give themselves this permission consistently read more books over the long run because they stay engaged rather than grinding through books that are not working.
Always have your next book ready
The gap between finishing one book and starting the next is where reading momentum often dies. You finish something satisfying on a Tuesday night and think "I'll figure out what to read next tomorrow." A week later you still haven't started anything. The solution is to always have your next book decided before you finish your current one. Keep your to-be-read list active in Leaf. When you are within fifty pages of finishing a book, pick the next one. Have it downloaded, on your nightstand, or already open on your phone. The transition from one book to the next should take minutes, not days.
How tracking changes your relationship with reading
Something subtle happens when you start tracking your reading. You stop thinking of reading as something that either happened or did not happen today and start thinking of it as a measurable practice. The ten pages you read on the train become a data point. The streak you have been building becomes a record. Your reading stats at the end of the year become evidence. Tracking does not make you read more by itself, but it makes the reading you do visible in a way that motivates consistency. You are no longer just a person who reads. You are a reader with a record.
