Jolabokaflod

Christmas Book Flood • Reading for Pleasure

DAY 9 — Slow Down, You’re Reading Too Fast

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Jolabokaflod Advent Calendar 2025

Somewhere along the way, many of us learned to read as if we were rushing through an airport.

Eyes scanning. Pages turning quickly. A quiet pressure to keep moving, to finish, to extract something useful before the next demand arrives. Even our reading — the very thing meant to slow us down — has learned to hurry.

Winter invites us to do the opposite.

I noticed this one December evening when I realised I had read several chapters without truly being in them. The words were familiar. The story was fine. But my attention was already halfway elsewhere. So I stopped. I went back a page. And this time, I read as if I had nowhere else to be.

The difference was immediate.

Sentences stretched. Images sharpened. Silence gathered between paragraphs. The book had not changed — my pace had.

Slow reading is not about difficulty or effort. It is about permission. Permission to linger on a line. To reread a paragraph because it felt good rather than because it was confusing. To let language work on you gently, instead of trying to work through it.

In a culture obsessed with speed, slow reading becomes a quiet act of resistance.

It says: I am allowed to take my time.
It says: This moment does not need to perform.
It says: Reading is not a race.

Today, on Day 9 of our Jolabokaflod Advent Calendar, I invite you to experiment. Choose a book that welcomes slowness. Read fewer pages than usual — but notice more. Let the rhythm of the words set the pace rather than your habit.

Today’s Reading Picks — “Slow Reading Essentials”

Books that reward patience, attention, and gentle presence:

These are not books to rush through. They are books to keep company with.

You can explore the full Advent Calendar titles here:
👉 Visit the “Advent Calendar” collection on Bookshop.org

And if you’d like to stay in this slower rhythm:
👉 Visit the Reading-for-Pleasure Starter Shelf

Tonight, try reading less.
But notice more.
And let slowness return reading to what it was always meant to be: a place to rest.

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Author: Christopher Norris

Media, publishing and social entrepreneur

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