Jolabokaflod

Christmas Book Flood • Reading for Pleasure


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

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.