I seem to be well out of the reading slump that plagued me last fall, trucking right along, powering through book after book. Once again, I can read on the bus, and in bed, and on the couch while "The Crown" murmurs in the background. (OK, that's a lie. I always give "The Crown" my full attention.)
But for a while it was a long dry spell.
These slumps hit us all from time to time, and it was helpful to ask how you all get through those days and weeks when nothing seems worth reading.
Bart Berlin wrote from Arizona, noting that after he retired he went almost a year without reading any books. This was unusual for him. "I forced myself to restart mainly by blocking out time," he wrote. "I had also visited a friend who was using his retirement to reread his extensive library. My mentor in keeping retirement from being brain-drained!"
Reader Valaire Riese of Chanhassen finds reading slumps annoying. She waits them out by immersing herself in Scrabble, solitaire or jigsaw puzzles. "I am always disheartened when these slumps occur because there are so many books I want to read and not nearly enough time each day to do so," she said.
Reader Suzy Hilliard had a whole bunch of solutions, all good ones. Let's bullet-point them:
• Read with a buddy. "I have a friend with whom I occasionally do a buddy read and then we talk about our thoughts," she wrote. "Sort of an ad hoc book club of two."
• Podcasts. "My favorites that could provide motivation to read specific books are: Slate Culture Gabfest, Slate Audio Book Club (even if the hosts' voices drive me crazy!), the New Yorker's 'The Writer's Voice' — something new they are doing where the authors of each week's short stories read their work, BBC: World Book Club, and Radiolab," she wrote.