Poll: American Readers Read Less Than One Book Per Month On Average

Yes, you read that headline right. According to recently released data from Pew Research, 51% of Americans say they had read “all or part of” 10 or fewer books in the past 12 months. In fact, more people answered that they had read no books in that period (25%) than had read 11 or more books during it (24%).

Of types of books read (a question where multiple answers were allowed), print remains king – and it isn’t particularly close. Even as those reading what I refer to as “dead tree edition” books has dropped since this survey began 15 yrs ago and is now down to less than 2/3 of Americans at 64%, that number is still more than double eBooks (31%) or audiobooks (26%).

Making my own habits certainly among the minority of overall readers. The currently projected 157 books for 2026 would be my lowest throughput since 2018, when I began my book blog, BookAnon.com, halfway into the year, and 100% of my reading is digital in some form. I actively don’t read from dead trees anymore anywhere I can possibly avoid them, even on forms and menus. Not from any environmental concern, I simply prefer the ease, convenience, and portability of screens of various sizes and/ or bluetooth connected devices for audio – and thus I fully embrace that this is a personal preference and don’t judge you (much :D) for preferring dead trees. (If I’m commenting about your choice of amusing yourself via slaughtering forests, it is primarily in jest – I truly don’t actually care and would rather you slaughter thousands of acres of trees so long as you read at all.)

One of the more interesting demographic crosstabs of this survey was actually among who is reading all these dead tree edition books. Specifically, more Zoomers (those currently 18-29 years old) – who we generally associate with all device everything – are actually reading dead trees (66%) than Boomers (those currently 65 years old or older) are (65%)! When it comes to digital books, however, the breakdowns proceed exactly as pretty well anyone would have assumed, with more Zoomers reading more digital books than any other generation, proceeding in order through Boomers having the least numbers of readers reading digital books of either variety.

Similarly, those who graduated college read more than those who attended some college classes who themselves read more than those with only a high school education or less. Again with “common knowledge” among booklandia on gender demographics of readers, more women (78%) than men (71% – a number that will shock some) have read at least part of one or more books in any format in the past 12 months.

And getting back to that base category of “read at least part of one book in the past 12 months”, we may see what may be the biggest shock of all as far as the demographic breakdown of these survey results: Zoomers (78%) read more than any other age group, including Boomers (73%)!

This post was originally posted to my Substack before being crossposted back to this blog and to my Twitter/X Articles.

#BookReview: The End Of The World Is Just The Beginning by Peter Zeihan

A Realist Looks To The Future. I’ve read several books in the last few years covering the general real-world end of the world scenarios and/ or projections for the next few decades, and this text is refreshing in just how grounded and real Zeihan’s approach is. There may in fact be squabbles about a particular point here or there, or even Zeihan’s entire general premise, as the only other review on Goodreads at the time I write this points out, but for me the analysis was close enough to be at least one plausible scenario among many that *could* play out – unlike most others I’ve read in this field. Add in the fact that this isn’t a dry academic look, but instead a somewhat humorous and even crass at times real, straightforward analysis… and you’ve got my attention. Note: If you’re a reader that absolutely WILL NOT tolerate f-bombs, even the occasional one… eh, you’re probably gonna wanna skip this one. 😉 Instead, this reads more like you’re sitting at the bar with a few drinks with an absolute expert in his field, and he is going over a very detailed look at what he thinks is coming over the next 10 – 30 years. As a text, it is thus quite remarkable. The *singular* weakness I found in the text that was star deduction worthy was a complete absence of a bibliography, and the frequent use of footnotes without actually noting even when they were happening was a touch irritating, but not additional star deduction worthy. Very much recommended.

This review of The End Of The World Is Just The Beginning by Peter Zeihan was originally written on July 13, 2022.