How I Hacked My ADHD to Read 5-15 Books Every Month

For a long time, I wanted to read more books. Year after year, I would set a reading goal, only to fail miserably.

I have a mild case of ADHD, which makes it very difficult to focus exclusively on a monotonous task for longer than about fifteen minutes (or alternately, makes it difficult to notice anything else when I’m in a state of hyperfocus). Because most novels take around 8-10 hours to read, it was usually my ADHD that made it difficult to finish any of them.

Then on year, I set a resolution to read or DNF (“did not finish”) every novel that has ever won a Hugo or a Nebula award. I knew that it would be difficult, so I went in with a plan. Long story short, the plan worked out amazingly well, and by the end of the year I had read (or DNFed) nearly 150 books.

But I didn’t stop there. After accomplishing the reading goal, I kept up with the same plan, tweaking it here and there until it became the main process by which I read books. And it still works amazingly well, as you can see from my current stats for this year:

  • January: 11 books read, 6 DNFed
  • February: 8 books read, 2 DNFed
  • March: 15 books read, 6 DNFed
  • April: 6 books read, 6 DNFed
  • May: 10 books read, 5 DNFed

So how does it work? Basically, by hacking my ADHD to turn it into an asset instead of a liability. Here is what I do:

1. Read lots of books simultaneously

This is the main principle that drives my reading process. Instead of trying to work against my ADHD and force myself to focus on the same book all the time, I keep a pile of books that I’m currently reading, and cycle through them. Whenever I get bored of my current book, I put it down and allow myself to become distracted with the next book. In this way, even though I’m constantly getting distracted, I’m also constantly reading, since the distractions are just other books.

If you don’t have ADHD, this might sound like it’s a little maddening—and for normal people, it probably is. But one of the nice things I’ve found about ADHD is that it really expands my capacity to hold multiple thoughts or ideas in my head at the same time. Yes, my mind is constantly bouncing around between all of them, but because I have enough room to hold them all, it’s actually not that hard to read, say, a dozen books simultaneously and remember what’s going on in each of them. I just have to make sure that I don’t let too much time slip by between the last time I pick it up.

Which leads to…

2. Keep a spreadsheet to measure daily progress

Because ADHD can really hamper my executive function, I try to simplify and automate as much as I can. For reading, that means tracking my progress on a spreadsheet, so that I don’t need to keep any of that in my head. Instead, when the time comes to restack my currently-reading pile, I just check the spreadsheet and stack them in the order that it tells me.

As an added bonus, seeing the numbers on the spreadsheet go up over time gives me a lot of motivation to keep reading. And when I’m in a place of low motivation, the spreadsheet helps me to pull back and reorder things, putting the short, easy books at the top and pulling the hard, longer books out of what I’m currently reading, to pick up later. Because it’s all tracked, when the time comes to pick up a book again after setting it aside for a few months, the spreadsheet helps me to do that quickly.

3. Have dedicated reading time

Another huge thing that helps with the executive function issue is keeping to a routine that includes some reading time, so that I don’t have to think about reading—I just do it. Personally, I’ve found that the best time for this is at night, shortly after putting the kids to bed. I’ll usually read through about half a dozen books before I become sleepy enough that it’s time to turn off the light.

I’ll admit, I’m not always great about keeping to this routine, but thankfully it’s the sort of thing that you can pick up easily after missing for a couple of days. It also helps that my wife usually likes to read in bed with me at the same time.

4. Start a new book almost every day

The thing I’ve found with ADHD is that it really makes me crave novelty. So whenever I feel like my reading habits are flagging, one thing that usually helps is to pick up a new book and put it on the top of the pile. After reading the first ten or so pages of a new book, that’s usually enough to put me into reading mode, and then I’ll devour the rest of the pile.

5. DNF early and often

Of course, if I’m starting a new book almost every day, that’s a recipe for getting buried in books really quickly! So to counteract that, and give myself room to experience more novelty in my reading life, I don’t force myself to finish every book that I start. In fact, there are some months where it seems I DNF more books than I finish! But that’s okay, because it makes room for the really good books. And honestly, there are so many books in the world that it just doesn’t make sense to spend a lot of time on the mediocre or terrible ones.

So that’s how I do it. How about you? What are some hacks that you’ve found that help to read more books?

By Joe Vasicek

Joe Vasicek is the author of more than twenty science fiction books, including the Star Wanderers and Sons of the Starfarers series. As a young man, he studied Arabic and traveled across the Middle East and the Caucasus. He claims Utah as his home.

1 comment

  1. Well, I don’t have ADHD so I don’t have hacks. But I will say that an Amazon Kindle Unlimited account helps to read a lot of books without paying a lot. And finding enjoyable series to read is a must. My current favorite genres are LitRPG and Mil Sci-fi/Space Opera, and it’s been very easy to find new series to read by simply reading the reviews. If a story is “woke,” someone will have posted a comment 🙂 Goodreads says I’ve read 86 books this year so far, although I’m pretty sure they count an omnibus as only one book, so it’s probably more.

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