How to Read More -- and Some Favorite Books From My Home Library
Please join me in putting down your phone, and starting to read again!

Like everyone else, these days I spend too much time doom-scrolling on my phone, and too little time reading actual books.
But I’ve been inspired by our teenaged sons - who are suddenly putting down their phones and reading long books about history and politics — to change my ways, and to get back to my first love: reading.
I’m guessing that you might feel the same way. So, in case it inspires you, I thought I’d share these favorite books from my home library, plus some suggestions for disconnecting from your phone, and reading more.
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First, some fave books:
Sacred Therapy: Jewish Spiritual Teachings on Emotional Healing and Inner Wholeness, by Estelle Frankel: This book is so full of wisdom and insight. I pulled down my copy just now and it’s filled with underlines and margin notes. Frankel draws on tales and teachings from the Bible, the Talmud, Kabbalah, and Hasidic tradition to offer insights on healing broken hearts, and living life as a sacred narrative.
The Power of Myth, by Joseph Campbell: I discovered Campbell’s work during that great transitional period of my life (in my early 30s, when I left the wrong career and the wrong relationship, and set sail into the unknown) and it has been a mainstay ever since. This book (as with most of Campbell’s work) is an exploration of how the world’s myths — ancient and modern — reveal the shared patterns of the human experience. Drawn from a series of conversations with journalist Bill Moyers, it shows how stories from diverse cultures illuminate universal themes such as the hero’s journey, the search for meaning, the tension between individual destiny and social roles, and the encounter with the sacred.

Gone: A Girl, A Violin, a Life Unstrung, by Min Kym: This is one of the most extraordinary memoirs I’ve ever read. World-class violinist Min Kym recounts the bond she formed at seventeen with a Stradivarius violin that became, for her, something like a lover, a child, a twin. These were not just fanciful metaphors: Min happily lived in a tiny apartment so she could pour all her financial resources into maintaining her instrument. But when her violin was stolen one day, her world collapsed. She stopped playing for years, fell into a deep depression. Eventually, though, she began to emerge — full of insights on loss and rebirth — and she wrote this magisterial book. When I first read the manuscript — which was sent to me by our shared editor — I stayed up all night to finish reading. I think you will, too.

And, here are a few suggestions of how to disconnect from your phone and read more:
*As with all habits you want to encourage, make them easy and inviting. Turn reading into a beloved ritual, with a “clean and well-lighted place”: your favorite armchair, a cozy lamp, a special reading snack or cup of coffee.
*Again, as with all habits you want to encourage, start small: fifteen minutes a day is fine, and so is ten minutes. So is five. Any amount of minutes is better than zero minutes!
As always, I’d love to hear from you:
*I’d be curious to know which one(s) of these books, if any, appeal to you.
*And, would you please share some favorite reads of your own?
*Do you think that our boys’ recently rekindled interest in book-reading is part of a wider trend, or a quirk of our family? I suspect the former, but am curious about your experiences.



I am currently about halfway through "Theo of Golden" by Allen Levi. I cannot remember a book I have been so enthralled by as I am by this one. It's also got a "Susan Cain vibe" to it, which is a very good thing. Highly recommend it as a totally uplifting, humanity-endorsing experience.
I come from a family of readers; my dad would stand in the pantry and read the back of soup cans and cereal boxes if he didn't have a book. I can still vividly remember the moment in my childhood when letters turned into words and getting my very own library card. It's like breathing, I don't know how to NOT do it. There have certainly been times when I didn't read very much (when my twins were infants I managed one - only one! - book that year) but I certainly didn't like it! That said, phone scrolling is very easy to fall into! I've put parental locks and timers on my social media apps and that has helped immensely with not only giving time to reading but to my other hobbies as well. My cousin tagged me in a Facebook post of "share your 12 favorite books" and since it was impossible to only post 12, I just kept going. I ended up posting one book a day for just over 3 years, there were themed weeks and everything. It was a good diversion during the pandemic and beyond! Obviously too many favorites to list here, but Joseph Campbell certainly was a great influence, which led me to Clarissa Pinkola Estes and Thomas Moore. Recent faves are anything & everything by Fredrik Backman, Four Letters of Love by Niall Williams, A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles, Circe by Madeline Miller & Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders (recommend the audio book for this one to keep track of the many characters easier!). Magazines, newspapers, graphic novels, audio books, soup cans -- it all counts!