“[O]nce a day, at least, I wonder what my life would be like if I smashed my phone into bits and never contacted AppleCare,” writes Jay Caspian Kang in his latest New Yorker column. Tellingly, he doesn’t wish for a specific intellectual glow-up in this hypothetical, just the sense of possibility. And he’s not alone. The cozy armchair, the writing desk, the law-library lamp casting a warm light over your longhand-written journal—all are part of the fantasy of a rich, phone-free life. But what if we’re getting as much, or more, from our prolific “online” reading as we would from the TBR pile of our dreams?

Counterintuitively, there has never been a time in history when people have spent more time reading words, even if it’s just text messages on their phones. We can agree that most of this reading is less edifying than books are, but I do wonder if the downturn in book reading, and its relationship to our online habits, might be more complicated than we are inclined to conclude. It is, for instance, much easier to find information now—information we might once have looked for in books, say, and also information about the books we might consider reading. Maybe, in the age of the internet, many of us, as informed readers, only want to read one book, tailored very specifically to our interests, every couple of years.

More picks about reading

Reading Behind Bars, and Beyond Barriers

Jackie Snow | Los Angeles Review of Books | April 29, 2025 | 2,952 words

“Jackie Snow reflects on what working for a books-to-prisons nonprofit has taught her about reading.”

Murderbot, She Wrote

Meghan Herbst | Wired | November 26, 2024 | 4,124 words

“Martha Wells created one of the most iconic characters in 21st-century science fiction: Murderbot, reluctant savior of humanity. Then she faced an existential threat of her own.”