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From I Never Finish Books to Bookworm: 3 Real Stories That’ll Change How You Think About Reading

Here’s a stat that might surprise you: According to reading research, roughly 57% of books started never get finished. That’s more than half of every book picked up with good intentions, abandoned somewhere between chapter three and “I’ll get back to it eventually.”

If you’ve ever felt that familiar guilt looking at the half-read books gathering dust on your nightstand, you’re not alone. Not even close.

Maybe you’ve sat quietly at a dinner party while friends discussed the latest bestseller, nodding along while internally panicking. Perhaps you’ve bought books with genuine excitement, only to watch them transform into expensive bookmarks. Or maybe you’ve just accepted the story you’ve been telling yourself for years: “Reading just isn’t for me.”

But what if that story is wrong? What if the problem was never you : it was the format?

Today, we’re sharing three real stories from real people who once said those exact words. And then everything changed.

Meet the Legends: Bek, Tina & Arjun

These aren’t book reviewers. They’re not literary critics or English teachers. They’re regular people with busy lives, limited time, and a history of abandoned books that could fill a small library.

They all shared one thing: the belief that they’d never be “readers.”

Then they discovered novellas : short books under 150 pages : and something clicked.

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Bek’s Story: From Book Club Anxiety to First-Night Finisher

“I always felt left out at book clubs until I smashed my first novella in one night! Now I’m actually excited to read with friends.”

Bek knows the feeling of being the person who never finishes the book club pick. While everyone else discusses plot twists and character arcs, you’re quietly hoping nobody asks your opinion. The internal monologue is brutal: Am I just not smart enough? Do I not care enough? What’s wrong with me?

For years, Bek avoided book clubs entirely. The social anxiety wasn’t worth it. Big 400-page novels felt like homework assignments she was destined to fail.

The turning point? Someone recommended she try a novella : something under 150 pages, designed to be finished in one or two sittings.

She was skeptical. Could a short book really deliver the same satisfaction?

That night, Bek sat down with her first novella. She finished it before bed.

The rush was immediate. That feeling of turning the final page, of completing something : it was almost addictive. Suddenly, she wasn’t a “non-reader.” She was someone who finished books.

Now? Bek shows up to book club having actually read the selection. She has opinions. She’s engaged. She’s confident.

The psychology behind it: Completion creates momentum. Our brains are wired to crave finishing things : it’s called the completion bias. Once Bek experienced that first win, her entire relationship with reading transformed.

Tina’s Story: From Stressed Out to Unstoppable

“Big books used to stress me out, but Short Reads made finishing a book feel easy… and now I can’t stop!”

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For Tina, thick novels weren’t exciting : they were intimidating. Every 500-page bestseller felt like a mountain she’d never climb. And here’s the thing about unfinished books: they don’t just sit there. They judge you.

That stack of abandoned reads becomes a monument to perceived failure. Reading stops being pleasure and starts being pressure.

Tina had essentially given up. She figured she just wasn’t built for building a reading habit.

Then she tried something different: a short, focused novella designed for people who don’t like reading (or think they don’t). No pressure. No marathon commitment. Just a tight, engaging story she could actually finish.

The transformation was immediate.

Without the intimidation factor, Tina could focus on what reading is actually about: the story. The characters. The escape. She finished her first novella and immediately wanted another.

Now she’s on a streak : multiple books finished, confidence building with each one. What changed? Not her intelligence. Not her attention span. Just the format.

The pattern: Small wins create big habits. Tina didn’t need to become a different person. She just needed beginner books that set her up for success rather than failure.

Arjun’s Story: One Win Changed Everything

“Novellas gave me my first win. Now I’m hooked!”

Sometimes, that’s all it takes. One finish line. One moment of “I actually did it.”

Arjun had spent years believing reading for beginners meant something was wrong with him. Real readers devoured massive epics. Real readers had overflowing bookshelves. Real readers didn’t struggle.

His first novella changed that narrative in a single evening.

One win. That’s what separated “reading isn’t for me” from “I’m hooked.”

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The Common Thread: What All Three Discovered

Bek, Tina, and Arjun aren’t special cases. They’re proof of something powerful:

It’s not about intelligence or attention span. It’s about finding the right format for modern life.

Here’s what they all realised:

  • Novellas under 150 pages are achievable : you can actually finish them
  • Completion feels incredible : that “I did it” rush is real
  • Short doesn’t mean shallow : it means focused, tight storytelling
  • Success breeds success : one finished book leads to another
  • The format was the barrier, not them

The real surprise? Once they started finishing books, they couldn’t stop. The confidence snowballed. Reading transformed from a source of shame into a source of joy.

Why This Actually Works: The Psychology

This isn’t just feel-good storytelling. There’s real science behind why easy to read books and novellas work for reluctant readers:

Psychological Principle How It Applies
Completion Bias Our brains CRAVE finishing things : it releases dopamine
Small Wins Theory Success breeds more success; confidence builds momentum
Reduced Cognitive Load Less intimidation = less resistance to starting
Self-Efficacy Achieving goals makes us believe we can achieve more

When you remove the intimidation, you remove the resistance. When you experience completion, you crave more. It’s a positive cycle that transforms books for non readers into gateways to genuine reading habits.

Could This Be You? A Quick Check

You might be the next success story if:

  • ✅ You’ve said “I never finish books” more times than you can count
  • ✅ Book clubs make you anxious (or you avoid them entirely)
  • ✅ Your TBR pile feels like judgment, not excitement
  • ✅ You want to read but feel overwhelmed before you start
  • ✅ You’ve wondered if reading “just isn’t your thing”
  • ✅ Big novels feel like commitments you can’t keep

Sound familiar? You don’t need to change who you are. You just need the right starting point.

Your First Win Is Waiting

Complete Catastrophes: A Miss Coco Cozy Mystery

Bek, Tina, and Arjun aren’t extraordinary. They just found accessible books that worked with their lives instead of against them. Novellas removed the barriers while keeping all the magic : gripping stories, satisfying endings, and the confidence boost of actually finishing.

Ready to find your format? C T Mitchell’s novella series are perfect for getting started:

  • Detective Jack Creed Series : Gritty crime mysteries that hook you from page one (perfect if you loved Arjun’s journey)
  • Lady Margaret Turnbull Series : Charming cozy mysteries with wit and warmth (ideal for book club lovers like Bek)
  • Selena Sharma Series : Psychological thrillers that keep you guessing (for anyone who relates to Tina’s need for engaging books)

Every book is under 150 pages. Every story is designed to be finished. Every ending delivers that completion high you’ve been missing.

Your “first win” is waiting. Give a novella a crack : you might just surprise yourself.

Got your own Short Reads story? We’d love to hear it. Drop a comment or reach out ( because every reader’s journey deserves to be celebrated.)

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13 Easy Books For Non-Readers To Build Their Reading Muscle

Here’s a shocking truth: The average person spends 2.5 hours daily scrolling social media, yet claims they “don’t have time to read.” The real problem? You’ve been trying to bench press 300 pounds when you haven’t even learned to do a push-up.

Reading is like any other muscle, it needs to be built gradually. You wouldn’t walk into a gym and immediately attempt the heaviest weights, so why are you picking up 500-page novels when you haven’t flexed your reading muscle in years?

If you’re among the millions who think “reading just isn’t for me,” you’re about to discover something game-changing. The issue isn’t that you hate reading, it’s that you’ve been choosing the wrong books for your current reading fitness level.

Why These Books Work (And Others Don’t)

Most books for non readers fail because they’re either too long, too dense, or too boring. The books below are different. They’re page turners that respect your time, grab your attention immediately, and, most importantly, you can actually finish them.

The secret? Each book on this list is designed to give you quick wins that build confidence and momentum. Think of them as reading workouts that gradually strengthen your focus, comprehension, and, yes, your genuine enjoyment of books.

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The 13 Books That Build Reading Muscle

1. The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

“Most people see the world as a threatening place, and, because they do, the world turns out, indeed, to be a threatening place.”

Why it builds reading muscle: At just 163 pages, this is the perfect easy book to start with. You can finish it in one or two sittings, and you’ll walk away feeling inspired about life’s possibilities. The simple, clear prose makes it ideal for reading for beginners.

2. The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune

Why it builds reading muscle: This feel-good fantasy proves that engaging books don’t need to be intimidating. It’s warm, funny, and genuinely uplifting, exactly what reluctant readers need to remember why stories matter. The magical elements keep you hooked without being confusing.

3. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie

Why it builds reading muscle: Christie’s masterpiece mystery is the ultimate page turner for people who hate reading. Short chapters, constant suspense, and a plot that moves so fast you won’t want to put it down. Perfect introduction to the mystery genre.

4. Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed

“Most things will be okay eventually, but not everything will be. Sometimes you’ll put up a good fight and lose.”

Why it builds reading muscle: This collection of essays is perfect for short attention span reading. You can read one piece at a time, making it ideal for dip-in dip-out reading. Strayed’s honest, compassionate advice about life’s challenges will keep you coming back.

5. Post Office by Charles Bukowski

“Food is good for the nerves and the spirit. Courage comes from the belly – all else is desperation.”

Why it builds reading muscle: If polished, traditional writing puts you to sleep, Bukowski’s raw honesty will wake you up. His unfiltered take on ordinary life as a postal worker is both hilarious and brutally real, perfect for readers who think books are “too proper.”

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6. The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman

Why it builds reading muscle: This cozy mystery about retirement home residents solving cold cases is entertaining without being stressful. Short chapters, lovable characters, and just enough mystery to keep you guessing. Ideal for building your reading habit with pure enjoyment.

7. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson

“Every now and then when your life gets complicated and the weasels start closing in, the only cure is to load up on heinous chemicals and then drive like a bastard from Hollywood to Las Vegas.”

Why it builds reading muscle: Thompson’s wild, debaucherous adventure reads like the most insane road trip story ever told. The raw energy and bizarre situations will keep you glued to the page, perfect for readers who find traditional literature boring.

8. When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi

“Science may provide the most useful way to organize empirical, reproducible data, but its power to do so is predicated on its inability to grasp the most central aspects of human life: hope, fear, love, hate, beauty, envy, honor, weakness, striving, suffering, virtue.”

Why it builds reading muscle: This memoir by a neurosurgeon facing terminal cancer is both heartbreaking and inspiring. Despite the heavy subject matter, it reads quickly and will change how you think about life and mortality.

9. Green Hills of Africa by Ernest Hemingway

“We have very primitive emotions. It’s impossible not to be competitive. Spoils everything, though.”

Why it builds reading muscle: Hemingway’s hunting memoir in East Africa showcases his famously clean, accessible prose. No complicated language or dense descriptions, just clear storytelling that puts you right in the African wilderness.

10. Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman! by Richard Feynman and Ralph Leighton

“There were a lot of fools at that conference, pompous fools, and pompous fools drive me up the wall.”

Why it builds reading muscle: A Nobel Prize-winning physicist who writes like he’s your funniest friend? Feynman’s entertaining tales of curiosity and discovery prove that accessible books can be both smart and incredibly fun to read.

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11. Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan

“Being out in big surf is dreamlike. Terror and ecstasy ebb and flow around the edges of things, each threatening to overwhelm the dreamer.”

Why it builds reading muscle: Even if you’ve never surfed, Finnegan’s beautifully written memoir about chasing waves around the world is mesmerizing. His vivid descriptions and philosophical insights make this a perfect bridge to more literary writing.

12. 11/22/63 by Stephen King

“Life turns on a dime. Sometimes towards us, but more often it spins away, flirting and flashing as it goes: so long, honey, it was good while it lasted, wasn’t it?”

Why it builds reading muscle: Yes, it’s longer, but this time-travel story about preventing JFK’s assassination is so gripping you won’t notice the pages flying by. King’s masterful storytelling will have you reading “just one more chapter” until 3 AM.

13. Beneath a Scarlet Sky by Mark Sullivan

“Do what I sometimes do when I get scared: imagine you’re someone else, someone who’s far braver and smarter.”

Why it builds reading muscle: This WWII story about an Italian teenager saving lives during Nazi occupation reads like the most incredible action movie ever made. Despite its length, it’s a true page turner that builds serious reading endurance.

The Real Secret: Short Reads Build Reading Muscle Faster

Here’s what traditional reading advice gets wrong: they tell you to start with “classics” or “important literature.” That’s like telling someone to deadlift 400 pounds on their first day at the gym.

The fastest way to build genuine reading muscle is through short wins. When you complete a book: any book: your brain releases dopamine and builds positive associations with reading. Each completed book strengthens your confidence, focus, and hunger for the next story.

The psychology is simple: Finished books create momentum. Unfinished books create guilt and reinforce the “I’m not a reader” identity.

This is why novellas under 150 pages are the secret weapon for building reading muscle. They give you:

  • Complete story satisfaction in just a few reading sessions
  • Immediate sense of accomplishment that motivates continued reading
  • Confidence boost that you CAN finish books
  • Momentum to tackle slightly longer books
  • Reading habit formation through frequent completion rewards

Complete Catastrophes: A Miss Coco Cozy Mystery

Your Next Step: C T Mitchell’s Reading Muscle Builders

Once you’ve conquered a few books from the list above, you’re ready for the next level of reading muscle building. C T Mitchell’s series are perfectly designed for new readers who want to maintain their momentum:

Detective Jack Creed Series: Fast-paced crime mysteries that hook you immediately and deliver satisfying conclusions in under 150 pages. Each book builds your mystery reading muscle while keeping you thoroughly entertained.

Lady Margaret Turnbull Series: Cozy mysteries that feel like visiting with a clever friend. Perfect for readers who want intrigue without violence, wrapped up in bite-sized, completely satisfying stories.

Selena Sharma Series: Psychological thrillers that prove short books can deliver serious suspense. These novellas build your tolerance for tension while rewarding you with quick, complete resolutions.

Each series proves that short read books aren’t inferior to longer novels: they’re precision-engineered reading experiences that respect your time while building genuine reading muscle.

Ready to start building your reading muscle? Pick one book from this list that sounds most interesting to you. Read it. Finish it. Feel that satisfaction of completing a story. Then pick another.

Before you know it, you’ll have built serious reading muscle: and discovered that you actually love books. You just needed the right training program.

Start your reading muscle journey today at The Short Reads and discover why thousands of former non-readers are now devouring books faster than ever.

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Books for Non-Readers: 10 Short Stories That Will Turn You Into a Confident Reader in 30 Days

Books for Non-Readers produced a statistic that might surprise you: 67% of adults haven’t finished a book in the past year. But here’s what’s even more surprising: it’s not because they don’t want to read. It’s because they’ve convinced themselves they’re “not readers.”

If you’ve ever felt intimidated by thick novels, guilty about unfinished books gathering dust on your shelf, or embarrassed to admit you “don’t really read,” you’re about to discover something that changes everything. You’re not broken. You just haven’t found the right approach.

The secret weapon? Short stories under 150 pages that give you complete, satisfying reading experiences in bite-sized portions. And I’m about to show you exactly how 10 carefully selected novellas can transform you from someone who “doesn’t read” into a confident reader in just 30 days.

Why Most People Struggle to Build a Reading Habit (And It’s Not What You Think)

You might think non-readers struggle because they don’t have time or they’re not smart enough. The real culprit is something psychologists call “learned helplessness”: the belief that you’re simply “not a reader” based on past failed attempts with 400-page novels.

Here’s what typically happens:

  • You pick up a popular 300+ page book
  • You read 50-100 pages and lose momentum
  • You abandon the book and feel like a failure
  • You conclude you’re “not cut out for reading”

But what if the problem isn’t you: it’s the book length?

Short stories and novellas solve this by providing what researchers call “mastery experiences”: complete successes that build confidence and create positive associations with reading. When you finish a compelling 100-page story, your brain registers it as a win, not a failure.

The 30-Day Reading Confidence Challenge: Your Roadmap to Success

This isn’t about speed reading or cramming. This is about building genuine confidence through achievable wins. Over 30 days, you’ll read 10 short books that gradually build your reading stamina while keeping you engaged with compelling mysteries, thrillers, and cozy stories.

The psychology behind why this works:

  • Week 1: Prove to yourself you can finish books
  • Week 2: Build momentum and develop a routine
  • Week 3: Tackle slightly longer stories with confidence
  • Week 4: Solidify your identity as “someone who reads”

Let’s dive into your 10-book reading journey, carefully curated from C.T. Mitchell’s collection of page-turning novellas.

Your 10-Book Transformation Journey

Week 1: Building Confidence (Books 1-3)

Complete Catastrophes: A Miss Coco Cozy Mystery

Book 1: Complete Catastrophes: A Miss Coco Cozy Mystery
Start with something light and fun. These cozy mysteries are designed to be quick, enjoyable reads that ease you into the reading habit. The cheerful covers and engaging characters make this perfect for building positive associations with reading.

Book 2: Murder and the Mechanic
A charming cozy mystery that proves reading doesn’t have to be intimidating. At under 100 pages, you’ll finish this in one or two sittings, giving you that crucial first “I finished a book!” moment.

Breaking Point Thriller

Book 3: Breaking Point
Your first thriller: short enough to finish quickly but engaging enough to keep you turning pages. This builds your confidence that you can handle different genres and more intense storylines.

Week 2: Building Momentum (Books 4-6)

Dead Shot Detective Jack Creed

Book 4: Dead Shot (Detective Jack Creed #1) – FREE
Enter the world of Detective Jack Creed with this fast-paced mystery. Perfect length for building stamina while introducing you to series reading: something that will serve you well as you continue your reading journey.

Book 5: Murder and the Jewelry Box
Another cozy mystery that maintains your momentum while exploring different storytelling styles. You’re proving to yourself that you can consistently finish books.

Book 6: Dead Ringer (Detective Jack Creed #2)
Continue the Jack Creed series and experience the satisfaction of following character development across multiple books: a sign you’re becoming a “real reader.”

Week 3: Growing Confidence (Books 7-8)

Detective Jack Creed Box Set

Book 7: Dead Wrong (Detective Jack Creed #3)
By now, you’re comfortable with mystery series and ready for slightly more complex plots. This book challenges you just enough to build confidence without overwhelming you.

Book 8: Deadly Vows
Explore the cozy mystery subgenre with this engaging story. You’re no longer just “trying to read”: you’re actively choosing books you want to read.

Week 4: Solidifying Your Reader Identity (Books 9-10)

The President's Men

Book 9: The President’s Men (Jack Creed New York Series)
A slightly longer novella that proves you can handle more substantial stories. The New York setting adds sophistication to your reading repertoire.

 

Book 10: Murder and the Monk
End your challenge with this satisfying cozy mystery. By finishing this book, you’ll have read 10 complete stories in 30 days: something you might not have imagined possible when you started.

Your Week-by-Week Action Plan

Week 1: Foundation Building

  • Read 15-20 minutes daily
  • Focus on completing books, not speed
  • Celebrate each finished book (seriously: do a little victory dance!)

Week 2: Routine Development

  • Increase to 20-25 minutes daily
  • Start noting what genres you prefer
  • Join online reading communities for motivation

Week 3: Confidence Expansion

  • Try reading in different locations
  • Discuss books with friends or family
  • Consider keeping a simple reading journal

Week 4: Identity Solidification

  • Aim for 25-30 minutes daily
  • Plan your next reading goals
  • Realize you’ve become someone who reads regularly

What You’ll Gain Beyond Just Reading 10 Books

After 30 days, you won’t just have 10 books under your belt. You’ll have completely transformed your relationship with reading:

  • Increased attention span: Short books gradually build your focus
  • Genre awareness: You’ll know what you like (mysteries? thrillers? cozy stories?)
  • Reading confidence: No more intimidation in bookstores or libraries
  • Social benefits: You can participate in book conversations
  • Mental stimulation: Regular reading exercises your brain
  • Stress relief: Reading becomes your go-to relaxation activity

Most importantly, you’ll stop saying “I don’t read” and start saying “I’m working through a great mystery series.”

Your Reading Journey Starts Today

The difference between someone who “doesn’t read” and someone who “loves reading” isn’t talent or intelligence: it’s simply a series of successful reading experiences that build confidence and momentum.

These 10 C.T. Mitchell novellas are specifically chosen because they’re:

  • Short enough to finish quickly (under 150 pages each)
  • Engaging enough to keep you turning pages
  • Varied enough to help you discover your preferences
  • Complete stories that provide satisfaction

Don’t wait for the “perfect time” to start reading. Don’t worry about being a “slow reader” or not understanding everything. The only requirement is starting with one short book and finishing it.

Your transformation from non-reader to confident reader begins with turning the first page of Complete Catastrophes. In 30 days, you’ll look back amazed at how far you’ve come.

Ready to prove to yourself that you absolutely can be a reader? Start your 30-day challenge today with The Short Reads and discover the reader you’ve always been capable of becoming.

Your reading muscle is stronger than you think. You just need to start flexing it.

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