Plus: Our book tips | Tuesday, March 22, 2022
| | | Presented By Emergent BioSolutions | | Axios Finish Line | By Mike Allen, Erica Pandey and Jim VandeHei ·Mar 22, 2022 | Mar 22, 2022 | Welcome back. Thanks for your smart suggestions on what to demystify next. We'll dig into blockchain, NFTs, the metaverse and more in coming weeks. 📬 Join the conversation at FinishLine@axios.com with your candor, questions and ideas. - Smart Brevity™ count: 475 words ... 1½ mins.
| | | 1 big thing: COVID revives reading | | | Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios | | Most of us were reading less — until 2020, Erica Pandey writes: - The average American read 20 minutes a day in 2020, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' American Time Use Survey. That's up 21% from 2019, and the most since the early 2000s.
Why it matters: The decline of reading — especially among teens — alarms scholars. But reading's pandemic-era renaissance offers us hope. Case in point: I set a goal this year to read a book a week. - I was an English major in college, but have barely picked up a book since graduation.
- We're in the 12th week of the year, and I've only finished 8 books. But I've learned a lot.
Five reading tips: - Just stop: There are too many awesome books out there for you to soldier on through one that's not delighting or helping you. Quit the second you have had your fill.
- Make it a habit: Build books into your daily routine, so you're reading when you wake up ... or commute ... or at bedtime.
- Track yourself: I use the app Reading List to keep track of my progress, and what I'm reading next.
- Digital detox: Keep your phone out of reach when you read to eliminate temptation.
- Family time: If you have kids, read to them. If you live with a roommate or a partner, read together.
I've been reading a mix of fiction and long-form journalism. Send your book picks to FinishLine@axios.com — including your favorite short one — so I can catch up to my goal. | | | | A message from Emergent BioSolutions | We Go to create a world that's prepared and protected | | | | Emergent maintains a critical role in the ongoing opioid crisis. We're developing emergency rescue medications that can help reverse an opioid overdose. It's just one of the ways we defend people from things we hope will never happen. Learn more about Emergent's protections. | | | 📚 Future of books | Speaking of short books ... Jim, Mike and Axios co-founder Roy Schwartz are writing a book on how to write, speak and conduct meetings in Smart Brevity. The title: "Smart Brevity." (You saw that coming!) - That's the style you see in this and all Axios emails.
Why it matters: Publishers tell us their data shows people are skimming most books or reading fewer pages. So they should be delighted with our < 90-minute read. Shameless plug: pre-order here. - Fun fact: Jim wrote most of the book on his iPhone 11.
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