musings, thoughts, and writings of Barbara W. Klaser


January 3, 2005

Who reads?

According to a July 2004 article in the “News Room” of the National Endowment for the Arts, Fewer Than Half of American Adults Now Read Literature. The article cites statistics from Reading At Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America. This 60-page report was created using data collected from a sample of 17,000 adults by the U.S. Bureau of the Census in 2002, at the request of the National Endowment for the Arts. Much of the blame for the documented decrease in the quantity of our literary reading over the past 20 years is placed on television and lower levels of education. The report defines literary reading as novels or short stories, plays, and poetry, and it makes no distinction as to the quality of the literary works.

Three points in the Reading At Risk report worry me most, as a writer hoping to sell my work:

    1) The 10% decline in literary reading means there are 20 million less potential readers.

    2) Only the growth in total U.S. population of nearly 40 million adults between 1982 and 2002 has kept the number of literary readers flat at 96 million, while the percentage of the U.S. population reading any books decreased by -7% over the last decade of the study (1992-2002).

    3) The rate in decline of literary reading is accelerating.

Curiously, at the same time there’s been a decline in literary reading, America has seen an increase in the number of creative writers by some 30% between 1982 and 2002. Could it be that as we write more we read less? How can we improve as writers if we don’t read?

The greatest increase I experienced in my reading time was when I had a long commute and rode in a vanpool. On nearly every work day, during those five-and-a-half years, I spent at least one additional hour reading, during my ride home. The greatest decrease in my reading time came about when I gained Internet access at home. Granted, much of my time online is spent reading, but it’s not typically literary reading.

As a side issue, I’ve noticed a greater need to sift through online material to get to the quality of reading material I can find in print, and that is sadly not saying much, because the quality of printed material has declined, sending many booksellers, in the U.K. at least, to the backlist.

Do we fit our reading in only where it’s convenient, these days, and have far too much other input to claim our attention? Perhaps television, computers, longer work hours and other increased demands on our time are helping to create a less literary culture. I’m now determined to take a closer look at the amount of time I spend reading literature, and to choose more carefully what I read.

— Barbara @ rudimentary 3:19 pm PST, 01/03/05

Write a comment | Comments RSS | Permalink | TrackBack URI

4 Comments

  1. cassie-b says:

    I read a lot. And on my 20 minute commute to and from work each day, I listen to books on tape. It’s a shame that so many people don’t find time to read. It adds so much to my life.

  2. eliot says:

    I can’t see how that statistic is accurate. Amazon and Barnes & Noble are expanding and selling more books than ever before. Most B&N stores have a huge novel section. They don’t do that just because there are a lot of novels-they do it because novels sell.

    Now, the decline of reading of quality literature….that’s a whole different story.

  3. Barbara says:

    You may be right. It would take some research to determine the total population growth compared with the total books sales during those years, but that might be more accurate than the cited study, which depended on anecdotal information from individuals about how much they read. But then I’m not a statistician.

  4. Margaret says:

    Well, the bookstores are certainly crowded, but maybe people are just there to look or have coffee. I love to read and mystery is my very favorite genre!

Leave a comment

All comments are subject to editing and or arbitrary deletion. There has been spammy abuse of the name and weblog fields. Leaving the name field blank results in "Anonymous".

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>


Recent Comments

Recently Commented Articles

Bookmarks

Blogs

  • An Englishman in New Jersey
  • Beyond the Fields We Know
  • Blog Trek
  • Cassie-B
  • Clear Lake Reflections
  • Conscious Junkyard
  • Down the Writers Path
  • Eric Mayer
  • Goddessing
  • Grapez
  • Greetings from Blogdog
  • Herbal Connection
  • how to save the world
  • Jana’s Journal & Sketchblog
  • Kingfisher Cove
  • Paula’s House of Toast
  • Reenie’s Reach
  • Sarah
  • Spinning
  • violetismycolor
  • Wall Street, Main Street and Me
  • Zen Knit

Resources for Readers

  • Authors’ Blogs
  • Best Author Blogs
  • Blogging Authors
  • Book Talk Radio
  • Bookslut
  • Campaign for the American Reader
  • Cozy Library
  • Cozy Mystery List
  • First Book
  • Goodreads.com
  • Mary Reed & Eric Mayer

Resources for Writers

  • A Writer’s Edge
  • Agent Query
  • Authonomy
  • Blog Your Book to the Top
  • Book Chat with Janet Boyer
  • Mary Gordon: The Art of Teaching and Writing
  • Preditors and Editors
  • The Book Deal, An Inside View of Publishing

Sites of Interest

  • Astronomy Picture of the Day
  • InkPot
  • Janet Boyer.com
  • Post Secret
  • The Art Shack Studio

WordPress Plugins

  • Arne Brachhold
  • Jerome Lavigne
  • Peter Harkins
  • Scott Buchanan
  • Theron Parlin
  • Alexking.org
  • Bad Behavior
  • Better Feed
  • boren.nu
  • Bread Crumb Trail Generator
  • ChaitGear
  • Contact Form
  • Customizable Posts
  • Edit Comments
  • ElasticDog
  • Elliot Back
  • GaMerZ
  • guff
  • hitormiss
  • Jixor.com
  • Live Comment Preview
  • Paged Comment Editing
  • Paged Comments
  • Photo Matt
  • Recent Comments
  • Related Posts
  • Roblog
  • Simple Thoughts
  • Spam Karma 2
  • Weblog Tools Collection
  • WordPress Plugin Database
  • WordPress Plugins
Spam Karma 2
Rediscover the Web

View XML RSS 2.0 feed
Technorati Cosmos





  1. https://www.posmn.com/
  2. https://horseswithouthumans.org/
  3. https://mysterynovelist.com/
  4. https://www.alianzademediosalternativos.org/
  5. https://hemophiliasc.org/
  6. https://rebuildingtogether-oaklandcounty.org/
  7. https://www.albertanthonyrealestate.com/
  8. https://www.thewildestjourney.com/
  9. https://www.doumouchtsis.com/
  10. https://www.phocaltherapy.com/
  11. https://liviacstein.com/
  12. https://joharasnakedance.com/
  13. https://www.125timeinharlem.org/
  14. https://savingdowns.org/
  15. https://drpcjaipur.org/
  1. HOME