u/k_lo970

Article: How audiobooks can help with burnout
▲ 421 r/Booktokreddit+1 crossposts

Article: How audiobooks can help with burnout

I was reading the Libby blog and thought this article about how audiobooks help with burnout was really interesting.

I've personally always felt it helped my anxiety but it is cool to see it is a real and not just something I convinced myself of one day.

libbylife.com
u/k_lo970 — 3 days ago

What magazines do you read?

There is so many I can access and I don't read any of them. I try browsing them and I think my ADHD brain is overwhelmed.

reddit.com
u/k_lo970 — 12 days ago

I need some non-fantasy stand alone book recs

I'm in the middle of multiple fantasy series at the moment with a long list of other fantasy series I want to read. I'm worried about a book slump and want to rotate in some stand alone non-fantasy books to avoid that.

I'm open to fiction, romance, and memoirs. They are not my go to but non-fiction and thriller (not too crazy) are ok too depending on the subject.

ETA: Some of my favorite books from the past few years include the Finlay Donavon series by Elle Cosimano, Dungeon Crawler Carl series by Matt Dinniman, Fourth Wing (Empyrean series) by Rebecca Yarrows, Mailman by Stephen Starring Grant, Don't Forget to Write by Sarah Goodman Confino, and 44 Scotland Street series by Alexander McCall Smith.

reddit.com
u/k_lo970 — 12 days ago
▲ 2 r/books

I'm currently reading Onyx Storm, Finlay Donavon Crosses the Line and listening to Carl's Doomsday Scenario. I'm enjoying all of them but I can't get myself to pick up any of these books and finish them. It isn't being afraid of them ending, I have the time, and I'm not in a slump because I have picked up other books and finished them. I don't get why I have a block with these particular books that I *want* to read.

Has anyone else dealt with this? How did you get past it?

reddit.com
u/k_lo970 — 21 days ago