Read More Books Without Finding More Time
How to read 50-100+ books per year with the same schedule

The Problem
You want to read more books but can't find the time. You read 10-15 books per year and wish it was 50. Other people seem to read effortlessly while you struggle. Your reading list grows faster than you can read.
Why This Matters
- ⚠️Reading goals constantly unmet
- ⚠️Feeling intellectually stagnant
- ⚠️Missing out on knowledge and ideas
- ⚠️Guilt over unread books
- ⚠️Envy of people who read 50+ books/year
The Solution
The secret to reading more books isn't finding more time - it's reading faster in the time you have. LumaRead's RSVP training helps you double or triple your reading speed, turning 15 books/year into 40-50+ books/year with the same time investment.
How It Works
Average reader: 250-300 WPM = 12-20 books/year
LumaRead training gets you to 500-600 WPM = 40-50 books/year
Same time investment, 2-3x more books
Progressive training takes 2-4 weeks
Works with any book format (PDF, DOCX, EPUB)
Benefits
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. A 300-page book at 500 WPM takes about 3 hours. If you read 30 minutes daily, that's 1 book per week = 52 books/year. Many LumaRead users exceed this.
Perfect - you have the most to gain. Slow readers often improve the most dramatically. Going from 200 to 500 WPM means 2.5x more books, turning 10 books/year into 25 books/year.
Speed reading doesn't hurt retention. Plus, the more you read, the more context you have for new information. Many LumaRead users report better retention because they're more engaged and less fatigued.
Stop wishing you read more. Start reading more with LumaRead.
Related Guides
How to Finish Books Faster
You start books with enthusiasm but never finish them. Your reading list keeps growing. Books you bought months ago sit unread. You want to read more, but there's never enough time.
How to Read 100 Books in a Year
Reading 100 books per year seems like a goal reserved for retired professors, trust fund beneficiaries, or people who simply don't sleep. You scroll past those Goodreads year-in-review posts showing triple-digit book counts and wonder: how? You read 10-20 books per year—about average for American adults—and even that feels like you're doing well. The idea of reading 5-10x more seems mathematically impossible given your work schedule, family obligations, and the basic human need for sleep and sanity. But here's what those prolific readers know that you might not: it's not about finding more time. Most 100-book readers don't have more free time than you. Many have full-time jobs, families, and active social lives. The difference is reading speed. When you can process a book in 3 hours instead of 10 hours, the math fundamentally changes. Suddenly, reading 100 books per year requires less daily time than watching the average American's 4+ hours of daily television. The "impossible" becomes not only achievable but almost inevitable once you remove the speed bottleneck. The psychological impact of believing something is impossible is powerful. You don't try strategies to read more because you've already decided it can't work. You don't prioritize reading because "you'll never catch up anyway." You accept slow reading as an identity—"I'm just not a fast reader"—rather than a changeable skill. This learned helplessness keeps you stuck at 10-20 books while others who developed their skills enjoy 5-10x your reading volume. The gap compounds yearly.