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Sometimes We All Need a Love letter to Reading

3 literary lessons learned whilst reading ‘Found in a Bookshop,’ by Stephanie Butland

Violet Daniels
8 min readMay 6, 2024
Image created by the author using Canva/Magic Media.

Sometimes even lifelong readers forget how powerful books can be. Often, we rush to race through each one, desperate to reach our Goodreads reading goal for the year.

TikTok and Instagram will taint our perspectives into thinking we need to read as many books as possible when really it’s about the time we spend with a book and how much value we can take away from it.

In our rush to get through books, therefore, we can lose sight of how powerful they can be. How they can stop and make us think (if we let them) and help shift our perspectives on important issues often discussed in fiction such as race, class or gender.

The more time we spend with them, the more meaning we can gauge. After all, it’s not a crime to want to devour a book slowly and carefully, despite what the influence of social media might lead us to think.

All these thoughts came to light recently after I finished Found in a Bookshop by Stephanie Butland.

I had purchased it a few months earlier as part of a Kindle book deal. It’s safe to say before reading it, that I didn’t have any high hopes. I had picked it to be my bedtime read…

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Violet Daniels
Violet Daniels

Written by Violet Daniels

Full time content writer navigating the world one word at a time | Top writer in books & reading | Aspiring novelist | 📚 https://www.violet-daniels.com/

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