Why limit the books you read that shape you? Reading across boundaries transforms your perception of what it means to be human. I still remember picking up a graphic novel for the first time and dismissing it as trivial. I realized how it can convey grief and hope in fresh, unexpected ways. That experience stayed with me. It opened my mind to stories I have otherwise ignored. It reminded me that real insight often comes by stepping outside what feels familiar. Then, later, I became addicted to Army Motors and PS Month, two vintage Army maintenance publications. I realized then that we can find meaning in everything we read.
Anyone who reads seriously eventually faces a familiar question: What kind of reader are you?
People rarely ask this question with any ill intent. Most often, it’s a subtle curiosity. It acts like a sorting hat, quickly assigning you to a shelf. Are you a reader of literary fiction or thrillers? Only the classics, or only nonfiction? Horror, early Gothic, one tidy corner?
This question suggests that reading, like identity, should be narrowed, defined, and efficient.
But what if the real answer is simpler and less tidy?
If you’re new here, you want to start with How to Read She Reads Everything. In it, I explain why this site resists narrow literary categories. It embraces a slower, more attentive reading life.
I read everything. My last trip to the local bookstore made this clear. My checkout slip listed a novel about time travel. There was also a new collection of creative nonfiction essays. I picked up a cookbook on Mexican cuisine, and a knock-knock joke book as well.
Additionally, there was a dense book on the history of American cooking. Finally, I chose a speculative fiction novella aimed at the average horror fan. Carrying the stack home, I experienced a sense of anticipation. It wasn’t because any one book promised to define me as a reader. It was because, together, they reminded me of how wide the world of books can be.
I don’t read without taste or care, but I don’t pledge loyalty to any one type of book. Like most readers, I prefer certain genres, but I’m also interested in many things. If you find me in a bookstore, I may have a craft book in my cart. A book about the Vietnam War or another historical text. The latest memoir, a literary novel, or a magazine. A book about cooking or the novel of the month is to be with me. And there’s always so much more I have for discovery.
I believe there is something intrinsically human, maybe even necessary, about not specializing too early.
Reading as Exposure to the Full Human Register
To read everything is not to flatten distinctions. It is in the honor range. Research on cognitive flexibility shows that encountering a wide array of material can enhance your ability to transfer knowledge. This enhancement helps in developing cognitive flexibility. It strengthens your ability to apply skills across different contexts. This is an effect known as “far transfer” in learning studies. Notably, educational psychologist Scott Barry Kaufman has suggested that broad learning experiences are crucial. These experiences promote the mental adaptability we need for innovative problem-solving. Giving yourself this range has real benefits. It helps us apply what we learn in one area to unanticipated challenges in another.
A Gothic novel and a family memoir are not the same experience. A cookbook and a war history do not move the mind in the same way. A slim book of poems asks something different from an epic fantasy.
But our life is not singular in tone.
We live with both poetry and practical matters, with grief and humor, devotion and absurdity, learning and desire. A reading life that fits this variety feels closer to how our thinking really works.
It can be deeply comforting to stick with books that show our own beliefs, values, or experiences. There is a sense of safety and validation in returning to what feels familiar. But if you only read what matches your own views, you never get a change of perspective.
As a practical step, set yourself a small reading challenge. Choose just one book that lies outside your usual interests or comfort zone. It is a genre you usually avoid. It is a topic you know little about. Alternatively, it is an author whose perspective differs significantly from your own. This will open you to new ideas. It will also help you directly experience the benefits of reading widely that this essay describes.
Reading different kinds of books can be challenging, but that challenge often leads to new understanding.
I’ve written about this attention before. You can find this in Reading As a Way of Paying Attention. In it, I explore how books train us to notice more than we thought possible.
The Danger of Literary Identity
Sometimes, our reading preferences can become rigid boundaries.
We start to think of ourselves as someone who doesn’t read romance. We don’t get fantasy. We’re entertained by thrillers alone. We believe we only read serious books. We put up small barriers around what we read.
But reading everything keeps the borders porous.
When you read memoirs, horror, philosophy, and historical fiction, you start to see repeating themes. These themes pass through different worlds. Maybe a philosopher within a worn essay struggles with the meaning of justice. That same question reappears when a horror novel’s heroine makes an impossible choice for her family. A war veteran’s memoir echoes themes of endurance and perseverance. It also highlights a sense of longing. These are themes you have just finished tracing through a nineteenth-century historical saga. Grief surfaces in a haunted house and quietly lingers in the margins of a family’s recounting. Suddenly, those patterns—grief, justice, betrayal, loyalty—are discovered in places you never expected, showing up everywhere, not just in one genre.
They are human ones.
Reading widely shows that literature isn’t a set of separate boxes. It’s one big conversation, spoken in many different voices.
You will appreciate On Rereading, Marginalia, and a Lifelong Reading Practice. This is true if you find yourself returning to the same books. This essay discusses how returning can be just as expansive as reaching outward.
Attention Is the Common Thread
Some people think that reading a wide range of books means you don’t read carefully.
The opposite is true.
To read everything well, you need to pay attention. Each book deserves to be approached in its own way. You wouldn’t read a novel the same way as you would a biography. Nor would you judge a cookbook by the rules of a political book. One way I practice this kind of attention is by pausing after each chapter. I jot a margin note with a simple question, tailored to the type of book. In fiction, I sometimes ask how a character’s motivation is shifting. In nonfiction, I note what surprised me or what evidence feels strongest. These habits help me stay alert to the different demands of each book. They also reveal the gifts each book offers. Reading widely becomes an act of reading well.
Reading all kinds of books teaches humility. It makes you adjust, listen, and rethink your approach.
This isn’t a random habit. It takes discipline. You start to ask: What is this book trying to do? Did it achieve its goals honestly?
That question works in any aisle of the bookstore.
This question informs my approach in How to Read Without Rating: On Quiet Literary Criticism. In this work, I think about reading as interpretation rather than judgment.
The Freedom of Refusing the Hierarchy
Often, before we even pick up a book, we are taught to sort literature. We place literature into categories of greater or lesser value. These hierarchies, whether formal or unspoken, can quietly restrict what we choose to read. They shape both how we see books and how we see ourselves as readers.
Some books get called ‘important.’ Others are seen as just ‘entertainment.’ Some are canonized, while others are dismissed as mere genre fiction.
But what’s considered important changes over time. Entertaining books can have deep ideas, and genre books can be beautifully written.
Reading everything is a quiet way to reject these rankings.
It is believed that insight appears in unexpected forms. A slim mystery carries moral complexity. A fantasy novel holds political wisdom. A memoir teaches structure as elegantly as any craft manual. Of course, not every book offers lasting value, and discernment matters as we build the library of our minds. There are moments when reading everything becomes overwhelming. It can feel scattershot, as if you are moving in too many directions at once. But it is upon reflecting on what truly stays with you that your taste and judgment slowly become stronger. By remaining open, we leave room for surprises, and sometimes the most unlikely sources leave the deepest mark.
Reading everything helps you avoid both intellectual snobbery and boredom.
Many of the curated collections in the Reading Lists archive show the same refusal to rank genres above one another. They are shaped by theme, season, and lived experience rather than literary status.
The Reader Changes
When you read widely for years, something subtle changes.
Books start to speak to each other as you read more widely. Sometimes, these conversations across time become startlingly clear. Consider how Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein was written in the early nineteenth century. It has become almost a founding myth for discussions about artificial intelligence today. Shelley’s questions about creation and responsibility resurface in essays. These essays debate the moral challenges of building sentient machines. Her ‘modern Prometheus’ is transformed into algorithms and neural networks. A myth can resurface in science fiction, and a historical event can be refracted through memoir. Themes and ideas braid themselves throughout centuries. Consider how Frankenstein by Mary Shelley continues to shape conversations about artificial intelligence.
Your reading life becomes richer and more layered, not just a straight line.
Because you’ve explored many kinds of books, you notice these connections.
Reading everything gives you a personal library packed with both books and the connections you discover between them. Building this library isn’t about reading everything at once; instead, it’s a process that unfolds patiently over time.
This is not an argument for speed.
It is not a manifesto for consuming every trending title.
The Books Expand
Reading everything isn’t about how much you read. It’s about being open to different kinds of books. Think of it as tending a garden. Each book is a seed. Some sprout quickly. Others take weeks or months to reveal their shape. You return to the plot with patience. You do not rush the growth but give space and time for roots to take hold. This slow cultivation lets insight surface at its own pace. The variety you plant rewards you with unexpected blooms.
You might spend months with one type of book. Then, return to poetry after reading nonfiction for a while. You could also reread a childhood novel and find new meaning in it. This is particularly true for me after I finish reading a series. My next choice is always another genre, totally unrelated to the one I just finished reading. I use it as a palette cleanser before I move on to something more serious.
Defending the idea of reading everything isn’t about rushing. It’s about being patient.
It is trusted that a lifetime gives you time to explore many different kinds of books.
What Reading Everything Teaches
Over time, reading a wide range of books helps you develop intellectual flexibility. This flexibility is not just valuable for individual development; it further shapes academic skills in valuable ways. When you are comfortable moving between different genres and disciplines, you find it easier to approach coursework from multiple angles. You can connect ideas from a novel to themes in a history class. Or you can draw an insight from science fiction into a philosophy discussion. This can deepen your knowledge and make your contributions stand out. In group projects or interdisciplinary research, intellectual flexibility lets you collaborate more effectively. It helps you appreciate complex viewpoints and solve problems creatively. By reading widely, you learn to think critically. You analyze unfamiliar materials. You adapt to new scholarly challenges. These are essential abilities for success in school and beyond.
- Emotional range
- Tolerance for ambiguity
- Resistance to excessive simplification
- Curiosity lacking an agenda
It also helps you become more understanding.
You have read widely. You recognize that no single book can represent a culture. A genre can’t be represented by a single book. Nor can a period or a person be represented by just one book. Then, you start to hear stories that contradict each other, and are in conflict, some overlapping and others pulling apart. Truth does not come in just one version. You hear clashing truths that unfold all at once. In this tangle, you realize something essential is revealed.
Reading everything helps you avoid oversimplifying things.
A Personal Confession
There were times when I tried to see myself as a certain type of reader. I focused on one genre and avoided others. I thought being serious meant narrowing my choices.
But each time, I felt limited.
The reading life that feels most honest to me is broad. It includes literary fiction and cookbooks, theology and thrillers, poetry and how-to guides. It means revisiting old favorites and trying something new. Above all, it embraces the fullness of lived experience.
To read everything is not to master literature.
It means staying open to learning.
You may relate to Why I Keep Reading, Even When Life Is Loud. This is especially true if you’ve ever wondered what reading is for when life feels heavy. It also applies when life feels loud. In it, I consider reading as steadiness rather than escape.
The Real Defense
In the end, the reason to read everything is simple. We refuse to sort ourselves neatly onto one shelf. By doing so, we open worlds within ourselves and in the books before us.
Human life is not categorized neatly.
Why should reading be?
If books are conversations that span time, listening to only one part of that conversation means missing out on much more of the lived experience.
Reading everything keeps the room open.
And in that openness, which sometimes looks messy or undisciplined to others, something quietly radical happens.
You become not just a reader of genres, but a reader of people.
And that is the most important literacy of all.
FAQs
Is it better to specialize in one genre?
Is it better to specialize in one genre?
Why read books outside your comfort zone?
Books outside your usual preferences expand empathy, intellectual flexibility, and interpretive skill.
Does reading everything mean reading without standards?
No. It means meeting each book on its own terms and evaluating it honestly.



















English (US) ·