We are all social, in the end

Default Image
22, Dec 2025
Reading Like a Writer (Or, How to Ruin Books Forever)

As readers, when we were young, we first started ruining our enjoyment of books in English Literature class where we would review Macbeth, An Inspector Calls or some other classic book to the end of term and never want to read them again. The same happened to me when I took a Media Studies GCSE during A-Levels and analysed so many Hitchcock films that I still cannot watch them over 30-years later.

But once you begin writing, you will never read the same way again. Suddenly you notice foreshadowing, sentence rhythm, pacing tricks, character arcs, and every time an author uses the word “suddenly.”

At first, it’s annoying. You miss reading purely for pleasure. But soon you realise this analytical lens is training your writing muscles. The more you read, the stronger you grow.

Read widely. Read badly written books (or what you think are badly written books, after reading them), they teach you what not to do. Read brilliant ones, they inspire you to level up.

You’re not ruining reading. You’re deepening it.

Tags: ,

Related Posts

The Revision Stage: Where the Real Writing Happens

Revising a manuscript is a bit like realising the house you built has several crooked walls, a suspicious smell, and…

When Your Characters Start Making Decisions Without You

There comes a moment in every writer’s journey when a character refuses to do what they’re told. You’ve outlined their…

Writer’s Block: Sometimes It’s Just a Tired Brain

As I ready myself for the upcoming Norwegian Christmas, which they celebrate on the 24th. This is great for me,…