These 8 Objects Helped Me Actually Finish 23 Books in 2025

I finished 23 books in 2025, after a few years of stalling out in the single digits. Most of those were physical books because I still love paper more than screens. The big shift was not suddenly having more free time, it was quietly building a set of reading ritual essentials that made sitting down with a book feel easier and more inviting than picking up my phone.

Instead of treating it as a willpower problem, I treated it as a design problem. I fixed how my books stayed open, how my space was lit, how comfortable long sessions felt, and how I handled travel, bathtime, and commutes. These seven reading ritual essentials did not turn me into a speed reader, they simply made reading the most pleasant option in more moments, and that is how I reached 23 finished books.

1. Bookish Bookmark

The Bookish Bookmark ended up being the quiet hero of my reading year. I read a lot of hardcovers and chunky paperbacks, and they used to fight me on every surface, snapping shut or demanding one hand just to hold them open. This clear acrylic piece became one of the first essentials in my reading ritual and changed that completely by sitting across the pages with a gentle curve and enough weight to hold everything flat without stressing the spine.

Because it is transparent, I can read straight through it while my hands stay free for coffee, breakfast, or note taking. It feels more like a small design object than a mere tool, and it looks beautiful left on a table between sessions. I reached for it during more than half of the 23 books I finished this year, especially the thicker novels and reference titles, and it turned physical reading from a small wrestling match into something smooth and effortless.

The Bookish Bookmark ended up being the quiet hero of my reading year. I read a lot of hardcovers and chunky paperbacks, and they used to fight me on every surface, snapping shut or demanding one hand just to hold them open. This clear acrylic piece became one of the first essentials in my reading ritual and changed that completely by sitting across the pages with a gentle curve and enough weight to hold everything flat without stressing the spine. Because it is transparent, I can read straight through it while my hands stay free for coffee, breakfast, or note taking. It feels more like a small design object than a mere tool, and it looks beautiful left on a table between sessions. I reached for it during more than half of the 23 books I finished this year, especially the thicker novels and reference titles, and it turned physical reading from a small wrestling match into something smooth and effortless.

Click Here to Buy Now: $65.00

What I like

  • Works especially well with thick books.
  • Sculptural, minimalist design looks good and feels premium in the hand.

What I dislike

  • Performs best on flat surfaces, so it is less ideal if you mostly read fully reclined or on your side.

2. Anywhere-Use Lamp

Once I solved the problem of books fighting me, I turned to the light around them. The Anywhere-Use Lamp became the anchor of my reading spaces at home, from the sofa to the bedroom to a quiet corner of the dining table. It is a cordless, minimalist lamp with a soft diffused LED that feels more like candlelight than a harsh task light, and a clean cylindrical form that blends into almost any interior.

Touch controls on the body keep the silhouette free of visible switches and make it easy to tap the lamp on and adjust brightness without hunting in the dark. Because it is fully rechargeable and wireless, I stopped being constrained by outlets and cords and could place it exactly where reading wanted to happen. For most of my evening sessions this lamp was beside me, and it quickly stopped feeling like a generic light and started feeling like a core reading ritual essential that quietly supported the majority of those 23 books.

Click Here to Buy Now: $149.00

What I Like

  • Cordless, rechargeable design lets you create a reading nook anywhere.
  • Soft, diffused LED creates a cosy, book friendly atmosphere.

What I dislike

  • Runs on 4 AA batteries, so you either go through disposables or need to charge rechargeable batteries.

3. LightMan Bendable Book Light

Not every reading moment happens in a perfectly styled corner, and that is where the LightMan by RayMay comes in. It looks playful at first glance, like a tiny figure with a glowing head and bendable limbs, but that personality hides a very functional little reading companion. I can clip it to the top of a book, wrap it around a headboard, or stand it on a shelf and then twist its arms and legs until the beam falls exactly where I need it. When I travel, it has become my secret weapon on long flights, because the built in overhead reading light on planes tends to wash a much wider area and I always feel like I am lighting up my neighbour’s space as well as my own.

The beam is bright enough for comfortable reading but soft enough that it never feels like a spotlight in my eyes. It is so compact it disappears into a carry on pocket until I need it. It became my go to solution for late night chapters and travel, quietly helping a handful of those 23 books get finished instead of abandoned, and it now feels like a non negotiable part of my travel reading ritual.

What We Like

  • Compact and lightweight, so it is easy to pack.
  • Playful character shape adds charm.

What We Dislike

  • Runs on coin cell batteries, which you need to replace rather than simply recharging via cable.
  • Light output is tuned for close range reading and is not strong enough to light an wide area.

4. Book Darts

As my reading picked up, I realised I needed something better than a normal bookmark. Book Darts became my favourite functional essential because they mark the exact line, not just the page. They are tiny metal arrows that slide onto the edge of a page and point precisely where you stopped, with a profile so thin that even a heavily marked book still closes neatly.

With a traditional bookmark, I often felt it was not worth opening a book unless I had time for a full section, because I knew I would only be able to save the page, not the last sentence I read. With Book Darts, I can drop one right at the final word, close the book, and know I will land exactly there next time, even if I only had time for a paragraph. I also use the different metal finishes as a simple code, with one colour for quotes I love, one for ideas I want to act on, and another for things I want to revisit later, so the edge of the book becomes a tiny, elegant index of what matters most to me.

What I Liked

  • Line level marking makes micro reading feel worthwhile.
  • Reusable metal construction is more sustainable and durable than disposable tabs or sticky notes.

What I disliked

  • Small size makes them easy to misplace if you are not disciplined about where you store them.

5. Thermo Mug x Paul Smith Double Mag

For my reading ritual, the thermo mug x Paul Smith Double Mag works because it gets both function and design right at the same time. It is a double walled stainless steel mug, so it keeps drinks warm or cold far longer than a regular ceramic cup. On cold days, I love settling in with a hot drink and a book, and this mug keeps my tea or coffee properly hot through a full chapter instead of turning lukewarm halfway through.

The insulation also makes it useful in warmer weather, because iced drinks stay cold without sweating all over my table or leaving rings on the surface. The stainless body feels solid without being heavy, and the Paul Smith detailing gives it a clean, characterful look that feels like it belongs in a considered reading setup rather than just being a generic travel mug. It did not directly add more pages to my 23 book total, but it made those cold weather reading sessions feel cosy and deliberate, which is exactly what I want from a reading ritual essential.

What I Like

  • Double walled stainless construction keeps hot drinks warm or cold drinks chilled for much longer.
  • Paul Smith detailing adds a clean, characterful look.

What I dislike

  • Not leak proof.
  • Limited regional availability.

6. Minature Bonfire Wood Diffuser

Once the light and the mug were in place, the last layer I wanted to add to my reading ritual was scent. The Miniature Bonfire Wood Diffuser Set became the little object that finished the scene and made my reading corner feel like its own tiny world. It looks like a miniature campfire on your table, with a rust resistant stainless steel base and bundled wood pieces that absorb essential oil, so it feels more like a design sculpture than a typical spa diffuser.

You do not actually light it, which makes it much calmer to use around books and textiles. Instead you add a few drops of oil to the wood and let the scent slowly drift into the room. You can choose between “Hakusan,” which evokes a Japanese mountain forest, or “Cedar,” which feels more like a cosy log cabin, and both create the illusion that you are reading in nature rather than in a city apartment. It made my reading corner feel like a retreat, which makes it much easier to choose a book over a screen.

Click Here to Buy Now: $99.00

What I Liked

  • Miniature bonfire form creates a strong visual focal point.
  • No open flame required, so it is safer and more relaxed to use near books, blankets, and paper stacks.

What I disliked

  • Scent throw is gentle, which is lovely for reading but may feel too subtle if you expect a very strong fragrance.

7. Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition

The Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition was not the main engine of my reading year, but it became the situational essential I relied on in very specific contexts. I still prefer physical books, yet the Kindle quietly took over bathtime, travel days, and some bedtime reading when I did not want to juggle a heavy hardcover or risk splashing a favourite edition. Its seven inch E Ink Carta 1300 display feels close to paper, with darker blacks and snappy page turns that make those edge case moments feel like proper reading rather than a compromise.

I keep it loaded with a mix of lighter reads and travel friendly titles that I am happy to enjoy in steamy bathrooms or cramped airplane seats. The glare free screen stays comfortable under bright airplane windows and in dim hotel rooms, and the auto adjusting warm front light lets me read in bed without blasting the whole room. Wireless charging and long battery life mean it is always ready to toss into a bag, and while it only accounted for a handful of the 23 books I finished, those would almost certainly have been lost opportunities without this particular ritual essential.

What I Liked

  • Auto adjusting warm front light is perfect for bedtime.
  • Waterproof design adds real peace of mind for reading near water.
  • Excellent battery life and wireless charging.

What I disliked

  • Wireless charging only works with ccompatible Qi chargers.

8. Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds 2nd Gen

For my reading ritual on the move, the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds 2nd Gen are all about turning chaos into a private reading bubble. I have tried a few different pairs over the years, and these are genuinely among the best noise cancelling earbuds I have used, which matters a lot on planes, trains, or in loud cafés. I use them both for audiobooks and for playing light background music while I read in noisy environments, and in both cases the noise cancelling lets the sound sit close and clear without being drowned out.

Battery life reaches up to six hours of playback on a charge, with the wireless case holding around three extra full charges, so a full workweek of listening felt effortless. I pair them with my phone, queue up an audiobook, or a soft playlist for reading in busy spaces, and suddenly those otherwise noisy hours become quiet, story filled pockets of time. They did not replace my physical reading, but they probably added three or four extra finishes to my 23 book total and rescued many sessions that would have been impossible without that level of noise control.

What I Like

  • Class leading noise cancellation.
  • Multipoint connectivity lets you switch between devices without constant reconnecting.
  • Comes in five color variations.

What I disliked

  • Touch controls can feel sensitive until you get used to it

How These Reading Ritual Essentials Added Up to 23 Books

Looking back, the pattern feels simple and honest. The pieces that touched the book and the light around it did most of the quiet work, from keeping pages open comfortably to making whatever seat I chose feel like a proper reading spot. The smaller details layered on top, like a bendable light for flights, line level markers for tiny pockets of time, a mug that kept drinks at the right temperature, and a diffuser that made the room smell like a forest or cabin, helped my reading corner feel less like an accident and more like a place I had designed on purpose.

The digital and audio pieces then extended that same ritual into situations where paper struggled. Baths, flights, hotel rooms, noisy cafés, commutes, and airport waits all became bonus reading windows, whether through a waterproof e reader or a pair of earbuds that could carve out a quiet bubble for audiobooks or soft background music. None of these objects are magic on their own, but together they removed enough friction that finishing 23 books in a year felt natural instead of aspirational, and that is the real value of building a reading ritual that actually fits your life.

2 Shares