The Reading Life · Slow Living

You don’t have a reading problem.
You have a choosing problem.

If you used to devour books, and lately can’t get past the first chapter, it isn’t your attention span. It’s something quieter. And it’s fixable.

Blind Date with a Book from Ivory Chapters

I used to read a book a week. I’d lose whole evenings to a story without noticing. Then, as I’ve gotten older, that just… stopped, and it wasn’t because I stopped loving books.

It was the choosing. I’d stand in the bookstore for forty minutes, read the back of a dozen novels, feel my eyes glaze over, and walk out with nothing. Or I’d buy the one everyone was talking about, get three chapters in, and let it join the leaning tower of half-finished books on my nightstand.

The pile started to feel less like a hobby and more like homework. Like something I was failing at. What I didn’t know yet was that the problem wasn’t me at all.

It turns out I wasn’t alone, or broken

If you’ve felt this too, here’s the part nobody tells you: a reading slump usually isn’t about willpower or attention span. It’s a mismatch. We keep reaching for the same authors, the same lane, the same “safe” picks the algorithm feeds us, and the spark quietly goes out.

“The magic was never in the book I picked. It was in the one I’d never have chosen.”

Because the truth is, the books that change us are almost never the ones we’d have reached for ourselves. They’re the ones a thoughtful friend presses into our hands and says, just trust me.

And then something small changed everything.

What finally broke the spell

I’d almost given up when a friend mentioned she hadn’t picked a book in nearly a year, and was reading more than she had in a decade. Her secret was something called a “blind date with a book.”

What was inside: the book and goodies
The wrapped book with twine and wax seal
Wrapped
Unwrapped

This is from Ivory Chapters, the bookshop that perfected this little reading treat.

The idea is disarmingly simple. You don’t choose the title. You pick the genre you’re in the mood for, and within it, a book you’d never have reached for finds you. It arrives wrapped, with only a few teasing words about the tone inside. You don’t judge it by its cover, its hype, or whether it’s “productive.” You just meet the story. (Want picks even more your style? There’s an easy way to tell them exactly what you love, I’ll get to it below.)

There’s actually a name for why this works: a curiosity gap. The moment a book is hidden from you, your brain has to know what’s inside. The decision fatigue disappears, and the delight comes back.

What was actually inside

  • A surprise book, chosen for the genres I love
  • Sticky tabs for marking the lines I didn’t want to forget
  • A pen and a bookmark that made it feel like mine
  • A few cute reading stickers to keep or share
  • A sachet of tea for the first chapter
  • All bound in paper, twine, dried flowers and a wax seal

That night I made the tea, broke the wax seal, and started a novel I would have walked straight past in a shop. By the second chapter I’d stopped checking my phone. I looked up and the tea had gone cold and it was dark out. I hadn’t disappeared into a book like that in years.

Go on a blind date with a book

Loved by 10k+ other readers

Reading on a morning dog walk

My husband snapped this of me on my morning dog walk. I couldn’t put the book down long enough to make it around the block.

How it works

1
Pick your genre

You tell them the kind of story you’re in the mood for, and can add a note or your Goodreads to fine-tune.

2
They choose by reader consensus

Your book is picked from titles readers consistently love, hand-wrapped with care, never pulled at random.

3
You meet the story

Unwrap it, make the tea, and rediscover what got you reading in the first place.

✦ A little-known tip

Here’s something most subscribers never think to do: after you order, email the shop your Goodreads profile, or just a few lines about what you love and what you’d rather avoid, and they’ll use it to fine-tune your match. The people who do this get the most uncanny picks. It takes two minutes, and hardly anyone bothers. Just write to contact@ivorychapters.com after checkout.

“But what if…” the honest part

What if I get a book I already own?

Just pop your Goodreads or a quick note in at checkout, and they’ll work around the ones you’ve read. And if a book you already own ever slips through, they’ll take it back. No harm done.

What if it’s not my kind of story?

You’re the one picking the genre, so it always lands in your lane. A surprise just means a story you wouldn’t have grabbed on your own. And if one really isn’t for you, you’ve got 30 days to send it back, so there’s nothing to lose by trying.

How do you know the books are any good?

Every title has to earn its spot. They cross-check it against thousands of real reader ratings across the big review sites, and it only makes the cut if it clears a high bar. So what lands in your hands isn’t a shot in the dark, it’s a book readers have already fallen for, picked to fit your genre.

What other subscribers said

★★★★★

“I was excited to find a new author that I haven’t read yet!”

Charlene P. · Verified customerCustomer photo of the wrapped Ivory Chapters book
★★★★★

“I opted for ‘surprise me’. I like many different genres. I was very pleased with this modern romance. A very good read, and wrapped so cute!”

Donna H. · Verified customerCustomer photo of the wrapped Ivory Chapters book
★★★★★

“Love how the book was wrapped up in beautiful wrapping paper, love the goodies that came with it and was surprised what book I received.”

Kristen K. · Verified customerCustomer photo of the wrapped Ivory Chapters book

The part that surprised me most

You can only read your favorite book for the first time once. That feeling, the one you’ve been chasing back, isn’t something you can force by re-reading old favorites.

But you can keep finding the next one. That’s really what this is: a renewable supply of the first-time feeling, arriving in the mailbox, asking nothing of you except an open mind.

Lost in a good book Find your next favorite book

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