More time means more books. Over the past three months, I’ve maintained my early to bed, early to rise schedule even though I didn’t need to get up for work. The cats wake me at 5am, and most days, I just stay up after I feed them.
When I’m working, I eat breakfast, exercise, shower, and write before logging on at 8am. I work all day, relax with my husband, eat dinner, and then crawl in bed around 9pm and indulge in a few pages of a novel before my eyes close. Sometimes I might read a little on my lunch break.
On sabbatical, I read in the morning. I read during the day. Fiction! During the day! I read at night. I spent the entire afternoon yesterday on the couch devouring Loving Frank, a novel about the love affair between feminist Mamah Borthwick and architect Frank Lloyd Wright. I read for a couple of hours, cat-napped for an hour, then reached over to the table from the couch and picked it right back up without getting up. It was an intense and brutal novel, and I feel melancholy after reading it (and after lying on the couch all day). But now it’s done, and I can move on to the next on my long list of other books I want to read.
I know I won’t be able to read this much when I go back to work, and that’s okay. I need to create and not just consume. But I will certainly miss taking in all the stories, the beautiful writing, the characters, the settings. I’ll keep my wake-up and go-to-bed hours when I go back to work next week, but I might shift my working hours. Maybe I’ll start and end later to accommodate a slightly longer swim workout, and to give myself time to read while I’m awake rather than as my eyes are closing for the day.
Books I read (so far) on sabbatical:
- Paris Letters: A Travel Memoir about Art, Writing, and Finding Love in Paris, Janice McLeod ♥️
- The DaVinci Code, Dan Brown
- The Inferno, Dante Alighieri
- A Gentleman in Moscow, Amor Towles ♥️
- The Iliad, Homer (translated by Emily Wilson)
- The Paris Wife, Paula McLain ♥️
- James, Percival Everett ♥️
- Beloved, Toni Morrison ♥️
- Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
- The Paris Novel, Ruth Reichl ♥️
- 1000 Words: A Writer’s Guide to Staying Creative, Focused, and Productive All Year Round, Jami Attenberg
- Less, Andrew Sean Greer
- The Road, Cormac McCarthy ♥️
- Night Watch, Jayne Anne Phillips
- Now Is Not the Time to Panic, Kevin Wilson ♥️
- In Our Time, Ernest Hemingway
- The Turn of the Screw, Henry James
- The Lost Queen, Signe Pike ♥️
- The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien ♥️
- The Godmother, Hannelore Cayre
- Die with Zero: Getting All You Can from Your Money and Your Life, Bill Perkins
- Loving Frank, Nancy Horan





















