The reading journal of dreams

The reading journal of dreams

In January, I decided I wanted to make myself a book bullet journal. I bought a dot grid journal and mapped it all out. By April though, it was clear it wasn’t working as it was more work that it was worth, and I couldn’t make it work for me. I scoured the internet looking for a reading journal that I could just fill in, but couldn’t find just what I was looking for. So… I designed one myself, the best reading journal, with all the pages I wanted and needed, without any of the fluff and extra stuff that just bogs me down and takes the enjoyment out of reading and filling in the book journal.

1. Just the right amount of detail makes it the best reading journal.

I designed my reading journal to have enough pages to read up to 60 books per year. Unless you’re in the super elite group of mega readers who read with every spare minute, I figured that would be enough for most people. I'm a pretty big reader I think, I'll read between 1 and 2 books each week, and this is sufficient for me. If you’re reading more, there are loads of other journals available, but this isn’t it.

Reading journal review page

I designed pages that would be useful for me, without superfluous info, just what is needed and is interesting to reflect on. This is what makes it the best reading journal for me. I have included space to record the book title, author, genre, the number of pages, when you read it, what format you read it in, a quote from the book and then space for a review. I also love the idea of having all the book covers in my reading journal, so I included space to glue mini covers on each review page, which I print at my local Boots, and stick in.

Reading journal review page filled in with a book cover photo

 

2. Not just book reviews.

I’ve been following a few booktokers over the last year or so, and seeing what they’ve included in their book bullet journals has been so handy for me, both in working out what I wanted but also what I didn’t want.

Welcome page to the reading journal - this book journal belongs to

I’m not interested in including challenges, however I realised some might want to, so I have intentionally left a couple of blank pages. I would also love to have a top 5 or top 10 page but know others aren’t interested in that, so that is what I’m going to be using one of my blank pages for.

Some extra pages I have included though are:

Book rating scale page in and Hope designs’ reading journal

  •  a star rating reference to remember what your star ratings mean throughout the rest of the journal.

Reading log pages to summarise what you’ve read over the year and the ratings given

  • a handy reading log over three pages which quickly lists the books read with their star rating, so that you don’t have to flip back through all your review pages to remember what you’ve read in the year.

Books read and pages read bar charts in the reading journal

  • a bar chart for number of books read each month of the year, and another bar chart for number of pages read each month. I have to sometimes double up on the pages read, but I do love that it is divided into fifties rather than hundreds.

Reading goal page

  • a reading goal page which is a page of 60 blank books. The idea is that you number the books up to how many you want to read, then colour the books in as you read one, to hopefully have a page of coloured, numbered books by the end of the year.

Half finished reading goal page from my reading journal
I’ve been colouring mine in the colours of my star ratings so that I have a record of how many of each star rating I’ve read over the year.

  • a bookcase to colour in as you see fit (as seen above).
Simple monthly bookish roundup in and Hope designs’ reading journal
  • 12 monthly stat pages which are short and simple recap pages. Every month also include a small illustration to colour in.

3. Hand lettered type and little illustrations to make your reading journal unique and beautiful.

I really enjoyed adding my signature hand lettering to all the page titles, and drawing little bookish illustrations to colour in - once complete, this beautiful and aesthetic reading journal is lovely and colourful and is mindful to fill in without being overwhelming.

 Reading journal page coloured in with hand lettered type
Bookshelf page coloured in the book bullet journal by and Hope designs

4. A lovely penguin classics clothbound inspired cover.

Using a dark dusty pink, the cover of the reading journal is covered in little book cover illustrations and has a similar feel to the linen covered penguin classics books, though it is just printed, rather than fabric covered. The words Reading Journal are hand lettered amidst the open book covers that adorn the cover. 


Reading journal front cover

Future plans for other covers are in the works, and a blue and or green cover will be coming in 2024, with all the same awesome pages inside the reading journal. So if this pinky colour is not your thing, stay tuned! If it is your thing, you can get yours here.

Perfect bound paperback notebook reading journal

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1 comment

nice works

alex

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