Why I Started Tracking Every Book I Read
May 30, 2026 · Business · 2 min read
A few years ago I started writing down every book I finish — title, date, a few lines on what stuck. It sounds like bureaucracy for a hobby. It turned out to be the highest-ROI habit in my intellectual life.
What the log revealed
The first surprise was embarrassment. I felt like a serious reader. The log said I finished eleven books my first tracked year, and four of them were airport thrillers. There's a deal lesson in there: feelings are projections; logs are actuals. You can't manage what you don't measure, and apparently you can't read what you don't measure either.
The second surprise was retention. The act of writing three sentences about a book — not a summary, just what stuck — does something a highlight never does. It forces a verdict. A year later, I remember the books I logged and have functionally lost the ones I didn't, including some I'm sure I enjoyed more.
The third surprise was the patterns. Scan five years of entries and you see your own mind from the outside: the year everything was about energy markets, the slow drift from strategy books toward biographies, the fiction drought that perfectly tracked a brutal deal cycle. The log is a mirror with a long memory.
The system, such as it is
People ask about the system expecting software. Here it is in full:
- One line per book: title, author, date finished.
- Three sentences max on what stuck. If nothing stuck, write that — it's the most useful entry of all.
- One flag: would I reread this? The "yes" list, after a few years, is the real library.
That's it. No ratings, no tags, no app. The friction has to be near zero or the habit dies by February.
The meta-lesson is the same one that shows up everywhere from portfolios to org charts: the cheapest way to get better at something is to start keeping score. The score doesn't even need to be good. It just needs to be written down, by you, where next year's version of you will find it.
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