About this collection
A reading log answers the small question that derails most readers: where was I? It also answers the bigger one — did I actually read this year, or did I only mean to?
Some printables here log minutes per day for a school summer-reading program; others track book titles per month for a year-end review; others are a single book's worth of one-page review notes.
Further reading: a longer essay on building a personal planning system that pairs well with this collection.
Inside the collection you will find seven meaningful formats. The Daily Minutes log is for school summer-reading programs and tracks 10–60 minutes per day across a six-week summer. The Monthly Titles log is for year-long reading goals (typically 12, 24, or 52 books) and gives you one row per book with a five-star rating, a one-line review, and a recommendation note. The Yearly Goal sheet is a single-page reading-year overview with a small chart for monthly book counts and a TBR sidebar. The One-Page Review is for books you want to remember in detail — three lessons, two quotes, a one-paragraph summary, and a who-to-recommend-it-to line. The Series Tracker is sized for trilogies and longer series. The TBR (To-Be-Read) List is a one-page running list of the next twelve titles, sourced from book reviews, recommendations, and library holds. The Library-Style sheet adds a due-date column for tracking library checkouts.
We design these for the most common reading audiences — elementary, middle, and high schoolers; adult readers; book clubs; homeschoolers; and students in summer-reading programs — because the log of an elementary student counting toward a 1,000-Books-Before-Kindergarten goal is genuinely different from the log of an adult reader trying to get through 24 books in a year. The Elementary variant uses larger boxes and a shorter title line; the Adult variant adds a five-star rating and a recommendation note; the Book Club variant has a discussion-questions column and a meeting-date row.
The single biggest reason a reading log stops getting filled in is that it lives in the wrong place. The recommended setup is to keep the log next to where you actually read — bedside table, kitchen counter, the back of the bathroom door — and to fill it in immediately after closing the book rather than "later."
What's typically inside a reading log printable
- A title and author line
- A start and finish date
- A page-count or minutes column
- A 5-star rating
- A short "what I will remember" line
- A one-sentence recommendation note
How to choose the right one
Pick a daily-minutes log for school summer reading, a monthly-titles log for a year-long reading goal, and a one-page review sheet for books you want to remember in detail.
A note on the underlying practice
Reading is the process of taking in the sense or meaning of symbols, often specifically those of a written language, by means of sight or touch.
Background context drawn from open Wikipedia summaries; the printables themselves are the editorial work of the PlannerNest team.
Related: a deeper guide to the methodology behind these printables.