Showing posts with label attention spans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label attention spans. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Why the shrinking sentence might tell us more than we think

A reflective look at why sentences in popular novels may be getting shorter, and what changing reading habits, technology and publishing mean for fiction.
Every so often, someone announces that the novel is in decline. Usually, this is followed by a familiar roll call of suspects: phones, streaming, BookTok, schools, short attention spans, modern life, the algorithm, and the general moral decay of people who do not own enough bookmarks.

This time, though, the anxiety has a number attached.

A recent Economist piece argued that it is not only that people are reading less, but that “the texture of what is being read is changing,” noting that its analysis of hundreds of New York Times bestsellers found that sentences in popular books have become almost a third shorter since the 1930s.