Why do people buy more books than they read?
A bookshelf is sometimes a map of unfinished ambitions.
Many people own dozens or even hundreds of unread books. The gap between buying and reading may seem irrational, yet it reveals something deeply human. Curiosity rarely waits for free time.
Purchasing a book creates optimism. The buyer imagines evenings spent learning, thinking, or exploring new ideas. The purchase is not only about the book itself. It is about the person someone hopes to become through reading it.
Reality, however, introduces limits. Work, family, entertainment, and countless distractions compete for attention. Books accumulate because ambitions expand faster than schedules do.
This is why unread books rarely feel like failures. They often feel like possibilities waiting patiently on a shelf.
People sometimes believe they collect books for knowledge. More often, they collect reminders of who they still wish to become.
