The Pattern Seeker

Your reading behavior tells a story. What if you could actually see it?

You're already paying attention to yourself—journaling, tracking habits, working on patterns in therapy. You notice when your routines shift, when your energy changes, when something feels off.

Reading is one more lens. When you read, what you choose, how long you stay with it— it all reflects something about your internal state. Attention span. Stress levels. What you're curious about when.

Epigramm captures this automatically, then shows you what you didn't know you were doing.

Pattern Seeker
Epigramm
wait this is wild
what'd you find
i literally only read romance when i'm stressed at work
that's so interesting
like i thought i was just inconsistent but there's actually a pattern
your reading is reacting to your life
and i can SEE it now
that's what epigramm does
it's like reading behavior as emotional intelligence
exactly
ok this is going in my therapy notes
+
iMessage Waveform

Reading behavior as data about yourself

When you read reveals as much as what you read. Morning sessions versus late-night scrolling. The books you finish in two days versus the ones you abandon at 30%. What genres you reach for when life feels chaotic versus calm.

These patterns aren't random. They're information. Epigramm captures them automatically, without you having to think about it or manually log anything. Then it shows you what's actually happening.

The goal isn't to optimize your reading. It's to understand yourself better through it.

Patterns you didn't know existed

When you actually read

Not when you think you should, but when you actually do. See your reading plotted across days, weeks, months. Notice morning versus evening patterns. Identify which seasons of life support reading and which don't. Spot correlations you wouldn't have caught manually.

What you're drawn to when

Track what genres, authors, or types of books appear during different periods. See if you reach for lighter reads during stress or heavier ones when you have space. Notice reading as emotional regulation in action.

Your actual attention patterns

How long do you typically stay with a book before putting it down? What percentage do you usually reach before abandoning? When do you pick books back up after pauses? These patterns reveal how your attention actually works, not how you wish it worked.

Custom context you define

Tag books with whatever helps you understand them: "read during breakup," "helped with work stress," "therapy homework." Create your own categories that reflect experience, not just genre. Make your reading history searchable by what actually mattered.

What you can do with Epigramm

  • See reading sessions automatically tracked without manual input
  • Identify patterns across flexible time ranges (days, weeks, months, custom periods)
  • Tag books with personal context that means something to you
  • Export reading data for journaling, therapy notes, or personal archives
  • Compare different time periods to understand shifts in behavior
  • Save quotes and notes that capture what resonated

These features exist to reveal insight, not enforce behavior. No streaks. No guilt. Just patterns.

For people already doing the work

If you're already journaling, tracking habits, paying attention to your moods and patterns— this is one more data point. Reading behavior is rich with information about attention, stress, curiosity, capacity.

Epigramm doesn't try to fix you or make you more productive. It gives you visibility into something you're already doing, so you can notice things you wouldn't have caught otherwise.

"Oh, I always abandon books at 30% when I'm overwhelmed at work."
"I read way more in the mornings during winter."
"I'm drawn to memoirs when I'm processing something."

That kind of self-knowledge matters. That's what this is for.

Why this approach is different

Most reading apps focus on completion, consistency, or public display. They're designed to make you read more or look more impressive.

Epigramm starts from a different question: what if your reading behavior is already meaningful, and the app's job is just to help you see it clearly?

No judgment about inconsistency. No pressure to perform. Just automatic tracking that turns behavior into insight.

For Pattern Seekers, that distinction is everything.

Common questions

Is this a productivity tool?
No. Epigramm doesn't try to make you read more or change your behavior. It tracks what you're already doing and shows you the patterns.
What if my reading is really inconsistent?
Inconsistency is data. It often reveals something meaningful about what else is happening in your life. Epigramm treats it as information, not failure.
Do I have to manually track anything?
No. Reading sessions are captured automatically. You can add tags or notes if you want context, but the basic tracking happens without you thinking about it.
Can I export my data?
Yes. Your reading data belongs to you. Export it for journaling, therapy work, personal archives, or just because you want to.

More Frequently Asked Questions

Dive deeper into specific features and how Epigramm works.

Epigramm is coming soon.

We're putting the finishing touches on a new kind of reading companion. Join the list for product updates, invitations for beta readers, and a few quiet perks reserved for early fans.

No spam. No hype cycles. Just thoughtful updates when something real changes.