We Used the Glocusent Book Light, 3-Color & 6-Brightness Reading Light, Bendable Neck Light, for 3 Months — Here's What Happened

When I first bought the Glocusent Book Light — the 3-color, 6-brightness bendable-neck model — it was because I wanted a compact, rechargeable reading light for late-night pages without waking my partner. After three months of actual use (not just quick tests), I have a good sense of where it shines and where it falls short. Below I walk through my experience in detail: how it performs day-to-day, the things I liked, the annoyances I ran into, a short comparison to my prior bedside lights, a practical buying guide, and my final takeaway.

Quick overview

I used the Glocusent primarily for bedroom reading, a few work-at-coffee-shop sessions, and while traveling. I clipped it to paperbacks, hardcovers and the brim of a cloth headboard; I also propped it on a bedside table for more diffuse light. The light has three color modes (warm, neutral, cool), six brightness levels, a flexible gooseneck, and a clip that attaches to books or surfaces. It’s rechargeable via a USB cable and is light enough to toss in a travel pouch.

First impressions and build quality

Out of the box, the unit felt lightweight and well finished for the price. The clip is a hard plastic with soft pads where it contacts pages or surfaces; the pads prevent scratching in most cases but aren't indestructible. The gooseneck is flexible and holds its shape well enough to aim the beam, but it isn’t as rigid as a metal goose-neck on more expensive lamps — I found myself readjusting occasionally after moving the book.

One detail I noticed immediately: the on-device buttons are tactile and easy to operate in the dark. There's a single button for power and cycling brightness, and a second button for switching color modes. That simplicity is welcome when you're fumbling under blankets.

Light quality and modes — the heart of the experience

What I found most important after three months was how usable the light actually is for reading for extended periods:

My real-world usage notes

For three months I tracked a few practical things. I used warm/level 2 most nights and left it on for sessions ranging from 30 minutes to 2 hours. On medium brightness, a full charge lasted me multiple evenings — roughly 8–10 hours total across that setting before the indicator showed low. On the highest setting, runtime dropped a lot (I observed it lasting only a few hours). The lamp charged with the included USB cable in under 2 hours from a wall adapter.

One thing I appreciated: the warm color on low brightness was gentle enough that it didn’t seem to interfere with my wind-down routine. I noticed I fell asleep as easily as with a standard bedside lamp—but I also found reading at high cool settings made me feel more awake, which was useful for proofreading or study sessions.

Clip and neck: convenience versus limitations

The clip does its job: it holds to book covers, magazines, and a thin mattress headboard. It’s strong enough that I could clip it on and read while lounging without the clip sliding. The soft pads help, but I did notice two issues over time:

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Battery life and charging behavior

I tested battery life under different conditions so I could give realistic numbers:

Charging is straightforward with a USB cable, and the lamp reports battery status with a small LED indicator. I liked that the included cable was long enough for bedside charging. I also appreciated that the lamp holds charge well when stored for a few days between trips.

Durability after three months

After three months of daily use, the lamp shows minor signs of wear — very small scuffs on the clip pads and a tiny seam separation in the plastic housing near the hinge (no functional problem). The LEDs haven’t dimmed, and the buttons still click reliably. If you’re hard on gear (constantly stuffing it into bags, stepping on it, etc.), I’d treat it as a mid-range device: sturdy for normal use but not invincible.

Use cases where it excelled