Yes, but do you "engage in the Torah" as the Jewish rabbis advize? Reading is good, very good, but engaging, that is, really digging, reading it in the Hebrew, learning the Jewish exegetical means and ways, getting beneath the surface..... that's where the good stuff is, yes?
Now since I am finding myself in the Zohar because they have published it and opened it up to the world, even though we really do need our fellow Jews to help us out (though I hear they are forbidden from doing so, dang it) one thing the rabbis in Zohar say many times throughout (I am in volume 4 of the 12 volume set of Daniel Matt, Pritzker edition) is "Blessed are those who engage in Torah!" And then you read some umpteen 20 pages, 20 full pages of just one sentence!, and it completely blows your mind how good these fellow brothers are. I have just never read anything so thorough, so delightful, so puzzling, so obvious which I had missed before, and so mysterious, all in one! It's the most delightful thing I have ever done for myself at this stage get into the Zohar, engage, cross check, get into their own cross references trying to figure out why in the middle of talking about Adam all the sudden we are whisked away to Isaiah, and then back over to Psalms, and then out into the universe! Some of the most amazing stuff I have ever found.
So, yes, by all means keep reading, but engaging is the next higher step, and ....not trying to make it complicated, but....... one really does need to read Torah in the Hebrew, it's an entire new and expansive dimension the likes of which I have never before realized was so valuable! The Septuagint Greek is pure bonus also if you are really going to "engage."