I’m very happy to have this guest post today — I just wish I’d set the schedule correctly. I love a nicely designed (and informative) infographic, and this definitely fits that. When I was asked if I’d be interested in posting this, I jumped on it. It’s a great way to commemorate the Bard’s birth.
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April not only marks the start of warmer temperatures and a new pile of spring reads, it is also the month of the birth of legendary playwright, William Shakespeare. The writer was born on April 23, 1564, and to celebrate, we’re highlighting some of his most strong-willed female heroines. Invaluable created a neat visual [N.B.: the image is much nicer if you follow the link than it does on the left there] that showcases a handful of Shakespeare’s most influential female characters, and explains just how each of them was given their memorable names. From Ophelia to Juliet herself, browse through these wonderful female characters and relive some of the most electrifying plays written by the celebrated, William Shakespeare in honor of his birth.
Category: Calendar Items Page 15 of 24

Today is the 103rd anniversary of Beverly Cleary’s birth, and drawing inspiration from Ramona Quimby some years ago, a group of people started commemorating her birth with a focus on families reading together. Which is just a cool idea. There’s a pretty good website with details and activities here.
I don’t really know if I can get my family to come together and read as a family anymore — but I can at least encourage them all to do it on their own. But for those of you who have younger kids (or more compliant teenagers), take a half-hour today and read together.
If you’re like me, or single, or just not into spending time with your family — it’s still a decent way to spend 30 minutes.
Just Drop Everything And Read
20 Books, 6258 pages (finished — a few were started earlier, and I’ve never done that page count before, and now I feel tired), an average of 3.8ish (my indecision on a couple of titles is stopping me from having a hard number — but I have to write my way to a conclusion on those). Overall, a decent month here. I hit a couple of hot streaks — there’s a few books here that will be in contention when I do the Best of 2019 lists, but man, there’s a couple I wish I hadn’t read. You take the good, you take the bad, and now you have the same song stuck in my head that I do.
So, here’s what happened here in March.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to:
Still Reading:
Ratings
I really don’t like being this flaky.
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2-3 | ![]() |
0-1 |
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4-5 | ![]() |
1 |
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3 | ![]() |
0 |
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5 | ![]() |
0 |
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3-4 | ||
| Average = | 3.8ish |
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Reviews Posted:
- The Great Brain (Audiobook) by John D. Fitzgerald, Ron McLarty: A frequently pleasant stroll down memory lane
- The Last Act by Brad Parks: He’s in the jailhouse now
- My Lovely Wife by Samantha Downing: I don’t think John Gray’s books cover marriages like this one
- And Drink I Did: One Man’s Story of Growing Through Recovery by Jay Keefe: An underdeveloped, but powerful memoir of addiction and recovery
- Not Everyone is Special by Josh Denslow: A Short Story Collection that’ll Gobsmack You at Least Once
- Killing State by Judith O’Reilly: I Can’t Suitably Encapsulate this Gripping Thriller
- Slow Horses by Mick Herron: A solid, if slow-building, entry point to a spy series
- Rogue Superheroes by Matt Cowper: Unintended Consequences Wreak All Sorts of Havoc on the Heroes’ Lives
- Who Killed the Fonz? by James Boice will leave you groovin’ all week
- Mama’s Gone by Leopold Borstinski: The Once and Future Lagotti Family
- No Country for Old Gnomes by Delilah S. Dawson and Kevin Hearne is a very foine booke that surpässes the original while showing full respect to the umlaut
- The First World Problems of Jason Van Otterloo by James Bailey: This Kid’s Struggles will Bring A Smile to Your Face
- Ronan Boyle and the Bridge of Riddles by Thomas Lennon, John Hendrix: A Young Irish Police Officer Takes on Leprechauns and other sorts of faerie folk.
- Crossline by Russ Colchamiro: Out along the edges, Always where they burn to be
TBR Pile/Mound/Heap:
Physical Books: 5 Added, 1 Read, 29 Remaining
E-Books: 1 Added, 0 Read, 20 Remaining
Audiobooks: 4 Added, 2 Read, 6 Remaining
Book Challenge Progress:
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2019 Library Love Challenge
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While I Was Reading 2019 Challenge |
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#LetsReadIndie Reading Challenge
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2019 Cloak & Dagger Challenge
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Humor Reading Challenge 2019
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2019 Cloud of Witnesses Reading Challenge
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How was your month?
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Been a crazy month around here, thanks to Fahrenbruary. More than twice the views and visitors over last February. Which ain’t half bad. I have some other thoughts about that part of the month that I’ll probably share soon. But even without that, it’s been a decent month. I’d have liked to have read a couple of more books and written a couple of more posts — but I’m not complaining. The quality of what I read was great on the whole, which is the important thing. Still, looking forward to March, I’ve got some great reads coming up.
Anyway, here’s what happened here in February.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to:
Still Reading:
Ratings
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4 | ![]() |
1 |
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1 | ![]() |
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7 | ![]() |
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2 | ![]() |
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4 | ||
| Average = 3.9 |
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Reviews Posted:
- Spare Room by Dreda Say Mitchell: Be It Ever So Creepy, There’s No Place Like Home
- In Their Own Words by David B. Calhoun: Not exactly what I expected, but a profitable read
- Slaughterhouse Blues by Nick Kolakowski: Broken Antiheroes on a Last Chance Power Drive
- The Disasters by M. K. England: Some Fun YA Popcorn SF
- The Lion’s Tail by Luna Miller, Aidan Isherwood (Translator): Unlikely doesn’t begin to describe the heroes of this debut PI novel
- The Assassination of Brangwain Spurge by M.T. Anderson and Eugene Yelchin: A wildly imaginative and creative MG Fantasy
- The Barista’s Guide to Espionage by Dave Sinclair: A Bond Girl à la Amy Sherman-Palladino leads this entertaining action story.
- Confess, Fletch (Audiobook) by Gregory Mcdonald, Dan John Miller: Fletch, Flynn, A Murder or two and a Heist. What more can you want?
- Main Bad Guy by Nick Kolakowski: A Blast of an Ending to this Trilogy
- Baptism: Answers to Common Questions by Guy M. Richard: A Solid and Encouraging Introduction to a Complicated Topic
- Circle of the Moon by Faith Hunter: PsyLED Fights its Biggest and Most Dangerous Foe and Troubles from Within
- Unstoppable Arsenal by Jeffery H. Haskell: Well, that escalated quickly . . .
- Black Moss by David Nolan: A Mystery that will Haunt You in a Stunning Debut Novel
- Standing in Another Man’s Grave by Ian Rankin: Back in the saddle again, Out where Cafferty is a friend?
- Seraphina’s Lament by Sarah Chorn: Beautiful, moving, and brutal. You haven’t read anything like this fantasy.
- Dead is Beautiful by Jo Perry: Another Winner for this Supernatural Duo
- Broken Dreams by Nick Quantrill: Meet Joe Geraghty, PI
- Saving the Reformation: The Pastoral Theology of the Canons of Dort by W. Robert Godfrey: A great Intro to the Canons of Dort and a valuable tool for study
- August by Jim Lusby: This troubled cop mystery just didn’t work for me
- The Murder Quadrille by Fidelis Morgan: A Clever, Well-Plotted, Fiasco of Crime
- A Burdizzo For A Prince by Mark Rapacz: A Vengeance Tale with a Lot of Personality
- Back Door to Hell by Paul Gadsby: Everybody be cool, that was a robbery!
TBR Pile/Mound/Heap:
Physical Books: 2 Added, 0 Read, 25 Remaining
E-Books: 3 Added, 8 Read, 19 Remaining
Audiobooks: 4 Added, 1 Read, 3 Remaining
Book Challenge Progress:
How was your month?
A few things you need to know before I start this: 1. Within the last two weeks, my laptop has stopped giving me warnings when my battery goes below 10%; 2 I am an idiot.
I started this early, I’ve never done that before. In fact, I had this about 40% done Wednesday night when my laptop battery died. Now, for various and sundry reasons, I use Notepad while I’m building these posts, and I had three different Notepad windows open, and was in a good groove working on this. Now, I hadn’t done a good job using the “Save Draft” button in WordPress and had not saved any of the Notepad windows (see #2 above). So when the battery just died on me, I know I yelled. I didn’t cuss/swear/curse/whatever you want to call it out loud, my kids were around and I try to be a good example. But I assure you, I thought a long blue streak. Between the discouragement from that, and my inability to arrange my thoughts about a novel afterwards, I ended up not posting anything Thursday. January in general has seen more days without a post than I like — this week was pretty typical.
But February will be busier — guaranteed. Fahrenbruary will be good for that, if nothing else.
Anyway, here’s what happened here in January. Good books, some decent posts (if I do say so myself). 2019 is off to a good start.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to:
Still Reading:
Ratings
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5 | ![]() |
0 |
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2 | ![]() |
0 |
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3 | ![]() |
0 |
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3 | ![]() |
0 |
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8 | ||
| Average = 3.79 |
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Reviews Posted:
- P Is for Pterodactyl: The Worst Alphabet Book Ever by Raj Haldar, Chris Carpenter, Maria Beddia: Twisted, Fun and even Educational
- Doctor Who: Rose by Russell T. Davies: It All Starts with — and Comes Back to — Rose
- Deep Dirty Truth by Steph Broadribb: Once Again, the Lori’s (almost) in Over her Head
- Fletch (Audiobook) by Gregory Mcdonald, Dan John Miller: A Strong Audio Version of One of My All-Time Favorites
- The Impossible Dead by Ian Rankin: Malcolm Fox Uncovers Corruption both Past and Present
- In an Absent Dream by Seanan McGuire: Another Wayward Child’s story — magical, enchanting, heartbreaking. You know the drill.
- Not Famous by Matthew Hanover: A Sweet bit of Lad Lit that’ll fill your Heart with Song.
- The Power of the Dog by Don Winslow: A truly magnificent book that I can’t adequately express my appreciation for
- Finders Keepers: The Definitive Edition by Russ Colchamiro: A Very Strange SF Romp
- Flight of the Fox by Gray Basnight: An Unlikely Hero. A Credible Threat. A Story You Hope Is Fiction
- Awakenings by Edward Lazellari: A Solid Beginning to a Portal Fantasy Series with a Twist
- Here and Now and Then by Mike Chen: A Dad. A Daughter. And Time Travel. (Kleenex may be required)
- The Reach of Shadows by Tony J. Forder: A Gripping Mystery, a Haunted Past, A Strong Novel
- A Brutal Bunch of Heartbroken Saps by Nick Kolakowski: A fast, fun, and bullet-ridden adventure
- Death Valley Superstars by Duke Haney: Cautionary Tales about Hollywood
- Immoral Code by Lillian Clark: A Heist Novel where the Heist is maybe the Dullest Part
TBR Heap:
Physical Books: 4 Added/5 Read
E-Books: 2 Added/0 Read
Audiobooks: 3 Added/3 Read
…only 1 net addition. Not bad.
Book Challenge Progress:
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2019 Library Love Challenge
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While I Was Reading 2019 Challenge ✔ An essay collection: Death Valley Superstars by Duke Haney |
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#LetsReadIndie Reading Challenge
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2019 Cloak & Dagger Challenge
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Humor Reading Challenge 2019
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2019 Cloud of Witnesses Reading Challenge
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How was your month?
As we kick off 2019, I wanted to take a glance back at 2018. 258 books read (plus comics, picture books, short stories, and the like that I don’t know how to count) — I exceeded my goal (nothing like exceeding an arbitrary number to boost the ol’ ego), 380 posts (short of my goal by a couple hundred, and worse — 15 fewer than 2017, which was down from 2016. This is a trend that I need to reverse). I had some strong gains in traffic — views and visitors — actually, strong gains doesn’t quite cut it. Consider my mind boggled. I’m also seeing good growth in followers here and on various social media fronts, which is encouraging as all get out — not just growth in numbers, but I’m actually interacting with people (and vice versa).
So here’s my breakdown of books by genre, like the one I did last year. Genre labeling is more difficult this year, I read a lot of hybrids, but I tend to go with the overarching genre (for example, Brassley’s The Drifting Lands books are fantasy novels in a SF setting, I went with Fantasy). Mystery/Suspense/Thriller is back to where it should be. Fantasy jumped up a bit, and Urban Fantasy took a dive. It’s been forever since I’ve read a Western, I guess (at least one that wasn’t a hybrid with Urban Fantasy or SF or something) — and I had to add a category for Poetry. Theological books went down in actual numbers, not just percent — but I read some big, technical stuff this year that take a lot of time/energy to read, so I’m not too bothered by that. Still, for someone who doesn’t plan too thoroughly, the percentages stay remarkably the same from year to year — tastes (and series I follow) apparently stay the same.
| Genre | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children’s | 11 (4%) | 7 (3%) | 5 (2%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Fantasy | 30 (11%) | 7 (3%) | 31 (13%) | 17 (9%) | 11 (7%) | 15 (8%) | 12 (6%) |
| General Fiction/ Literature | 22 (8%) | 29 (10%) | 27 (11%) | 17 (9%) | 7 (4%) | 30 (16%) | 30 (14%) |
| Horror | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (.4%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Humor | 3 (1%) | 1 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (1%) | 3 (2%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller | 107 (38%) | 102 (37%) | 61 (25%) | 64 (34%) | 62 (37%) | 63 (33%) | 73 (35%) |
| Non-Fiction | 22 (8%) | 10 (4%) | 11 (5%) | 8 (4%) | 4 (2%) | 2 (1%) | 11 (5%) |
| Poetry | 1 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Science Fiction | 25 (9%) | 27 (10%) | 37 (15%) | 16 (8%) | 17 (10%) | 14 (7%) | 11 (5%) |
| Steampunk | 3 (1%) | 1 (0%) | 2 (1%) | 7 (4%) | 3 (2%) | 3 (2%) | 11 (5%) |
| Theology/ Christian Living | 25 (9%) | 30 (11%) | 33 (14%) | 42 (22%) | 42 (25%) | 37 (19%) | 10 (5%) |
| Urban Fantasy | 29 (10%) | 45 (16%) | 36 (15%) | 19 (10%) | 20 (12%) | 26 (14%) | 48 (23%) |
| Western | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
- Enough about me. I want to talk about you, who keep me going and show an interest in what I’m doing here and give some thanks to people for their impact on The Irresponsible Reader (the blog and the person) in 2018:
- Thanks to everyone for your comments/feedback — texts, emails, comments here/BookLikes/Goodreads, tweets, FB comments, even the occasional Face-to-Face conversation. Keep it up! I really appreciate the time you took to leave feedback. Hopefully you can tell that you’ve shaped the conversation here — it has, I assure you. Many of you are pushing me to be better writers — some of you push me to read better books.
- Flattered thanks to (in no particular order): 500words, Ethan Bayes, Haden Clark, Amy Sparks, lynnm2018, Paula Bardell-Hedley, BookieWookie, awritersramblings446569187, Somya Gujjar, LFBooks, andrea bindi, rimpytoor, Jakirra Ballard, Beardy Book Blogger, A D Solomon, spacefaith1 (thanks for the follow, but not linking to that banner pic, sorry), Alicia Reads, Arrowhead Freelance and Publishing, Stephanie, Tim Miller, KL, [there was going to be another name here, but I’m pretty sure it’s merely an attempt to get us all to buy iffy tourist packages to the UK], ankandas, Jess T., steamstefny, millennialdrowning, Merv, Danielle The Bookworm, damppebbles, oddandbookish, Samantha Loves To Read, irevuo, factfictionfake, savageddt, Charlie De Luca, Higginbotham Publications, Carla Alexandra Rodrigues, jstlouise, Sritha Bandla, James Remmer, moviewarden, Eva Newermann, glenn van nostrand, T.Jaye, Tatiana Ketchum, linaprosserr, annhwkns77, Allie Sumner, lindsayjohnna, thisischechewinnie, vibealittle, cagedunn, Aspen Kendrick, atozmom, https://crossfitmomm.com/, jendionne10, figlia dei fiori, Deb / Being Aunt Debbie, Dog Training Guidance, Cristian Mihai, pitchstory, Jordan Peters, A Star on the Forehead, Tiana (The Book Raven), V Ramasamy, dpranita583 (don’t click on that link if you’re hungry, btw), Peg Glover, SAM, http120111324 (which is one of the stranger monikers I’ve come across online, but I’m pretty sure there’s a person behind this), Clarissa, Jenn, Leah’s Bookish Obsession,Johnny, EduPub, Liv Miles, simplymyswank, Adam Wall, RABT Book Tours and PR, Cali’s bookcamp, lifecanbebeautifulyolo, wisdomfromafather, Ola G, francestaylorblg, ingrid baker, blgkaelabl, Equipping, Williwash, angelgwapaxd, SindrElf, mithilamohan0123, Redeemed Three, The Godly Chic Diaries, littleliteraturekc, pinnaclemotivation, wittysarcasticbookclub, AlbertHolmes, The Sunday Feeling, hellotheregigi, Moonlight Snow, Fashion-Creative thinking, jennifertarheelreader, Jenniely, Pinklotus76, Word Hunter, Russell Deasley, february87, Ontheminds, awesomeyou, whinney, Di Salvo Cambiamento, Arganise Campbell, and Shalini for being new followers (at least for a post or two) of the blog (in one of its forms) this year — the size of this list shocks me, and I hope you all got at least something out of it. (I sincerely hope I didn’t miss anyone)
- Hearty thanks to (in no particular order): Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris, David Baldacci, Scott Brick, Joel R. Beeke, Harry Bingham, Haya Magner, Miri Leshem-Peli, James Alan Gardner, Nick Offerman, Seanan McGuire, Douglas Light, Francis Portela, Samuel Renihan, Ian Rankin, Gregg Hurwitz, Jody Houser, Pere Pérez, Marguerite Sauvage, Colleen Doran, Preston Randall, Dennis Maley, Thomas Perry, Michael Kramer, Aman Mittal, Charles St. Anthony, Rod A. Walters, Vincent Chu, Sean Grigsby, Benedict Jacka, Gildart Jackson, Michael Allen, Pierce Brown, Peta Lemon, Maria Dasic Todoric, Neil Simon, Max Casella, Peter Michael Goetz, Valerie Harper, Alexana Lambros, Anna Sophie Loewenberg, Jonathan Silverman, Joyce Van Patten, JW Bowe, Katherine Moennig, Alex Wells, Simon Garfield, in60learning, Ryan McGraw, Myke Cole, Joe Ponepinto, David Ahern, B.C.R. Fegan, Lenny Wen, Nurit Zvolon, Rotem Lots-Zaiden, Stephanie Marland, John Hughson, Ali Smith, Sergey Grechishkin, K. J. Howe, Darrell Drake, Marissa Meyer, Stephen Gilpin, Yaakov Malkin, Shmuel Sermoneta-Gertel, Steven Brust, Michael J. Kruger, Kevin Hearne, Tom Rachman, Carolyn Arnold, Walter Kerr, Steve Cavanagh, Barb Taub, David W. Barbee, Mercedes Lackey, Luca Veste, Patricia Briggs, Lorelei King, P. G. Wodehouse, Simon Prebble, Drew Magary, Christopher Lane, Ace Atkins, Cassandra Khaw, Vern Poythress, Rica Newbery, Alan S. Kessler, J. K. Rowling, Jim Dale, Michael R. Underwood, Alex Bledsoe, The Babylon Bee, Jim Butcher, James Marsters, Nicky Peacock, Malka Ann Older, Simon Hall, Stephanie Tromly, Kathleen McInerney, Faith Hunter, Khristine Hvam, Dan O’Brien, Janet Elizabeth Croon, Michael Koryta, Rick Riordan, Michael Crouch, Aida Rascanu, Beatrice Magrini, Ian Patrick, George Guidall, Simon Bower, Paul F. Yeulett, Delilah S. Dawson, Todd Miles, Layton Green, Michael Connelly, Marie Brennan, Susan Duerden, Rhett Dodson, E. J. Copperman, Jeff Cohen, Jenny T. Colgan, Russell Day, Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, Jodi Meadows, Katherine Kellgren, Ken Jennings, Mark Dever, Luke Daniels, Derek W. H. Thomas, Willie Davis, Jeffery H. Haskell, Reed Farrel Coleman, Dave Barry, Becky Chambers, Lee Goldberg, Beth Mattson, Paul Cornell, Coleman Alexander, Duncan MacMaster, Lisa Lutz, Nick Kolakowski, Jodi Taylor, Chris von Halle, Gail Honeyman, Erica Wright, Joseph Brassey, James Stansfield, M. W. Craven, Andrew Cartmel, Darrin Doyle, Chuck Waldron, Derek & Dave Philpott, Jordan Harper, Amy Stewart, Rebecca BradleyRebecca Bradley, Nicholas Eames, Mark David Zaslove, Fonda Lee, Nicholas Petrie, A. Lee Martinez, Cristelle Comby, Carrie Vaughn, Marguerite Gavin, Jo Platt, J.C. Jackson, Bradley Horner, Jeremy Billups, Jasper Fforde, Emily Gray, Clare Blanchard, Holter Graham, Russel D. McLean, Sinclair Ferguson, Brent Jones, Kevin DeYoung, Cheryl Denise Bannerman, Robert Galbraith, Nevin Martell, Jeremy Arthur, Gail Carriger, Craig Johnson, Greg van Eekhout, Mark Manson, Roger Wayne, Robin Sloan, Therese Plummer, Ruth Sutton, Ben Aaronovitch, Mike Lupica, Andrew Field, Michael Connelly, D. G. Hart, Donald S. Whitney, Joe Ide, Margaret Stohl, Julia Whelan, Gary Raymond, Mark Eglinton, Spencer Quinn, Jim Frangione, Rob Sinclair, Julie Klam, Karen White, Jenn Stroud Rossmann, Arline Cooper, S.L. Huang, Richard B. Gaffin, John Marrs, Jon Rance, Jay Stringer, Napoleon Ryan Heather Wilds, Matt Phillips, Cassandra Gelvin, Christopher A. Hutchinson, Guy Prentiss Waters, Nick Spalding, Sarah Knight, Anna Willett, Oyinkan Braithwaite, Laura Hicks, Gregory Mcdonald, Dan John Miller, Meghan Scott Molin, Ben Sasse, David Rosenfelt, Grover Gardner, Matthew Hanover, J. F. Pandolfi, Steph Broadribb, Lee Child, Betsy Reavley, Mary Oliver, John Burgoyne, Matt Cowper, Jon Voss, GJ Moffat, Nicholson Baker, Bill Todd, Raj Haldar, Chris Carpenter, Maria Beddia, Kurt Scheffler, Janet Evanovich, Winston Graham, Danny E. Olinger, John Owen, Russell T. Davies, Marie Lu and Will Damron this blog would be nothing without your efforts, your blood, sweat, tears, fears, work, love, dreams, hopes, art and words. Your books were my companions throughout this year, and I can’t thank you enough for them (and I hope I get to spend time with many of you again soon!).
- More thanks to all those who requested that I read and talk about your (or your clients’) books. I know how much the work, effort, heart, and everything that went into your books. It’s super humbling, I know you all didn’t like what I said, but, I am grateful for the opportunity. Sorry, I didn’t list you all by name this year, but I’d have forgotten one (am making a better effort on this in 2019).
- Many thanks to David Ahern, Nick Kolakowski, Chuck Waldron, Derek and Dave Philpott, and Matt Cowper for taking time out of your busy schedules to answer a few quick questions with me this year! (Note to self: I did too few of these this year, work on that).
- A special thanks to my wife. Without your support, indulgence and patience this thing wouldn’t exist — and I’d read a lot less (the horror!). Thank you. I love you.
- And thank you all for reading. Honestly, each time I get a notification of a like, or a share, or a follow, etc. it makes my day. To know that someone took a couple of seconds or more out of their day to glance at this? It means the world to me. Thanks.
Have a great 2019, hope you find plenty of good things to read!
So, this is the end of December. The end of 2018. As I said earlier, I started a new job, so my numbers are a little lower — I think this is likely the new normal (at least for a while). Twenty-two books is nothing to sneeze at, really. I think I know I say this too frequently for anyone to take me seriously (including myself), but I really didn’t write as much as I wanted to this month. But I rested a lot. I did like a good amount of what I actually wrote, so there’s that. Anyhow, some of the highs from this year — and a couple of lows, in other words — December was pretty representative.
So, here’s what happened here in December.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to:
Still Reading:
Reviews Posted:
- The Frame-Up by Meghan Scott Molin: Likeable Characters, Strong Mystery, & Geeky Fun Combine for a Winning Debut
- Mr. Pizza by J. F. Pandolfi: A Winsome Tale of a Rookie Teacher
- The Complaints by Ian Rankin: Introducing the anti-Rebus, Malcolm Fox
- Them: Why We Hate Each Other – and How to Heal by Ben Sasse: A Profound and Helpful (and Hopeful) Book I Wish I Could Adequately Discuss
- Murder in the Dark by Betsy Reavley: This look at murder’s aftermath feels as authentic as a True Crime book
- Dog Songs by Mary Oliver, John Burgoyne: A combination of one of my favorite topics and least favorite form
- The United Smiths of America by Jon Voss: I read it so you don’t have to.
- Blackwater by GJ Moffat: A Brutal and Gripping American Crime Story
- The Everlasting Story of Nory by Nicholson Baker: A Look at Life through the Eyes of a 9-year-old Girl
- Godlefe’s Cuckoo by Bill Todd: A Deadly Game of Hide-and-Go-Seek
- The World Savers by Matt Cowper: A Bang-Up Start to a new Super-Hero Series
- Hardcore Twenty-Four by Janet Evanovich: A Swing-and-a-Miss from a Typically Reliable Source
- The Crescent and the Cross by Kurt Scheffler: An Uneven But Ultimately Satisfying Historical Fiction
- Ross Poldark by Winston Graham: A decent read, but it’s not for me.
- Past Tense by Lee Child: If this wasn’t a Reacher book, I’d probably like it more…
- Just the Clothes on My Back – a collaboration with Lee Child by Naked Blue: Jack Reacher Rocks
Book Challenge Progress:
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Past Tense by Lee Child The Impossible Dead by Ian Rankin Ross Poldark by Winston Graham Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J. K. Rowling, Jim Dale |
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Mr. Pizza by J. F. Pandolfi Murder in the Dark by Betsy Reavley The United Smiths of America by Jon Voss P Is for Pterodactyl: The Worst Alphabet Book Ever by Raj Haldar, Chris Carpenter, Maria Beddia The Crescent and the Cross by Kurt Scheffler Ross Poldark by Winston Graham Dog Songs by Mary Oliver, John Burgoyne Geerhardus Vos: Reformed Biblical Theologian, Confessional Presbyterian by Danny E. Olinger Doctor Who: Rose by Russell T. Davies |
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Mr. Pizza by J. F. Pandolfi Murder in the Dark by Betsy Reavley The World Savers by Matt Cowper The United Smiths of America by Jon Voss P Is for Pterodactyl: The Worst Alphabet Book Ever by Raj Haldar, Chris Carpenter, Maria Beddia The Crescent and the Cross by Kurt Scheffler |
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✔ Read a book that takes place in one day: The United Smiths of America by Jon Voss ✔ Read a collection of poetry: Dog Songs by Mary Oliver, John Burgoyne ✔ Read a book you received as a gift: The Crescent and the Cross by Kurt Scheffler ✔ Read a book recommended by one of your parents (in-laws count): Ross Poldark by Winston Graham ✔ Read a book with your favorite food in the title.: Mr. Pizza by J. F. Pandolfi |
How was your month?
Well, November happened. Lot’s of pretty cool stuff in my non-blog life, and things related to the blog. Pretty good reading month — almost good writing month. Some less-than-good reads, plenty of great reads. Nothing to complain about, that’s for sure.
So anyway, here’s what happened here in November.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to:
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Still Deciding | ![]() |
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Still Reading:
Reviews Posted:
- Zero Sum Game by S.L. Huang: A Healthy Dose of SF Peanut Butter in this Thriller’s Chocolate Results in a Very Tasty Book
- Two Kinds of Truth by Michael Connelly: Bosch Enters New Territory and Revisits some Old in Two Very Different cases
- Dark Sacred Night by Michael Connelly: Bosch and Ballard Team Up in one of Connelly’s best
- Some quick thoughts on Lethal White by Robert Galbraith
- The Green Viper by Rob Sinclair: A strong, twisty thriller that will satisfy
- Be Brave, Little Puffy by Arline Cooper: A Cute Fish Tale
- The Twisted Web by Rebecca Bradley: A Great Hook and Subtle Storytelling Make for a Compelling Read
- The Place You’re Supposed to Laugh by Jenn Stroud Rossmann: A Great Read about the Less-Glamorous, Less-Successful Side of Silicon Valley
- Her Last Move by John Marrs: This Thriller Left Me Feeling Gobsmacked and Awestruck
- The Vinyl Detective: Written in Dead Wax by Andrew Carmel: A great intro to one of the most unlikely thriller heroes around
- You Had Me at Woof (Audiobook) by Julie Klam, Karen White: A meandering mess of vaguely dog-related memoirs.
- Depth of Winter by Craig Johnson: Walt Goes South of the Border on a Rescue Mission
- Know Me from Smoke by Matt Phillips: A heart-wrenching noir love story.
- Dry Hard by Nick Spalding: Who needs to drink when you can have this much fun reading?
- Degrading Orbits by Bradley Horner: What comes next for the Star-Crossed Axel and Helen
- Kitties Are Not Good To Eat by Cassandra Gelvin: and other useful and cute advice on feline care for the younger set.
- The Lord’s Supper as the Sign and Meal of the New Covenant by Guy Prentiss Waters: A Thoughtful & Encouraging Look at the Supper in its Redemptive-Historical Context
- Small Town Nightmare by Anna Willett: A Creepy and Fast Adventure
- My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite: A Charming, Dark, and (somehow) Fun Serial Killer Tale
- The Summer Holidays Survival Guide by Jon Rance: Heart-warming and Funny Bone-Tickling
- They Promised Me the Gun Wasn’t Loaded by James Alan Gardner: The Newest Canadian Super-Heroes are Back in Action
Book Challenge Progress:
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You Had Me at Woof (Audiobook) by Julie Klam, Karen White The Complaints by Ian Rankin My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite They Promised Me the Gun Wasn’t Loaded by James Alan Gardner Mr. Monk Goes to the Firehouse by Lee Goldberg, Laura Hicks Play Dead by David Rosenfelt, Grover Gardner |
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The Green Viper by Rob Sinclair The Place You’re Supposed to Laugh by Jenn Stroud Rossmann Be Brave, Little Puffy by Arline Cooper The Summer Holidays Survival Guide by Jon Rance Know Me from Smoke by Matt Phillips Kitties Are Not Good To Eat by Cassandra Gelvin Dry Hard by Nick Spalding Small Town Nightmare by Anna Willett You Had Me at Woof (Audiobook) by Julie Klam, Karen White My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite Her Last Move by John Marrs Rediscovering Humility: Why the Way Up is Downby Christopher Hutchinson The Frame-Up by Meghan Scott Molin |
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The Green Viper by Rob Sinclair The Place You’re Supposed to Laugh by Jenn Stroud Rossmann Be Brave, Little Puffy by Arline Cooper The Twisted Web by Rebecca Bradley Degrading Orbits by Bradley Horner The Summer Holidays Survival Guide by Jon Rance Know Me from Smoke by Matt Phillips Kitties Are Not Good To Eat by Cassandra Gelvin Dry Hard by Nick Spalding Small Town Nightmare by Anna Willett |
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✔ Read an audio book with multiple narrators: Ways to die in Glasgow by Heather Wilds, Napoleon Ryan ✔ Read a book you chose based on the cover: Know Me from Smoke by Matt Phillips: A heart-wrenching noir love story. |
How was your month?
Happy Thanksgiving/Turkey Day/Thursday
(depending on your location/preference)
When I think about all the great things that have happened around the blog and behind the scenes this year leaves me at a loss for words, let me list a few things I’m thankful for — a very incomplete list, I assure you:
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- The readers of this blog, the authors who’ve corresponded with me/provided books for me to read/encouraged me — even promoted this here project. The messages of support/care/encouragement that we received from you all when my son got his kidney were inexpressibly helpful.
- The publicists, publishers, book tour hosts, etc. I’ve been working with this year who’ve especially made things great — I typically hesitate to mention any by name, so as to not inadvertently miss anyone and cause offense (and make me feel bad). But I want to mention two by name this year — Lori Hettler of TNBBC Publicity and Emma at damppebbles blog tours. You two have expanded (and pushed) my boundaries this year, exposed me to some great reads I’d have not tried, and put up with my quirks and memory lapses with grace.
- Books
- Authors!
- Books
- Coffee (and other beverages both caffeinated and adult)
- Books
- Time to read
- Books
- Easily finding an appropriate image for this post for the second year in a row
- Books
- Easily finding an appropriate image for this post for a change
- Audiobooks and talented narrators
- The Nampa Public Library (and The LYNX! Consortium) — and their generous grace period
- Books
- Rediscovered Books and Libro.fm
- Books
- Goodreads, WordPress, NetGalley, BookLikes
- Books
- Evernote (but you’re making it harder)
- Books
- Organ Transplants (just to get serious for a moment)
- Authors!
- Authors!
My supportive, understanding and encouraging wife and kids who do a pretty decent job pretending to care when their old man drones on and on about what he’s reading or what’s going on with the blog.
- Again, all of you who read, follow, like, tweet, comment, email, etc. this page — you have no idea how much every little bit is appreciated.
A lot of highs, a couple of lows — and a decent amount of stuff in between. I’d hoped to get more written — but, I’m not beating myself up over it (or so I keep telling myself). I made some decent progress on the reading challenges I’m tackling. All in all, a pretty good month, I think.
Here’s what happened here in October.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to:
Still Reading:
Reviews Posted:
- Looking for Calvin and Hobbes (Audiobook) by Nevin Martell, Jeremy Arthur: A close-up look at the Cartoonist and His Creation
- Scoundrels Among Us by Darrin Doyle: An Impressive Array of Short Fiction
- Trouble Never Sleeps by Stephanie Tromly: Tromly (and Digby & Zoe) saved the best for last.
- Burning Secrets by Ruth Sutton: A Child Abduction Sets Off a Disturbing Chain of Events
- Voyage of the Dogs by Greg van Eekhout: An All-Ages SF that is a sure-fire crowd-pleaser
- The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck (Audiobook) by Mark Manson, Roger Wayne: A Mix of Common Sense, Cynicism, Self-Aggrandizement, Clever Writing, and a Great Narrator
- Dead Blind by Rebecca Bradley: A gripping thriller featuring a uniquely disqualified hero
- Lies Sleeping by Ben Aaronovitch: Things get Intense in the Ongoing Conflict between The Faceless Man and The Folly.
- Blood Feud by Mike Lupica: Sunny Randall’s Back in this Promising Reintroduction
- A Few Thoughts on Changes (Audiobook) by Jim Butcher, James Marsters
- The Ten Commandments by Kevin DeYoung: A Warm, Engaging Study of God’s Revealed Will
- Without Rules by Andrew Field: A dark tale where many means are justified
- Just One Damned Thing After Another by Jodi Taylor: A Delightfully Charming and Fun Time-Travel Epic Kicks Off
- She Rides Shotgun by Jordan Harper: A Gripping Thriller, A Touching Father-Daughter Story, a Special Kind of Crime Novel
- Night and Silence by Seanan McGuire: Toby Daye’s shattered world gets another blow — can she survive?
- Video Killed the Radio Star by Duncan MacMaster: A Murder Mystery as Fun as The Buggles’ Song
- Exit Music by Ian Rankin: Rebus has one more shot at Big Ger before he retires
- Wrecked by Joe Ide: Isaiah and Dodson Face Their Most Dangerous Foes Yet
- The Golden Orphans by Gary Raymond: An Artist, A Mysterious Russian and an Enigmatic Island
- Time’s Up, Afton by Brent Jones: Jones Wraps Things Up with a Suspenseful and Successful Conclusion
- So Let It Be Written by Mark Eglinton: A Disappointingly Delivered Account of a Rock Star’s Career
Book Challenge Progress:
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Voyage of the Dogs by Greg van Eekhout The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck (Audiobook) by Mark Manson, Roger Wayne Sourdough (Audiobook) by Robin Sloan, Therese Plummer The Defense by Steve Cavanagh, Adam Sims Exit Music by Ian Rankin Woof by Spencer Quinn, James Frangione Wrecked by Joe Ide Zero Sum Game by S.L. Huang Black Widow: Forever Red by Margaret Stohl, Julia Whelan So Let It Be Written by Mark Eglinton |
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Burning Secrets by Ruth Sutton The Golden Orphans by Gary Raymond Zero Sum Game by S.L. Huang Black Widow: Forever Red by Margaret Stohl, Julia Whelan So Let It Be Written by Mark Eglinton Blood Feud by Mike Lupica Without Rules by Andrew Field Voyage of the Dogs by Greg van Eekhout The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck (Audiobook) by Mark Manson, Roger Wayne |
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Burning Secrets by Ruth Sutton The Golden Orphans by Gary Raymond Time’s Up, Afton by Brent Jones Without Rules by Andrew Field Video Killed the Radio Star by Duncan MacMaster |
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✔ Read a memoir or biography of a musician you like: So Let It Be Written by Mark Eglinton ✔ Read a book with your favorite food in the title.: Sourdough (Audiobook) by Robin Sloan, Therese Plummer |
How was your month?

























































































































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