Category: News/Misc. Page 61 of 228

The Irresponsible Reader in 2023: Thoughts, Thanks, and Stats

Programming Note: As is my custom, over the next week I’ll be looking back over the year that was—but I’ll try to come up with some new material, too. Many/most others have already done their best-of/year-end wrap-up posts, but I’m a stickler—I can’t start doing this kind of thing ’til the year is over. My brain doesn’t allow me to work that way (I just hate projecting things in general—and some years ago when I just read irresponsibly but hadn’t adopted the name, the last novel of the year was so far beyond the rest that I can’t start looking back until 12/31 at the earliest).

As we kick off 2024, I wanted to take a glance back at 2023—304 books finished (plus comics, picture books, short stories, and the like that I don’t know how to count)—my mind is thoroughly boggled! I exceeded my goal (nothing like exceeding an arbitrary number to boost the ol’ ego), too; finishing over 82,481 pages (too many audio-only things, to get an accurate count); with an average rating of 3.68 Stars (exactly the same as last year…how’s that for consistency).

On the blog front, I put up 626 postsan all-time high for me!! Thanks have to be given for all the contributors I had to a couple of series of posts this year that made that possible (I’ll get to this below). I had another year of strong gains in trafficviews and visitorsI’m not big-time (never going to be), but those numbers consistently weird me out (which is why I only look every 6-12 months). My follower count (here and on social media sites) is encouraging and humbling, I really feel like I ought to do more to earn them. Maybe there’s a book on how to be more interesting as a person that I should grab.

This was a year for series for me (which is partially why I’m so far behind on my To-Write-About pile). I (yet again) didn’t get back to my Classic Spenser series (which is grating), and I got too caught up in other stuff and abandoned my monthly Highlights: Lines Worth Repeating series (it’ll be back soon). But on the positive side, my Literary Locals series really took off and I launched my Grandpappy’s Corner, a true labor of love. My contribution to Self-Published Author Appreciation Week, The Inside Scoop—Self-Published Authors Talk About Self-Publishing turned out to be far bigger than I expected—and far better than I hoped. Lastly, there was the Top 5 All-Time Desert Island Books series of guest posts, which I particularly enjoyed.

I, like many readers, am an introvert. But this year, I went out of my way to attend some in-person events, and hope to do some more of that. There were a couple of individual signings and readings, some other events at Rediscovered Books, the Nampa Library’s Treasure Valley Indie Book Fair, the Boise Library’s Comic Arts Fest and their Book Faire, and a meeting of IdaHope. It was great to interact with fellow readers and some authors apart from the screen. I started to list the authors I met, and then realized I’d forget at least one and would feel horrible. So…you know who you are, if you’re reading this, I really enjoyed interacting with you. I should probably list recording an episode of Let Me Tell You a Story as meeting an author (and her husband), but that was for Internet consumption, so it feels strange including it with all this offline stuff (but oh man…such a fun thing to do!).

As is my habit, here’s my breakdown of books by genre—I tweaked the table a bit, so it actually fits on the screen (or should). Genre labeling continues to be more difficult as I’m reading a lot of hybrids (most of us are, they’re being produced more), but I tend to go with the overarching genre. Once again, for someone who doesn’t plan too thoroughly, the percentages stay remarkably consistent from year to yearmy tastes (and the series I follow) apparently stay the same. I was surprised by the Mystery/Suspense/Thriller drop, and am bothered by the Theology drop (although a lot of those took enough work/time that it I can assuage my conscience). I expected the increase in Children’s lit—but those are so short that I can’t attribute any changes between it and the other moves.

Genre 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2012-16
Children’s 25 (8%) 5 (2%) 2 (1%) 5 (2%) 7 (3%) 11 (4%) 7 (3%) 5 (.5%)
Fantasy 34 (11%) 32 (10%) 20 (7%) 35 (13%) 28 (10%) 30 (11%) 7 (3%) 86 (8.6%)
General Fiction/ Literature 26 (9%) 24 (8%) 22 (7%) 16 (7%) 21 (8%) 22 (8%) 29 (10%) 111 (11%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 90 (30%) 114 (37%) 117 (38%) 90 (34%) 105 (38%) 107 (38%) 102 (37%) 323 (32%)
Non-Fiction 22 (7%) 29 (9%) 22 (7%) 28 (10%) 25 (9%) 22 (8%) 10 (4%) 36 (3.6%)
Science Fiction 34 (11%) 28 (9%) 20 (7%) 20 (8%) 30 (11%) 25 (9%) 27 (10%) 95 (9.5%)
Theology/ Christian Living 30 (10%) 45 (15%) 38 (13%) 23 (8%) 34 (12%) 25 (9%) 30 (11%) 164 (16.4%)
Urban Fantasy 33 (11%) 34 (11%) 49 (16%) 42 (16%) 25 (9%) 29 (10%) 45 (16%) 149 (14.9%)
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/
Steampunk/ Western)
9 (3%) 2 (1%) 12 (4%) 4 (2%) 6 (2%) 7 (3%) 2 (1%) 32 (3%)

Thanks to the nifty spreadsheet made by the Voracious Reader, a few more stats were prepped for me (if I did better at using the tool, I could have more). I find them interesting, and maybe you will, too.
Re-Read Chart Huh…that’s a 2% drop in re-reads. I’d have guessed I went up by 5-10%.Source of my Books
Thanks to a comment from Allyson Johnson last year, I broke things down a bit to differentiate between borrowed (from a person) and borrowed from a Library. Combined, that number went down, which would trouble me a bit, but the percentage of review copies went up to almost balance it out.
Format of the BookThe percentage of eBooks went up as did paperbacks (oddly). Hardcovers took the hit there. There’s probably a link between that and the review copies mentioned above.

Enough about me. Now we get to my favorite partI 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 2023:

Have a great 2024, hope you find plenty of good things to read!

May your coming year be filled with magic and dreams and good madness. I hope you read some fine books and kiss someone who thinks you're wonderful, and don't forget to make some art -- write or draw or build or sing or live as only you can. And I hope, somewhere in the next year, you surprise yourself. -Neil Gaiman

December 2023 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

Lookee there, another month is done and dusted (yeah, a year, too…but we’ll get to that later). This month I finished 27 titles (3 down from last month, 6 down from last December), with an equivalent of 7,905+ pages or the equivalent (1,599 more than last month), and gave them an average of 3.78 stars (the same as last month).

There were a couple of picture books in that total, and 2 books I’ve been working on for months, so that’s really a lower number. But…eh, whatever. With one exception, I had a good time with them. I didn’t write as much this month as it felt I did, but I liked almost everything I produced. So…I’m calling it a win.

Here’s what happened here in December.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to

Broken Trust Regeneration and Redemptive History The Secret
4 Stars 3.5 Stars 2 1/2 Stars
The Last Dance The MOST Powerful Christmas
4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars
Imaginary Numbers Blood Betrayal Alexandra Petri's US History: Important American Documents
3.5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars
Mislaid in Parts Half-Known Gone, Baby, Gone The Lord Bless You and Keep You
4 1/2 Stars 5 Stars 4 Stars
Grandpappy's Corner Logo Like, Literally, Dude Guards! Guards!
3 Stars 4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars
The Curator The Chimes The Mayors of New York
5 Stars 4 Stars 4 1/2 Stars
The God of the Mundane Vicious Dogs Such Sharp Teeth
3.5 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars
The Many Assassinations of Samir, the Seller of Dreams The Moonshine Messiah She-Hulk: Jen Again
3.5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars
The Existence and Attributes of God A Mystery Revealed: 31 Meditations on the Trinity The AItheist
5 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars

Ratings

5 Stars 3 2 1/2 Stars 1
4 1/2 Stars 4 2 Stars 0
4 Stars 7 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 5 1 Star 0
3 Stars 7
Average = 3.78

TBR Stacks/Piles/Heaps

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of
2021
9 45 42 144
1st of the
Month
7 47 69 153
Added 3 2 8 1
Read/
Listened
4 2 9 1
Current Total 6 47 68 153

Breakdowns:
“Traditionally” Published: 18
Self-/Independent Published: 9

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 25 (8%)
Fantasy 4 (15%) 34 (11%)
General Fiction/ Literature 1 (4%) 26 (9%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 9 (33%) 90 (30%)
Non-Fiction 2 (7%) 22 (7%)
Science Fiction 3 (11%) 34 (11%)
Theology/ Christian Living 5 (19%) 30 (10%)
Urban Fantasy 2 (7%) 33 (11%)
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/ Steampunk/ Western) 1 (4%) 9 (3%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wrote
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (2nd, 9th, 16th, 23rd, and 30th), I also wrote:

Enough about me—how Was Your Month?

December Calendar

Saturday Miscellany—12/30/23

When going through the posts, etc. I had collected for this week, it felt like this was going to be nothing but a list of lists. Which would’ve been fine, but strange, you know? I did eventually get mostly past the lists to some other things. But I’ll warn you now, if you are looking to keep your TBR from exploding, there are several things I linked to today that you’ll want to avoid.

On the other hand, if you’re wanting it to explode with goodness…

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet If Not For Libraries: Authors on the Importance of Public Libraries—The New York Public Library put this together earlier this year, and I’m not sure how I missed it until this week.
bullet Five years and 2m copies later, self-published author lands UK book deal—Granted, the overwhelming majority of self-pubbed authors won’t see this kind of success. But doesn’t it make your heart warm to see that some do?
bullet A.I. : In the Age of the Absence of the Author
bullet Why Readers Love Craig Johnson’s Walt Longmire Series —this is a good overview of the series/good intro for those who’ve thought about dipping their toe in.
bullet Before We Go Blog is always a reliable source of good material, but three of the posts the team put up this week caught my eye.
bullet Top Urban Fantasy Series To Get You Hooked on the Genre—I enjoyed (the?) previous version(s?) of this, but this updated one makes me feel positively un-read in the genre.
bullet Top Ten Fantasy Characters That Probably Listen to Taylor Swift—Kudos to them for even coming up with this idea. I’m not a Swiftie (at least not after her second album), but I enjoyed the post
bullet Seven Favorite Cinnamon Rolls in SFF Novels—Is Cinnamon Roll a term I should already be familiar with? Either way, I’m adding it to my vocabulary.
bullet Top 20 Most Recommended Audiobooks of All Time—according to Libro.fm
bullet Another batch of Best of 2023 lists:
bullet Top Five Most Dramatic Twists I Read In 2023—Steven Writes comes up with another good category
bullet 10 of My Favorite Reads in 2023—from Pages Unbound’s Krysta
bullet Adam Holcombe provided “A handful of great books, given to you in the form of specialized awards”
bullet FanFiAddict’s A.J. Calvin’s Top 10 Reads of 2023
bullet Favorite Books in 2023—from A Literary Escape
bullet Out of This World SFF’s My Top 10 Reads of 2023!!!
bullet Most Memorable Reads of 2023—from Reading Ladies Book Club
bullet Top 5 Books of 2023—Top 5? As I’m going to demonstrate next week there’s no way I could get things down to 5. My hat’s off to Books are 42 for pulling it off.
bullet Tales from Absurdia’s The Best Books I Read in 2023
bullet Esmay Rosalyne’s Best Surprises of 2023
bullet What Makes a Story Comforting?—another good one from Molly Templeton. I’m also tempted to (somewhat reluctantly) rewatch Grimm.
bullet How to Plan for Your 2024 Reading Challenge —some good advice from NetGalley’s We Are Bookish blog
bullet Backlist Bingo 2024—it’s been a minute since Armed With a Book did a Bingo, this looks fun
bullet Read What You Got—a month-long push to clear up your unread books
bullet The 2024 Booktempter’s TBR Challenge—the last two of these from Runalong the Shelves have proved helpful to me. I’m back for a third go-round.
bullet The Project Backlist Reading Challenge—another good-looking challenge
bullet Bookish Travel: Visiting The 50 US States 2023—what a great idea…
bullet 2024 Ultimate Book Blogger / Reader Spreadsheet Template—a great tool for Bloggers and super-organized readers (or those wanting to be)
bullet Quotables: Words that Stuck with me in 2023—I love this annual post (which inspired my monthly posts…that I will get back to!)

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Sundry Notes of Music: An Almost Memoir by Ian Shane—some of the bigger moments of Shane’s life are described through the filter of important (to him) songs. Humor, love, loss, and a lot of music. I talk a little more indepth about it here.

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Little Reader, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
To Read or not to Read. Not even a question.

WWW Wednesday, December 27, 2023

This was supposed to be the 2nd or 3rd post of the day, but you know how things gang aft a-gley sometimes. Hopefully, I can eke out something else, too.

In the meantime, I’ll get to business with this and see you in 7.

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Easy enough, right?

What are you currently reading?

I’m reading The Many Assassinations of Samir, the Seller of Dreams by Daniel Nayeri, Daniel Miyares (Illustrator)—a book I’m not even going to try to sum up in less than a couple of paragraphs. I’m listening to Such Sharp Teeth by Rachel Harrison, Kristen Sieh (Narrator) on audiobook. I’m not so sure about the story as a whole—but it possibly includes the best description of someone becoming a werewolf that I’ve ever come across.

The Many Assassinations of Samir, the Seller of DreamsBlank SpaceSuch Sharp Teeth

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Henry Brock’s Vicious Dogs, a clever PI novel, and the superlative The Curator by M.W. Craven, John Banks (Narrator) on audio.

Vicious DogsBlank SpaceThe Curator

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be The Moonshine Messiah by Russell W. Johnson. Next, I’m going to try the audiobook of The Blacktongue Thief by Christopher Buehlman—I’m not 100% I can devote the attention to it that it deserves in audio format, but I haven’t been able to find the time for the print version, so we’ll see how I do.

The Moonshine MessiahBlank SpaceThe Blacktongue Thief

How are you closing out the year? Trying to squeeze in a few more books for whatever your goal was?

(I’ve got three more I hope to finish. Will get at least one of them done 🙂 )

MUSIC MONDAY: Christmachanukwanzaramadanamasmukkarborday by Gangstagrass

Music Monday
Music Monday’s originated at The Tattooed Book Geek‘s fantastic blog and has shown up here and there since then.

The Irresponsible Reader Metallica Logo

Saturday Miscellany—12/23/23

I’m glad you stopped by for this today, but I really want you to read my earlier post of the day, I had more fun with it than I usually do. So take a moment if you haven’t to check out: The Grandcritter’s First Festivus.

With that out of the way, let’s get to the “serious business” of today.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Reading print improves comprehension far more than looking at digital text, say researchers—Not the first time I’ve heard this, but I do find it interesting. Would you all prefer if I started mailing these so you can understand it more?
bullet ‘It’s totally unhinged’: is the book world turning against Goodreads?—pretty sure I’ve posted things like this before, too. One of these days, the death knell may truly ring.
bullet Last week, I linked to the first 20 of these, and now we can read The Biggest Literary Stories of the Year: 30 to 11 The 10 Biggest Literary Stories of the Year—(at least according to LitHub). Some interesting things here…many of which I was previously unaware of. That’s how in-tune with the Big News I am.
bullet Before We Go Blog brings Five Recommended Books for Winter Reading—(or other times of the year, too)
bullet Announcing the Picture Prompt Book Bingo Challenge for 2024—It’s like Dixit or Mysterium mixed with a Reading Challenge.
bullet It’s time for some more 2023 Best Of Lists.I agree with a lot of these (and added more than I should to the overburnded TBR)
bullet The Ultimate Best Books of 2023 List—Lit Hub’s Emily Temple compiles results from 62 published lists to list the best of the best.
bullet Top Five Character-Driven Books I Read In 2023—from Steven Writes
bullet Operation 2023: Success! (Or Favorite Books From this Year)—Witty and Sarcastic Bookclub has some real winners (and you’ll never guess the 2nd book on this list!)
bullet Favourite Series of 2023—from Novel Deelights
bullet CrimeReads’ The Best Noir Fiction of 2023
bullet The Best Books I Read in 2023—from Read Betwixt Worlds
bullet Tiny Elf Arcanist Character Awards 2023
bullet CrimeReads’ The Best Traditional Mysteries of 2023
bullet Why Stories About Stories Bugs Me

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Death in the Dark Woods by Annelise Ryan—should’ve been mentioned here last week. Moving on from lake monsters, cryptozoologist/bookstore owner Morgan Carter looks into Bigfoot.
bullet Down The Well by Veronica King—this just sounds like a ball. Sentient lamp posts? You can never go wrong with lamp posts in fantasy, making them sentient is a heckuva bons.
bullet Grimdwarf: A Magaine of Fantastic Tales edited by JCM Berne—1. It’s free. 2. It’s good. 3. It’s a quick read. 4. It’s good. I have no idea how/if I’ll be talking about this zine regularly, but for now, I’m just going to promote it when I have the opportunity.

Meme Showing a Smiling Santa and the Text: All I Want for Christmas Is you. Just Kidding. There better be some books under that tree.
(can’t like back to the creator, since I don’t know where it came from)

The Grandcritter’s First Festivus

Shunning the commercialization of Christmas*/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa/Santaween/Chrismukkah, we’re again celebrating Festivus (for the rest of us) here at The Irresponsible Reader. But this time, we’re doing something extra special—my Grandcritter is joining us as I share with him the wonders of the day.

And no…this isn’t just an excuse for a proud grandparent to show you all pictures of this adorable guy. You’re just going to have to take my word for that.

Let’s begin our observance!

Festivus PoleWe start by setting up the Festivus pole. See how he’s taking in the very high strength-to-weight ratio (because it’s a mighty fine pole) and how he’s fascinated by it without any need for distracting tinsel. It’s very important to take in the simplicity.

And now, let the Airing of Grievances begin.

Airing of Grievances
I initially assumed that I’d be handling this myself, the kid’s not even a year old. So, sure he has a gripe or two, but they can’t be book-related, can they? Turns out they can.

The Grandcritter’s Grievances

Aggrieved Grandcritter
bullet Board Books need to taste better! Sure, the texture is interesting and provides an interesting mouthfeel. But the taste is rather plain. Can’t we get something that tastes like food mixed into that coating on every page?

bullet Related to that, try as I might, I cannot fit an entire book into my mouth at once. I don’t know if it’s a me problem or a publishing/book design problem, but I think it’s the latter. I don’t know why, but I think it would be really satisfying if I could just get one to fit the whole way, you know?

(Grandpappy’s original idea for my Feat of Strength was to get a picture of me trying to pull this off, but Mommy wouldn’t let him. Apparently, he’s supposed to discourage that, not try to get me to do it. I’d make this a Grievance, too. But Mommy probably knows best, and Grandpappy says I should wait at least 13 years before pushing back like that in public.)

bullet I’ve got a beef with the people that make those “Indestructibles” books for people my age. Do they not understand how satisfying it is to rip a page in a book (and maybe to stuff it in your mouth)? That sound…that feeling of power…it’s so good. And then these mean grown-ups make it so my people can’t do that? It’s the worst. (also, Grandpappy says they’d do better selling multiple copies of books when adults replace the ones with missing pages)

bullet Lastly, my TBR is too huge! I’m never going to catch up at this point. Never mind the books that Mommy and Daddy have picked out for me, or that I might be interested in—do you have any idea how long the list that my Grandpappy has for me is??? Talk about Irresponsible…

Grandpappy’s Grievances

(Yes, some of these are only slightly revised from previous Festivus posts. This is to be expected, it’s not like the entire universe fixed itself after I threw up a few posts. I’ve got to keep up the pressure.)

bullet AI’s takeover of publishing, from covers to audiobook narrations to writing and illustrating! It’s just too much. This is about human creativity, not close approximations of it. Also, you’d think that people who publish/sell/read dystopian fiction and SF would know better than to give the reins of anything to an AI.

bullet I have a grievance with the book publishing/selling/marketing industry. It’s 2023, why are we still placing stickers on books? If we have to do that, why hasn’t Science come up with a sticker that doesn’t leave a gummy residue behind? C’mon, Science, if you can’t give us a cure for cancer, a pill so people with Celiac disease can eat bread, or an Oreo that will help me lose weight—at least you can give us stickers that don’t leave gunk on our books! Especially, especially when it covers the ISBN number for those of us trying to scan them.

bullet What’s worse than stickers are those things that look like stickers, but aren’t. Just stupid, garish circles that have been printed on the cover and really only serve to obscure the image. What’s the point?

bullet I have a grievance with Movie/TV covers on books. C’mon people, this is stupid. Sure, it may help sell more copies of the books—but has any book been improved by one of these covers? No! Knock it off! And especially, stop it with sticking pictures of actors on books in a series that haven’t been adapted, just because some have (yeah, I’m looking at you, Longmire).

bullet Similarly, what’s up with publishers changing the look of series covers—and or the height of the books—in a series? I like when they match and I resent having to go buy second copies of the old ones to have a nice matching set. (which I generally avoid, but I think about doing it a lot).

bullet Whether it’s from a mainstream publisher, indie press, or a self-pubbed book, we have the technology and (theoretically??) the education so there’s no reason for there to be missing/extra punctuation or misspelled words in books. We all understand human error, some are going to slip through, but…

Obviously, this doesn’t apply to book blog posts. No one paid for these.

bullet I have a grievance with the Book Blogging Community. There are way too many good book bloggers out there to keep up with. Some of you need to write less often! Also, you make the rest of us look bad.

bullet I’ve got a grievance with running out of places to put books and bookshelves that aren’t like a bag of holding or TARDIS and can’t take an increasing number of books. So…physics, I guess. Yeah, that’s right, Laws of the Physics, I’m calling you out. Get your act together!

bullet And what’s more…I lost my train of thought. Still, I managed to get a little off my chest, and that felt good.

And now, the Feats of Strength

Time for Feats of Strength
This was tricky to capture in a photo, but I think you can make it out…The Grandcritter is lifting my The Lord of the Rings Illustrated hardcover. Yes, one corner is resting on (read: digging into) my arm, but he’s picked up the other end on his own. All 3.54 lbs. of it–with one hand, mind you.

Feat of Strength

Let’s see how the rest of you do with your feats.

I hope you enjoyed this bit of fluff and regardless of what holidays/festivals you may or may not celebrate that you have a happy one!

* I’ve gotten a little feedback about this—it’s pretty clear I’m a Christian. So why do I do a Festivus post instead of something about Christmas? While I do think that believers have the liberty to celebrate the Nativity if they desire to, I’m ambivalent toward the day, and hesitant to make a big deal out of it. So, I don’t. If you’re curious, I thought this episode of The Heidelcast did a decent job of articulating many of the issues (without getting nasty about it).

On the other hand, Festivus is just silly fun. Hope you don’t mind…

Happy Festivus

WWW Wednesday, December 20, 2023

I almost didn’t get any reading done yesterday, a very uncommon event. I did find myself early to something, so I was able to read most of the inaugural issue of Grimdwarf Magazine, and I can see this becoming a regular part of my reading rotation.

The other thing I wanted to mention is that the other day as I was packing to go to work, I grabbed the Guards! Guards! and put it in my coat pocket. I can’t remember the last Mass Market Paperback I read. It’s so convenient! I love a good hardcover, and ebooks are so essential now. But wow…I miss MMPs. We need a resurgence of them.

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Easy enough, right?

What are you currently reading?

I’m reading Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett, and am shaking my head at how I stopped reading this series years ago. My current audiobook is the haunting The Curator by by M.W. Craven, John Banks (Narrator) on audiobook.

Guards! Guards!Blank SpaceThe Curator

What did you recently finish reading?

The last book I finished was Mislaid in Parts Half-Known by Seanan McGuire, I talked it up yesterday. The fascinating, entertaining, and often convincing, Like, Literally, Dude: Arguing for the Good in Bad English by Valerie Fridland, narrated by the author and several others was my last audiobook.

Alexandra Petri's US HistoryBlank SpaceLike, Literally, Dude

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be The Mayors of New York by S. J. Rozan (I am so looking forward to it) and my next audiobook should be Such Sharp Teeth by Rachel Harrison, Kristen Sieh (Narrator).

The Mayors of New YorkBlank SpaceSuch Sharp Teeth

Are you reading anything that’s making this holiday season happy? Or are you preparing to air a grievance?

MUSIC MONDAY: Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) by Darlene Love

Music Monday
Music Monday’s originated at The Tattooed Book Geek‘s fantastic blog and has shown up here and there since then.

The Irresponsible Reader Metallica Logo

Saturday Miscellany—12/16/23

Late again…but I have a good excuse. I was meeting a prospective/probable new member of the household, a sweet lab/boxer mix. So…this takes a back seat.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet On the Difficulty of Giving Books as Gifts
bullet The Most Scathing Book Reviews of 2023—from BookMarks. I’m feeling much better about all my negative reviews.
bullet The best book covers of 2023 are the ones you’ll never see: The most interesting book cover designs are often left on the cutting room floor.
bullet 10 Things We Learned in 20 Years of Writing Mysteries—from the writers behind “Cleo Coyle”
bullet Ian [Rankin]’s end of year round-up: 2023
bullet Kevin Hearne also posted a Year-end roundup
bullet FALL BACK TO READING SERIES – Featuring Lee Goldberg—Goldberg shares Non-Fiction and Fiction recommendations
bullet The Biggest Literary Stories of the Year: 50 to 31—(at least according to LitHub)
bullet How about some more Year-End Best Of lists? (in no particular order). Several of my TBR reads are here and not enough things that I have read are, oh and the TBR has been made longer by these, too.
bullet CrimeReads’ The Best Crime Novels of 2023—Some great ones here (and in the Honorable Mentions!)
bullet The 139 Best Book Covers of 2023
bullet My Ten Favourite Reads of 2023—from Grab This Book
bullet FanFiAddict’s The Bookwyrm’s Best Reads of 2023
bullet Also from CrimeReads, The Best Debut Novels of 2023
bullet Also from FanFiAddict, Charlies Top Reads of 2023
bullet Top Five Powerful Books I Read In 2023—Stephen continues his trend of categorizing his lists in the best way
bullet And one more from FanFiAddict, Lord TBR’s Top Reads of 2023
bullet Rethinking the End of Year Book List—What better way to follow those up than with a reconsideration of the idea?
bullet How do You Measure a Year in Reading?—I’ve read this a couple of times now, and will probably do it a couple of more
bullet Maybe the Greatest Fantasy Standalones Ever—Not content with just looking at 2023, Peat Long tackles the Entirety of Human History
bullet Ideas For 2023 Book Gifts—for the second week in a row, I’m starting on the same topic I began on. I’d like to say I’m clever enough to keep this up, but we all know better.

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Fully Booked Best Middle-Grade Books of 2023 with Zach Weinersmith—before digging into Kirkus Review’s Best Middle Grade books of the year, the episode features a chat with Weinersmith about Bea Wolf, Beowulf, and MG books in general. I really enjoyed this one

Bookstore Sign reading, Book Math: Buying the series means you really only bought 1 book

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