Category: Calendar Items Page 4 of 21

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

In February, I finished 26 titles (6 up from last month, 4 up from last February), with 6,588 pages or the equivalent (500 up from last month), and gave them an average of 3.8 stars (0.1 up from last month). Sure, 2 were Children’s Books, and a few were 150 pg. and under–so the number of titles is deceptive. Still, it was a good month on that front.

Mt. TBR moved in the right direction in a noticeable way, so I’m happy with that. And how often do I get to say something like that?

You’ll notice that I don’t have an IndieBound sticker on the side anymore and my posts don’t have the buttons for it anymore–I’ve moved over to Bookshop.org (IndieBound moved me over there, actually). I see some interesting things I can do there in the future, stay tuned.

I didn’t get as much written as I wanted to, but when don’t I say that? I did get a good number of Q&As up, and started a new series (Grandpappy’s Corner). So what (little) I produced, I’m very happy with.

Basically, it was a good month around here. Here’s the breakdown:
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to

Bad Memory Hunting Fiends for the Ill-Equipped The Silk Empress
3 Stars 3 Stars 3.5 Stars
Underground The Adventure Begins! Magpie Murders
4 Stars 3 Stars 5 Stars
Scratching the Flint The Hero Interviews The Shadow of Christ in the Book of Lamentations
4 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun A Man Named Doll The Foundling, the Heist, and the Volcano
3 Stars 3.5 Stars 4 Stars
Vampire Weekend Anna and the Vampire Prince Saint Patrick the Forgiver
4 Stars 3 Stars 5 Stars
Patrick of Ireland Red Rising Haven
3.5 Stars 5 Stars 3 Stars
Foundations Pocket Apocalypse Noirville
3.5 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
Selected Sermons What is Love? The Freedom of a Christian: A New Translation
4 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
This is the Word of the Lord Broken
3 Stars 5 Stars

Still Reading

The Existence and Attributes of God A Geerhardus Vos Anthology The Bandit Queens
Good Dog, Bad Cop

Ratings

5 Stars 4 2 1/2 Stars 0
4 1/2 Stars 0 2 Stars 0
4 Stars 10 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 4 1 Star 0
3 Stars 8
Average = 3.77

TBR Stacks/Piles/Heaps

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of
2022
5 45 42 143
1st of the
Month
5 45 46 145
Added 2 3 7 2
Read/
Listened
2 4 10 2
Current Total 5 44 43 145

Breakdowns:
“Traditionally” Published: 11
Self-/Independent Published: 15

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 2 (8%) 2 (4%)
Fantasy 4 (15%) 6 (13%)
General Fiction/ Literature 1 (4%) 4 (9%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 7 (27%) 13 (28%)
Non-Fiction 1 (4%) 2 (4%)
Science Fiction 1 (4%) 1 (2%)
Theology/ Christian Living 5 (19%) 8 (17%)
Urban Fantasy 4 (15%) 4 (21%)
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/ Steampunk/ Western) 1 (4%) 7 (15%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wrote
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (4th, 11th, 18th, and 25th), I also wrote:

Enough about me—how Was Your Month?


February Calendar

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

I finished 20 titles with 6,087 pages or the equivalent and gave them an average of 3.7 stars. Sure, that’s a low number of titles for me, but I read a lot of a couple of the others that I haven’t finished. I’m calling it a good month (with one exception)—quality over quantity for sure.

Between the 2022 in Review material and the Literary Locals series being in full swing, this was a pretty busy month around here. That makes me feel pretty good—although I did run out of gas toward the end of the month—and my non-blog life took up more time than I’m used to. If I could keep up my pace (or something close to it) from the first of the month, I’d be content.

So there’s my evaluation of the month, here’s what happened here in January.

Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to

Harvested Triptych Pieces of Eight
3.5 Stars 2 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars
Bartleby and James: Edwardian Steampunk Chronicle Destructive Reasoning The Night Watch
3 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
Risen Blackwater Falls A Drink Before the War
5 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
Lost in the Moment and Found The Sexual Reformation I Have a Confession
4 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars 4 Stars
Ms. Demeanor The Perception Of Dolls Half-Off Ragnarok
3 Stars 5 Stars 4 Stars
Really Good, Actually The Wizard’s Butler The Nature and Work of The Holy Spirit
3 Stars 3 Stars 3.5 Stars
On the Savage Side How to Astronaut
4 Stars 3 Stars

Still Reading

The Existence and Attributes of God A Geerhardus Vos Anthology The Hero Interviews

Ratings

5 Stars 2 2 1/2 Stars 1
4 1/2 Stars 2 2 Stars 0
4 Stars 5 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 4 1 Star 0
3 Stars 6
Average = 3.67

TBR Stacks/Piles/Heaps

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of
2022
5 45 42 143
1st of the
Month
5 45 42 143
Added 6 3 9 2
Read/
Listened
6 3 5 0
Current Total 5 45 46 145

Breakdowns:
“Traditionally” Published: 11
Self-/Independent Published: 9

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Fantasy 2 (10%) 2 (10%)
General Fiction/ Literature 3 (15%) 3 (15%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 6 (30%) 6 (30%)
Non-Fiction 1 (5%) 1 (5%)
Science Fiction 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Theology/ Christian Living 3 (15%) 3 (15%)
Urban Fantasy 3 (15%) 3 (15%)
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/ Steampunk/ Western) 2 (10%) 2 (10%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wrote
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (7th, 14th, 21st, and 28th), I also wrote:

Enough about me—how Was Your Month?


January Calendar

2023 Plans and Challenges

Finally it’s time to stop looking at 2022 (as fun as that’s been) and to start focusing on 2023.
2023 Plans and CHallenges
Typically, I’m reticent to get into calling my shots, as it were, too much anymore—there’s a project from 2020 still hanging over my head to point out the problems with me doing that. I’m sure there are older abandoned (or “paused”) projects, too —I just don’t want to go spelunking through the archives to find more personal failures (minor, to be sure, but technically failures).

I do have things I want to accomplish here over the next 12 months for a variety of reasons—and listing them like this helped last year (although, you’ll see a lot of echoes here from that post. But most of those echoes are of a “continue doing this” nature). So, here’s what I’m going to shoot for around here in the next 12 months.
bullet Continue that Literary Locals Project!
bullet Cut down on my Goodreads Want-to-Read list and the unread books that I own (a perennial project, but I made some strides last year)—at least two of the Book Challenges this year should be a fun way to help.
bullet I’m going to finish my Classic Spenser series and maybe find another Classic to do a project read-through. We’ll see about that. (This is a repeat from last year, but it’s nagging at me)
bullet I’m going to continue to be picky in the Book Tours I participate in. I still like Tours, they expose me to things I wouldn’t normally read—and I’m going to keep doing them. But if I’m picky, it helps me focus on other things.
bullet Similarly, I’m doing fewer Book Challenges. I like the ones I’ve picked out—but they’re concrete things, no more of these “Read as Many of X as You Can” challenges. They don’t move the needle one bit for me as far as picking books—I read as many as I’m going to anyway, just with a count. But Challenges with specific targets can be fun. I’ll talk about those in a minute.
bullet Try to interview more authors (maybe others, too?), and get better at that, too. The Literary Locals series is helping with that.
bullet I have one other new feature that I’ll be debuting soon(ish). I’m excited about it, but need a couple of more things to happen before I tell you anything.

2022 Book Challenges


Goodreads Challenge
Goodreads Challenge
My oldest son taunted me into upping my annual goal to 250 this year. I’ve topped that the last 7 years, so I feel pretty good about meeting that. I’d kept my goal lower because 200 seemed realistic—and anything above it was just gravy. Ultimately, I really don’t care if I hit it—or beat it.

Well, okay, I don’t care that much.


12 Books
I did this one last year, and it really expanded my reading. This year looks like it’ll do the same. There are 2 books I’d had on my list of “should probably read” and 1 book that I’d never heard of before, but instantly wanted to read as soon as it was recommended. The rest? I’m looking forward to reading them, but I’m relatively certain I wouldn’t have picked on my own. BTW, I could use one more recommendation to finalize this list.
12 Books Challenge


2022 While I was Reading
While I Was Reading
I’ve done this one for the last few years—and Ramona’s done a great job of stretching me. And will continue to do so—this year’s categories look like a lot of fun, too.


Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge

Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge
I really appreciate the way this one is put together, and it’s pretty easy—just 1 book a month and my TBR should go down by at least 12. This was pretty helpful last year, and I expect the same this year. I’ve actually already knocked off the January stretch goal, and should have the actual goal done next week.


Beat the Backlist Reading Challenge;
Beat the Backlist Reading Challengee
I’ll be pairing this one with my Goodreads Want-To-Read goal and the TBR Reduction challenge as much as I can. It’s really just a way to trick myself into doing better at both of those. I’ve seen a few people do this lately, and it seemed like a good idea. Still, I’m not a glutton for punishment—I’m only going for the 24-prompt version.


20 Books of Summer
I’ll also undoubtedly do the 20 Books of Summer Challenge…that’s been pretty fun. And I can easily combine it with 2 or 3 of the above challenges, to be super-productive.


That’s everything I have planned, I can’t wait to see what unplanned things happen around here. Hope you’re around to join in the fun!


(Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay)

Fourth Quarter Check-In/Wrap-Up: 2022 Plans and Challenges

I don’t know if anyone actually reads these (or cares), but I enjoy putting them together—if only so I can think about what I’ve read and plan for the upcoming quarter/year/etc.

I didn’t have many concrete plans for 2022, but one that I mentioned was “Cut down on my Goodreads Want-to-Read list and the unread books that I own (a perennial project, but I made some strides last year).” How am I doing on that?

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of 2021 9 45 42 144
End of 2022 5 43 37 143

That’s…um, not bad. I wanted better and I thought I was making a concerted effort on that for the year. It’s a start. Also, I did read 88% of the books I was given or purchased in 2022—that’s the sole encouraging thing I can take away from that chart. For the sake of my fragile ego, I’d also point out that the TBR work on the paper books would look a lot more impressive if I hadn’t been given 7 books in December with no time to read any of them. (don’t get me wrong, I’m very grateful…but ouch)
Not Bad

How’d I do with the rest of my plans and move on to the Reading Challenges…
2022 Book Challenges

12 Books
I had a lot of fun with this one—and definitely found a series (maybe two) to read and a couple of authors to read more of. I’ll be sharing my 2023 Challenge soon.
12 Books Challenge Quarter 4


2022 While I was Reading
While I Was Reading
I posted this list last week, but I’ll repeat it here because I did that for the first 3 quarters.

  1. A book with a question in the title: Have I Told You This Already?: Stories I Don’t Want to Forget to Remember by Lauren Graham
  2. A book of non-violent true crime: Blessed Are the Bank Robbers: The True Adventures of an Evangelical Outlaw by Chas Smith
  3. A book with a cover you don’t like: Composite Creatures by Caroline Hardaker
  4. A historical fiction novel not set in Europe: A Snake in the Raspberry Patch by Joanne Jackson
  5. A book with a character’s name in the title: With Grimm Resolve by Jefferey H. Haskell
  6. A book featuring paranormal activity (fiction or non): (that feels like half of what I read) Nice Dragons Finish Last by Rachel Aaron
  7. A book with a number in the title: Citizen K-9 by David Rosenfelt
  8. A food related memoir: Yes, Chef: A Memoir by Marcus Samuelsson with Veronica Chambers
  9. A book that’s won an award: The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes (Winner of The Booker Prize, 2011)
  10. A middle grade novel: How to Save a Superhero by Ruth Freeman
  11. A book by an author who shares your zodiac sign: Radio Radio by Ian Shane
  12. A book that’s a combination of genres: Bloodlines by Peter Hartog

Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge

Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge
I was almost successful with this one, I didn’t read one month’s category—but I did hit two Stretch Goals (including the Stretch Goal for the month I didn’t/couldn’t read). So that’s 14 off the pile. Not as good as I’d hoped, but better than I expected. The 2023 version looks fun, too.
January – New Beginnings I give you permission to read the most recent book you got on top of your TBR.: Bloodlines by Peter Hartog
Stretch Goal – Read the oldest book in Mount TBR it has waited long enough: Nice Dragons Finish Last by Rachel Aaron
February – Valentine’s Day Gift
Is there that book by an author you love you picked up and still haven’t read because you do not deserve it just yet? Other items got in the way? You have for this challenge to pick that book up and read it: Troubled Blood by Robert Galbraith
March – Fresh blooms
For the beginning of Spring I want you to open a book in the TBR pile by an author you’ve never read before: The Part About the Dragon Was (Mostly) True by Sean Gibson
April – New Openings
April is derived from the Latin for ‘to open’ In Mount TBR there may be the first book of a series. Your challenge is to read: Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City by K.J. Parker
May – Randommmmm
You MAY pick one random book out of Mount TBR and you must read it: Conjured Defense by J.C. Jackson
June – The Longest Day
Find the longest book in Mount TBR and you must read it: The Border by Don Winslow
July – You Came, You Read and You Conquered
In your TBR there may have been a book you know will be a challenging read. Show it who is the Emperor and read that book until it screams for your mercy and then finish it! AMORALMAN by Derek Delgaudio
August – Holidayyyyy
Pick a book that takes you away to another place. Read it and relax: The Ghost Machine by James Lovegrove
September – Back to School
Pick a book with some link to education. Dark Academia; dangerous school, etc.: The Days of Tao by Wesley Chu (I had a hard time finding something for this prompt, and was so happy when I remembered this started at a summer class)
October – Booooo and Eeek
Read a horror or dark themed tale (crime counts too!) you want to be unsettled!: Jane Steele by Lyndsay Faye
November – Short and Sweet
Read three novellas: I only had one novella (and forgot to read it), so I technically failed this. But I did accomplish the Stretch Goal.
Stretch Goal – read the 11th book from the beginning or end of your TBR pile: Less by Sean Greer
December – Happy Endings
Have you been holding back the finale of a series? Now time to see where it ends.: I accidentally read the book I’d slotted for this during the 20 Books of Summer—whoops! (The Deepest Grave by Harry Bingham). Thankfully (not for my TBR, but for the sake of this challenge), I had another series ending that I could read: Sacrifices by Jamie Schultz

(Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay)

December 2022 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

Well, this was a pretty good way to wrap up 2022—I feel pretty productive. I completed 33 titles (that includes a short story, a quick collection of flash fiction, 2 books that I’ve been working on for months, and 3 children’s books—which helped that number) and 8,694+ pages (or the equivalent). My average rating for the month was 3.6 stars, which I won’t complain about. This is likely my best month ever for non-review(ish) posts, if not ever, at least for this year. A lot of books finished, a good rating average, and a lot of things written. Color me pleased as punch.

Here’s what happened here in December.

Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to

Bookish People Baby Dragon's Big Sneeze The Legend of the Christmas Witch
2 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars 3 Stars
No Plan B Low Anthropology Stone Cold
3 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars
The Spare Man Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing Radio Radio
4 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
Junkyard War Her Name is Knight Have I Told You This Already?
3.5 Stars 3.5 Stars 3.5 Stars
Vinyl Resting Place The Twist of a Knife Sacrifices
3 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
The Return of the Christmas Witch 12 Things God Can't Do Secrets Typed in Blood
3 Stars 4 Stars 3.5 Stars
Pet Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries</a Midnight Blue-Light Special
3 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
Everything's Changing In the Fullness of Time The Hope of Life After Death
3.5 Stars 5 Stars 3 Stars
Faith & Life Yes, Chef Killer Story
5 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
Scattered Showers Your Perfect Year The Neil Gaiman at the End of the Universe
3.5 Stars 2 Stars 4 Stars
Early Grave The Princess Beard E.B. White on Dogs
4 Stars 3.5 Stars 4 Stars

Ratings

5 Stars 2 2 1/2 Stars 1
4 1/2 Stars 0 2 Stars 1
4 Stars 12 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 8 1 Star 0
3 Stars 9
Average = 3.6

TBR Stacks/Piles/Heaps

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of
2021
9 45 42 144
1st of the
Month
7 50 42 148
Added 2 0 8 0
Read/
Listened
3 2 8 5
Current Total 5 43 37 143

(yes, the math doesn’t work—like it didn’t last month—but I did a year-end audit, and had to tweak a couple of things (not sure how they got messed up in the first place. Time to fire some of my staff again. The totals are right now.)

Breakdowns:
“Traditionally” Published: 25
Self-/Independent Published: 8

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 1 (3%) 5 (2%)
Fantasy 6 (18%) 32 (10%)
General Fiction/ Literature 5 (15%) 24 (8%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 9 (27%) 114 (37%)
Non-Fiction 4 (12%) 29 (9%)
Science Fiction 1 (3%) 28 (9%)
Theology/ Christian Living 5 (15%) 45 (15%)
Urban Fantasy 2 (6%) 34 (11%)
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/ Steampunk/ Western) 0 (0%) 2 (1%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wrote
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (3rd, 10th, 17th, 24th, and 31st), I also wrote:

Enough about me—how Was Your Month?

December Calendar

Festivus 2022: For the Rest of Us

Shunning the commercialization of Christmas*/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa/Santaween/Chrismukkah, we’re again celebrating Festivus (for the rest of us) here at The Irresponsible Reader.

Let’s begin our observance!

Festivus PoleHere I am with my Festivus pole. I really appreciate the very high strength-to-weight ratio, it’s a mighty fine pole.

Note the lack of distracting tinsel. It’s very important.

And now, let the Airing of Grievances begin.

Airing of Grievances
Yes, some of these are only slightly revised from previous Festivus posts. Which is to be expected, it’s not like the entire universe fixed itself after I posted one lil’ post. 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 The Goodreads “update” or “upgrade” or “redesign” or whatever they’re calling it. It’s uglier, it’s flakier, it’s less functional, and just plain worse. I don’t disagree that the site needed a makeover and improvements, but what we got wasn’t what we needed.

bullet I have a grievance with the book publishing/selling/marketing industry. It’s 2022, 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 maybe helps 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 It’s another year without the next installment from Rothfuss/Martin. No, my grievance isn’t with them, it’s with the entitled “fan” of the work, whinging at every conceivable moment about how long it’s taking them. Because there’s nothing else around to read? Let ’em get it right and use that energy to support someone whose books could use it.

(still—Martin, Rothfuss, Lynch…c’mon…)

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.

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, that felt good.

And now, the Feats of Strength

Time for Feats of Strength
This is going to be a doozy. Possibly my greatest Festivus Feat of Strength to date.

For my Feat of Strength, I’m going to watch the Netflix movie, Spenser Confidential. Theoretically based on Robert B. Parker’s Wonderland by Ace Atkins, directed by Peter Berg, with a screenplay by Sean O’Keefe and Brian Helgeland, and starring Mark Wahlberg, Winston Duke, Alan Arkin, and Iliza Shlesinger. That’s not a big deal, really, I endured it before.
Spenser Confiential
However…this time I’m going to do it without complaining to anyone—friend, stranger, wife, child, or dog—while doing so. I will not write about the experience, post anything on the Internet or social media (beyond this post), or do anything of a similar nature. I will keep all of my comments, complaints, criticisms, or comparisons to the novels or previous TV/film adaptations to myself. Furthermore, I shall endeavor to enjoy the experience. I honestly don’t know if I can pull this off, but I will attempt it.

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

* 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

November 2022 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

In November, I managed to wrap up 22 books with a total of 6,940 pages (or the equivalent). With one exception, I really liked them, giving them an average 3.8 stars (including 4 books that are strong contenders for my year-end lists). All in all, it was a great month for what I read—even if the numbers were on the low end for me. I’ll take that trade off.

On the production side, I’m less happy. But regular readers can count on me saying that regularly, so I won’t dwell on it. But I got to do a Q&A with Marshall Karp this month—so honestly, I’m more than fine with that side of things.

Anyway, here’s what happened here in November:
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to

The Veiled Edge of Contact Discount Armageddon Kestral's Dance
4 Stars 4 Stars 3.5 Stars
Gardens Terry's Crew Less
4 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars
Screwed NYPD Red 7: The Murder Sorority Desert Star
4 Stars 4 Stars 3.5 Stars
All These Worlds Theft of Swords Missing Pieces
3.5 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
Druid Vices and a Vodka A Hard Day for a Hangover The Excellencies of God
3 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
Dead Lions The Mututal Friend Bully Pulpit
5 Stars 2 1/2 Stars 4 Stars
Wistful Ascending The World Record Book of Racist Stories Little Ghost
4 1/2 Stars 4 Stars 4 Stars
Aether Powered
3 Stars

Still Reading

Faith & Life In the Fullness of Time Low Anthropology
Bookish People

Ratings

5 Stars 1 2 1/2 Stars 1
4 1/2 Stars 3 2 Stars 0
4 Stars 11 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 3 1 Star 0
3 Stars 3
Average = 3.8

TBR Stacks/Piles/Heaps

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of
2021
9 45 42 144
1st of the
Month
7 46 45 147
Added 3 2 6 1
Read/
Listened
3 1 9 0
Current Total 7 50 42 148

The math on that e-book column doesn’t work right, even I can tell that, but I’m not going to find the time to figure out where I went wrong.

Breakdowns:
“Traditionally” Published: 13
Self-/Independent Published: 9

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 4 (1%)
Fantasy 9 (9%) 26 (10%)
General Fiction/ Literature 3 (14%) 19 (8%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 7 (32%) 105 (42%)
Non-Fiction 1 (5%) 25 (10%)
Science Fiction 4 (18%) 27 (11%)
Theology/ Christian Living 2 (9%) 40 (16%)
Urban Fantasy 3 (14%) 42 (13%)
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/ Steampunk/ Western) 0 (0%) 2 (1%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wrote
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (5th, 12th, 19th, and 26th), I also wrote:

 

Enough about me—how Was Your Month?

November Calendar

Thanksgiving 2022

Happy Thanksgiving/Turkey Day/Thursday

(depending on your practice/preference/location)


On this day that has been set aside these U.S. for expressions of gratitude, it’s been my custom to take a moment or two and mention a few of the things that The Irresponsible Reader is thankful for:

bullet The readers of this blog. If I knew your names, I’d thank you all personally.
bullet The authors who’ve corresponded with me, encouraged me—even promoted this here project.
bullet Those authors, publishers, and/or publicists provided books for me to read.
bullet Books (print, electronic, or audio)—the stories, characters, and/or things I learn are what keep me sane, entertain, and inspire me.
bullet Authors! If not for them, I wouldn’t have the above.
bullet Talented narrators and illustrators—ditto
bullet Coffee (and other beverages both caffeinated and adult)
bullet Time to read
bullet The Nampa Public Library, The Caldwell Public Library, (and The LYNX! Consortium)
bullet Rediscovered Bookshop, Rediscovered Bookshop – Caldwell, and Libro.fm
bullet My supportive, understanding, and encouraging wife and kids. They all do a pretty decent job pretending to care when this old man drones on and on about what he’s reading or what’s going on with the blog. They’ve also continued to step up on the brainstorming front lately.
bullet Again, all of you who read this page, follow, like, tweet, comment, email, etc.—you have no idea how much every little bit is appreciated.

For my fellow Americans, I hope you have a pleasant day with your friends and/or family. As for the rest of you, I hope you enjoy today and that you enjoy having the same pant size tomorrow as you do today.

October 2022 in Retrospect: What I Read/Listened to/Wrote About

I finished 25 titles last month, for 7,641+ pages (or the equivalent)—the number of titles is down a few from September, but the page count went up. So, I can’t complain about that too much. I gave those titles an average of 3.68, which is another good sign. I have been struggling with my energy levels some, so I haven’t produced as much as I’d intended (I think it’s some tweaking going on with medication that’s messing with me, but I’m not sure). I did like what I did manage to eke out—and the stuff that’s in-progress is making me very happy. Hopefully, you get to see that in the next couple of weeks.

But enough of the summarizing, here’s what happened here in October.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to

A Death in Door County The Iron Gate Legends & Lattes
3 Stars 4 1/2 Stars 3.5 Stars
Working It Out Amari and the Great Game Anonymous
2 Stars 3.5 Stars 4 Stars
Good Talk Athanasius of Alexandria Slaying Monsters for the Feeble
4 Stars 3 Stars 3 Stars
6 Ripley Avenue The World's Worst Assistant The Old Woman with the Knife
4 Stars 3 Stars 3.5 Stars
Racing the Light The Ophelia Network Jane Steel
5 Stars 3 Stars 4 Stars
Declassified The Bullet That Missed Rebel with a Clause
3 Stars 5 Stars 5 Stars
Flight Risk The Life and Work of Jesus The Vexed Generation
4 Stars 3 Stars 3.5 Stars
The Sense of an Ending Treasure State Bunnicula The Graphic Novel
Still
deciding
3.5 Stars 5 Stars
Poltergeist
3 Stars

Still Reading

Faith & Life In the Fullness of Time The Excellencies of God
The Veiled Edge of Contact

Ratings

5 Stars 4 2 1/2 Stars 0
4 1/2 Stars 1 2 Stars 1
4 Stars 6 1 1/2 Stars 0
3.5 Stars 5 1 Star 0
3 Stars 8
Average = 3.68

TBR Stacks/Piles/Heaps

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of
2021
9 45 42 144
1st of the
Month
9 50 40 144
Added 2 4 8 3
Read/
Listened
4 8 3 0
Current Total 7 46 45 147

Breakdowns:
“Traditionally” Published: 21
Self-/Independent Published: 4

Genre This Month Year to Date
Children’s 0 (0%) 4 (2%)
Fantasy 3 (12%) 24 (10%)
General Fiction/ Literature 1 (4%) 16 (6%)
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller 9 (36%) 98 (39%)
Non-Fiction 3 (12%) 24 (10%)
Science Fiction 2 (8%) 23 (9%)
Theology/ Christian Living 2 (8%) 38 (15%)
Urban Fantasy 3 (12%) 29 (12%)
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/ Steampunk/ Western) 1 (4%) 2 (1%)

Review-ish Things Posted

Other Things I Wrote
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (1st, 8th, 15th, 22nd, and 29th), I also wrote:

Enough about me—how Was Your Month?

Third Quarter Check-In: 2022 Plans and Challenges

One of the handful of things I dropped the ball on recently was this check-in. I appreciate—and can use—the time to plan and organize, and hopefully, someone enjoys reading them.

I didn’t have many concrete plans for 2022, but one that I mentioned was “Cut down on my Goodreads Want-to-Read list and the unread books that I own (a perennial project, but I made some strides last year).” How am I doing on that?

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of 2021 9 45 42 144
Current Total 9 50 40 144

That’s…not good. I did have to burn a few Audible credits…and then there was this sale, and…and…ugh. Other than that, I’m still doing pretty well at reading what I buy this year. But, this is really not what I’d hoped to see at this point of the year.
Not great, Bob

Let’s see how I’m doing with the rest of my plans and move on to the Reading Challenges…
2022 Book Challenges

12 Books
I’m doing well with this one, but am a little intimidated by the book I have slated for November—it’s a little on the longer side and if it’s as good as Micah says, I’m going to lose a lot of 2023 to the rest of the series. (a good problem to have)
12 Books Challenge Quarter 3


2022 “Support Book Bloggers” Challenge
Support Book Bloggers Challenge
I decided to nix this one—I’m working on all the things mentioned here, but feel a little uncomfortable doing these things because of a checklist—and even more awkward about discussing it. But I’m mentioning it again, because I like the idea and want to spread the word about the efforts (it’s just not for me)


2022 While I was Reading
While I Was Reading
I’m doing okay on this—as usual, I’m not really planning the books for this challenge. When October hits, if I haven’t read everything on the list, I’ll get serious about hunting.

  1. A book with a question in the title.: I have an idea for this, but I’m not sure a local library will get it next month when it comes out, and I don’t know that I want to spend money on it. Hmmm…we’ll if I have to get clever.
  2. A book of non-violent true crime.: Blessed Are the Bank Robbers: The True Adventures of an Evangelical Outlaw by Chas Smith
  3. A book with a cover you don’t like.: Composite Creatures (the style of the art just bugs me)
  4. A historical fiction novel not set in Europe.: A Snake in the Raspberry Patch by Joanne Jackson
  5. A book with a character’s name in the title.: With Grimm Resolve
  6. A book featuring paranormal activity (fiction or non.): That’s like a third of what I’ve read this year…I guess I’ll go with Amongst Our Weapons
  7. A book with a number in the title.: Citizen K-9
  8. A food related memoir.: I have no idea. Literally.
  9. A book that’s won an award.: I’ve read a few of these, I just need to track down a title for this blank
  10. A middle grade novel.: How to Save a Superhero by Ruth Freeman
  11. A book by an author who shares your zodiac sign.: This one is going to be hard—it also comes close to disclosing more personal information than I want to share—but I think I’ve got one in mind.
  12. A book that’s a combination of genres.: Bloodlines by Peter Hartog (I also used this for the next challenge, so I’ll probably replace this on the final list)

Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge

Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge
I’m hitting the target on this one—I’ve only managed to hit 1 Stretch Goal (I don’t have many books that apply to the stretches, actually). This isn’t helping that much with my reduce the TBR plan, but it’s not hurting it. So there’s that.

In the months to come, I’m going to have to get creative to find a way to match the challenge with a book. I’m eager to see if I can pull it off.
January – New Beginnings I give you permission to read the most recent book you got on top of your TBR.: Bloodlines by Peter Hartog
Stretch Goal – Read the oldest book in Mount TBR it has waited long enough: Nice Dragons Finish Last by Rachel Aaron
February – Valentine’s Day Gift
Is there that book by an author you love you picked up and still haven’t read because you do not deserve it just yet? Other items got in the way? You have for this challenge to pick that book up and read it: Troubled Blood by Robert Galbraith
March – Fresh blooms
For the beginning of Spring I want you to open a book in the TBR pile by an author you’ve never read before: The Part About the Dragon Was (Mostly) True by Sean Gibson
April – New Openings
April is derived from the Latin for ‘to open’ In Mount TBR there may be the first book of a series. Your challenge is to read: Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City by K.J. Parker
May – Randommmmm
You MAY pick one random book out of Mount TBR and you must read it: Conjured Defense by J.C. Jackson
June – The Longest Day
Find the longest book in Mount TBR and you must read it: The Border by Don Winslow
July – You Came, You Read and You Conquered
In your TBR there may have been a book you know will be a challenging read. Show it who is the Emperor and read that book until it screams for your mercy and then finish it! AMORALMAN by Derek Delgaudio
August – Holidayyyyy
Pick a book that takes you away to another place. Read it and relax: The Ghost Machine by James Lovegrove
September – Back to School
Pick a book with some link to education. Dark Academia; dangerous school, etc.: The Days of Tao by Wesley Chu (I had a hard time finding something for this prompt, and was so happy when I remembered this started at a summer class)

(Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay)

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