Friday, January 1, 2021

2020 Stats

 So I am just going to share my overall stats for my reading year. I keep track of a different number of things. I got this idea from Hardback Hoarder, who a few years ago put up a Google Sheet that allowed her to keep track of certain stats. I have changed it a little to keep track of what I want to keep track of, and every year, I update it a little to reflect things I want to keep track of or don't really care to keep track of anymore. I have not updated it yet this year, so I won't be able to discuss that on this post, but maybe before January has completed, I will be able to share that.

Anyway, let's jump right into my 2020 stats. 

Just some generic information for the yearly stats including pages read, hours listened (this amount is inclusive of  pages read), and the amount of books I read this year. The first chart shows how many of those books were read per month.

Books Read: 59
Pages Read: 10219
Hours Listened: 115.17


The next chart shows what audience the books were for. I read a lot of Children's books this year because my sister is becoming a teacher and I wanted to help get some ideas of what books she is going to get for her class.


The following chart is the format of the books I read. The chart doesn't show which is which but I read majority ebooks and the smallest amount was the physical copies, while the 15 books are books I listened to via audiobook.


The two next charts are the genre of books that I read and the ratings that I gave. The other category was the Children's books.


The next chart depicts whether I read books by male authors or female authors. As you can see, I read way more by females. I would like to see this be more even this coming year.


My final chart shows what year the books I read were published in.


My favorite book this year would be between House of Salt and Sorrows by Erin A. Craig and Kingdom of the Wicked by Kerri Maniscalco. My least favorite book that I read this year was Fierce and Subtle Poison by Samantha Mabry.

Thursday, December 31, 2020

End of Year 2020 Reading Resolutions Wrap-Up

So this year was kind of rocky for my reading. Basically I went into a reading slump that pretty much lasted the entire year. Looking forward into my Reading Resolutions for next year, there will be some changes taking place because I think a big reason I went into a slump was because I got behind at the beginning of the year when I took some months away from reading while I moved and did some remodeling in my new house. I had too high of expectations, and that ended up being the downfall of my reading year.

I have a few different challenges that I am really interested in tackling next year, but I'm thinking of setting up a jar with monthly challenges to do change up my reading resolutions, goals, or challenges. I'm looking forward to the next year, and the books that I am really excited to read.

1. Meet My Goodreads Reading Challenge Goal

Halfway through the year, I changed my goal from 50 to 10, and I did end up meeting this challenge, and exceeding it by 21.

2. Listen to 10 Audiobooks

I ended up listening to six audiobooks - wasn't a strong year for audiobooks, but slowly I am starting to listen to more overall then I have in my past years.

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3. Read 10 Contemporary Novels

Contemporary books are my least favorite genre, so every year I just aim to read 10, sometimes I read more and other times I don't meet the 10 books. I read two contemporary novels this year - so it wasn't a strong year for this. This is one of the challenges that doesn't really faze me if I don't reach it just because contemporaries aren't my favorite and it's just a challenge that I put into place to try to read outside of my normal reading tastes.

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4. Read a book in all of the following genres:

Dystopian/Apocalyptic: Agnes at the End of the World by Kelly McWilliams
Historical Fiction: Kingdom of the Wicked by Kerri Maniscalco
Fantasy: Tiger at Midnight by Swati Teerdhala
Fairytale Retelling: House of Salt and Sorrows by Erin A. Craig
Mystery: Things She's Seen by Ambelin & Ezekiel Kwaymullina
Thriller/Suspense: Off the Trail by Diana Urban
Horror: Dread Nation by Justina Ireland
Graphic Novel/Manga: Pumpkinheads by Rainbow Rowell
Poetry/Verse: Voices by David Elliot
Anthology: Rural Voices by Various Authors
Sci-Fi: Unearthed by Amie Kaufman and Meagan Spooner
Middle Grade: NONE
Steampunk: NONE


5. Read 10 books that are longer than 500 pages

I did not end up reading any book over 500 pages - I don't know if I am going to make this a challenge next year or not. Although, I do want to read more longer books. Even though I didn't read any books over 500 pages, I got close with a few books that I read this year.

6. Finish the Series of Unfortunate Events

I didn't read any Unfortunate Events books. This will probably not be a challenge next year.

7. Read all of Amie Kaufman's, Meagan Spooner's, and Jay Kristoff's books

I did not read all, but I did read Unearthed by Amie Kaufman and Meagan Spooner. Other than that, I read nothing. I'm probably going to aim for this challenge again next year.

8. Read all of Kasie West's books

Nope, did not happen. We will see if this will be a challenge.

Have a Happy New Reading Year!!!!!

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Waiting on Wednesday: 2021 January Scheduled Book Releases


In the coming year, I plan to slowly introduce new posts weekly. One that I am starting is going to be my Waiting on Wednesday: Monthly Scheduled Releases to share with you the books that I am highly anticipating reading this year that also happening to be coming out this year.

Last year, I was looking forward to 45 books that were scheduled to be released throughout the year. Obviously, last year was a bad reading year for me in general, but I ended up only reading 1 of the 45. Some of those books are on my TBR for this year (already planned for January), so I am still planning to get to some of them. I also in general only read, 9 books that were published in 2020 (which isn't necessarily a bad thing), with the majority of the books I read last year from the previous year, 2019.

Starting off in January, there are five books coming out that I would love to read either during the month of January or hopefully February.

I have not preorder any of these books, and most likely these will all be acquired from my local library. I don't tend to preorder a lot of books, just because I have limited space for my books - although, it is known to happen.

There are also plenty more books that I would love to read that are coming out in January, but these are the ones that if I had to pick and read any books coming out this next month, these would be the ones.

Friday, November 27, 2020

Tistheseasonathon TBR


If you want to know more about what this readathon is about, check out the twitter account: @Tistheseasonn. So my plan is to read all holiday themed novels for this challenge because I'm really in that Christmas Spirit minus one which is the second challenge because there wasn't any Holiday themed books on my TBR for this year. Also for my Diverse Book, I don't yet no if that will fit, but I'm hoping because it was hard to look for a diverse holiday book, but if it ends up not fitting, I do have an alternative book.

Here are the challenges and my TBR:

1. Read a Holiday Themed Book: 12 Men for Christmas by Phillipa Ashley

2. Read a Book You Wanted to Read This Year: Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes

3. Read a Book with Lights on Cover by Jay Asher

4. Read a Diverse Book by Various Authors

5. Read a Cozy Read by Various Authors

Bonus: Read the Group Book: In A Holidaze by Christina Lauren

Along with the 5 challenges, there is a Bingo Board that was Created, but I have my own Christmas Bingo Board that I will be completed for the entire month of December.



Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I Want to Read Before the End of the Year


If you have been following this year (which would have been really hard), you would have noticed that my year was really rough. This was due to a lot of factors, those being that I moved at the beginning of the year, got a new puppy, and corona happened, which limited me going out to the library (which is where I get most of the books I read). In October, I ended up trying to attempt in two readathons to jumpstart the slump I entered at the beginning of the year (like I had done multiple times of the year). This time it helped and I'm not in my slump anymore. So before I get too far into November, I wanted to share my top ten books I want to read before the end of the year (all of them will be books I own). I already read one book that I would have put on here (House of Salt and Sorrows - look for the soon to posted review of this novel), so I don't want to read too much that would be included in this post. Without further ado... the books...

1. Kingdom of the Wicked by Kerri Maniscalco

I absolutely love Kerri Maniscalco's writing, and I really need to also finish the Stalking the Jack the Ripper series, but this book is about witches, which wasn't really something I was interested in reading much (with a few exceptions), but after reading Serpent & Dove by Shelby Mahurin last year, I am fascinated with witchy novels now. That's all I really know - I'm kind of going into this blind.







2. Blood & Honey by Shelby Mahurin

Serpent & Dove
was one of my favorite reads from last year. I quickly read through the novel because of how much I was hooked by the characters and the story. So basically Serpent & Dove is about a witch and a witchhunter who are forced into marriage while there is a war going on between the witches and the hunters. Blood & Honey picks up pretty much where Serpent & Dove left off. I'm expecting it too bring out a lot of emotions from me, and I'm honestly already looking forward to the next book in the series, Gods & Monsters.





3. Stroke of Malice by Anna Lee Huber

Stroke of Malice
is the eighth novel in the Lady Darby series, it's about two individuals who investigate murders in the mid 1800s, and I absolutely love it. It also happens to be set in like England, Ireland, and Scotland. I've been trying to find some books that are very similar, and I haven't really found any that have intrigued me as much as this series. I'm hoping to wrap this book up - I've already started and I'm a few chapters in - before the year is over because the next book comes out in April, and I'm already ready for that one.

4. One by One by Ruth Ware

I thoroughly enjoy Ruth Ware's novels. I am up to date on all of her novels except for this one. What I love most about her books is the unreliability of the narrators (not all of them), and the style of her writing. Turn of the Key was one of my favorite reads of this year, and One by One sounds like I will enjoy it even more. Our main character gets snowed in with eight of her coworkers, who are all untrustworthy, and maybe some people start dying? It sounds like a book that is right up my alley.
5. Warrior of the Wild by Tricia Levenseller

Tricia Levenseller has become an automatic buy author for me after I fell in love with her Daughter of the Pirate King series. It is one of my favorite duologies of all time, and I am ready to jump into her other novels - they have been sitting on my shelf for too long unread. This book is viking inspired, and it sounds amazing! This is about the daughter of  the village leader, who has been training her whole life to take over. During her coming-of-age trial, her test is sabotaged and she fails - which results in her being sent out into a monster-filled wilderness on a quest to kill a god or die trying.

6. Other Side of the Sky by Amie Kaufman and Meagan Spooner

I have no idea what this book is about, but anything Amie Kaufman is listed as an author on, I will pretty much pick up and read. I'm not going to find out what this is about, I'm going into it blind. I do know that it's a Sci-Fi novel. And this book was on my Reading Resolutions for the year (although I did not get a majority of my Reading Resolutions completed - it will be nice to at least mark this off.

7. Impossible Girl by Lydia Kang

Impossible Girl
takes place in the mid 1800s, and is about a female resurrectionist who procures bodies with anatomic anomalies and sells them. And then murders start happening - and she is the target due to her anatomical anomaly - two hearts.
 
8. Hunting Prince Dracula by Kerri Maniscalco

This book should not be a surprise because a few books up, I had mentioned how much I need to finish reading this series. If you haven't read Stalking Jack the Ripper, you definitely should. Stalking Jack the Ripper is about Audrey, who secretly studies forensic medicine in her uncle's laboratory. Then some gruesome murders start happening, and she starts investigating. Hunting Prince Dracula takes place shortly after Stalking Jack the Ripper wraps up, Audrey goes away with a friend, Thomas Cresswell to Romania where Europe's best school of forensic medicine is, and stumbles into another killer.

9. Windwitch by Susan Dennard

Truthwitch was a top read and it has been a long time coming for me to read the sequel. This series about a world of witches of different talents whose world is thrown into a war. I don't really know much about what Windwitch is about because I decided not to spoil anything by reading the summary, but it takes place right after Truthwitch.

10. Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab

I have been wanting to read a novel by V.E. Schwab for some time. I "technically listened" to City of Ghosts by her, but since I honestly cannot remember it, I'm planning to either listen to it or read the book again, and don't really include it. It's about a woman who makes a Faustian bargain to live forever and is cursed with being forgotten by everyone she meets. It sounds very intriguing, and I look forward to jumping into this novel.