I spent some time knocking off books that had been on my TBR for near on a decade, and so I feel a sense of satisfaction having read this one just for that fact alone. That said, I did enjoy the book, but not enough to keep my print copy.
The Re-Read Challenge
Goal: Re-read as many books as I want
Books read: 2
Goal achieved? Yes?
Previously I had been doing a lot of rereading for comfort or to revisit old favorites. This year I had a mission: read the books on my shelves and remove everything I don't want to carry up and down three flights of stairs when I move. That didn't leave much room for rereading.
But, I also didn't feel the pull of rereading. If I had, I would have read them regardless of my goal to read books I own. I just didn't feel the pull. And, while I want to reread when I feel the urge, I think it's also equally okay not to force a reread I'm just not feeling at the moment.
Goodreads Reading Challenge
Goal: 50 books, then adjusted, and adjusted, up to 85
Books read: 85
Goal achieved? Yes!
I
set a modest goal of 50 books so I didn't feel pressured by quantity
and because, I love it when my progress bar says "you're x books ahead!"
rather than "you're x books behind" or even the mild "You're on track!" This was also an...anomalous year, to say the least, so I didn't want to feel any kind of pressure to read a certain number of books. Instead, I let myself read when I felt like I wanted to read, and not sweat it when I had months where my brain just could not focus on reading.
Historical Fiction Challenge
Goal: 15 books
Books read: 24 (bio-fic/non-fic)
Goal achieved? Yes!
I
love reading about history and I wanted to make sure I put some focus on
the genre again since it's so easy for time to slip away when it
comes to reading (i.e. "has it really been four years since I last read a
book in that series??" Sound familiar? Sorry Patrick O'Brian...).
While I
included historical fantasy and historical lite in the list, what I
really wanted to make sure I read was biographical historical fiction
and non-fiction. Basically, I wanted to learn about history. This year I also read a lot of disease books and I decided to lump them into this category since I like reading the books that focus on disease through a historical lens. I reveled in gory, horrifying plagues of Ebola, tuberculosis, yellow fever, and smallpox.
Over the last few years I've been steadily and unintentionally shifting from fiction to non-fiction, and this year continued that trend. I read 13 biographical non-fiction books (up from last year's 8) plus another 7 historical non-fiction books (disease, fashion, etc.). That's 20 non-fiction books! Incredible for me. My biographical fiction reading was a lot less than usual, clocking in at only 4 (down from the 6 I read last year, which was lower than the previous year). I'd like to read more biographical fiction next year, especially considering I own so many of them.
I also read a whole slew of historical fiction that wasn't biographical, but was historical. Toward the middle through end of the year I really got into "westward-ho fiction" with several YA/MG books following fictional characters making their way in the rugged American west. I went to California, Montana, Texas, New Mexico, Oregon, and all the states in between.
My biographical reading saw a mix of familiar and new faces. Marie Antoinette, Anne Boleyn, and Eleanor of Aquitaine made several appearances, including the long-hyped but ultimate letdown of Antonia Fraser's Marie Antoinette: The Journey. Less common, but increasingly more common ladies such as Catherine of Aragon, Catherine de Medici, and Matilda also showed up, each with a hit that made for standout reading experiences.
I finally knocked off Trevor Royale's The Wars of the Roses, but much like Antonia Fraser's offering, this one was more of a soulless letdown, though still worth reading. G. J. Meyer's Tudors was another historical overview that had been on my list for a while, but sadly it too could not hold a candle to my previously read Tudor by Leanda de Lisle. Other "just okays" but still glad I read them included the book on Caligula, She Wolves, and The Other Tudor Princess. I wanted to spend more time with the three Edwards this year, and I did through Thomas B. Costain's solidly Good The Three Edwards. Most surprising love? That award goes to the shockingly gripping Empire of the Summer Moon.
While much of 2020 saw a lot of familiar Tudors and Plantagenets, it also introduced me to a
number of new-to-me or still very toe-dippy historical figures and
events. I spent some time with James I's wife in The Danish Queen (didn't like her much), Minette, Charles II's sister (she's okay), and Consuelo Vanderbilt. The latter was a result of an accidental foray into her autobiography via an Edith Wharton-inspired Victorian/Edwardian binge, all of which I thoroughly enjoyed. I also did a few inadvertent toe-dips into WWII and while I enjoy the era it still hasn't gripped me enough to go into a full dive.
Jean Plaidy and Carolyn Meyer were sadly absent this year, along with a second year of no Sharon Kay
Penman, Susan Howatch, or Anne O'Brien. This was a surprisingly American-filled year with the cherry on top the long-feared but best loved Gone with the Wind. On the historical-lite front, I finally, finally read some Kate Morton books and I loved every one of them. All in all, I'm quite happy with how this year's historical reading went.
Read My Own Books Challenge
Goal: Read books I acquired prior to 2018
Books read: 53 read
Goal achieved? Yes!
I
set a rough target of reading or DNF-ing 12 books this year. Working
out to roughly one book a month, I figured that was doable. Really, what
I want to achieve with this challenge are two things: First, I want to
determine whether or not I should continue lugging these books around
with me. Second, I want to not let books sit unread for years on my
shelves.
Last year I read 27 books, but this year I read a whopping 53!
Of the 53 books, 21 of them were e-books (40%, down from 63% last year) and
32 were print books (60%! up from 10 books and 37% last year!). In an effort to be proactive and not let books languish unread for years, 19 of them were books I got in 2019. In an effort to read books that have in fact been languishing for years, 34 have been sitting on my shelves unread for 2 or more years, with most of them acquired between 2012 and 2018 (2-8 years!). I didn't keep track of all of the books I gave away this year, but I went
through a major purge and removed over 154 books that I did keep track of, and many more that I haven't (and
many of those I didn't track on Goodreads, so they're not included in
the numbers below).
I'm
still playing around with how I want to track progress on this, and I
think now I may try tracking both percentage of books read and number of
books removed that year. This way if I either increase the percentage or remove books,
either way I'm moving toward my goal.
26% read of books acquired in 2020 (140) (104 to 100%)
41% read and 0 added of books acquired in 2019 (165), up 8% (97 to 100%)
34% read and 10 removed from 2018 (253), up 5% (167 to 100%)
33% read and 41 removed from 2017 (302), up 9% (202 to 100%)
47% read and 40 removed from 2016 (322), up 8% (171 to 100%)
39% read and 12 removed from 2015 (96), up 18% (58 to 100%)
49% read and 5 removed from 2014 (74), up 7% (38 to 100%)
54% read and 5 removed from 2013 (50), down 2% (23 to 100%)
67% read and 9 removed from 2012 (60), up 20% (20 to 100%)
89% read and 17 removed from 2010-2011 (129), up 11% (14 to 100%)
83% read and 1 removed from 2008-2009 (35), up 2% (6 to 100%)
87% read and 2 added from 2003-2007 (103), down 2% (13 to 100%)
100% read and 0 removed from 2002 and earlier (75), 0%
This year I also decided to break this up into print and e-books.
Print:
21% read of books acquired in 2020 (14) (11 to 100%)
67% read and 0 added from 2019 (30), up 0% (10 to 100%)
43% read and 0 added from 2018 (28), up 0% (16 to 100%)
44% read and 0 added from 2017 (45), down 0% (25 to 100%)
49% read and 0 removed from 2016 (49), up 0% (25 to 100%)
38% read and 0 removed from 2015 (39), up 0% (24 to 100%)
42% read and 0 removed from 2014 (69), up 0% (40 to 100%)
61% read and 0 added from 2013 (41), up 0% (16 to 100%)
66% read and 0 added from 2012 (44), up 0% (11 to 100%)
80% read and 0 removed from 2010-2011 (111), up 0% (22 to 100%)
91% read and 0 removed from 2008-2009 (33), up 0% (3 to 100%)
87% read and 0 added from 2003-2007 (97), down 0% (13 to 100%)
100% read and 0 removed from 2002 and earlier (65), 0%
E-Books:
27% read of books acquired in 2020 (132), up 0% (96 to 100%)
38% read and 0 added from 2019 (150), up 0% (93 to 100%)
33% read and 0 added from 2018 (239), up 0% (160 to 100%)
34% read and 0 added from 2017 (288), up 0% (190 to 100%)
48% read and 0 removed from 2016 (307), up 0% (160 to 100%)
19% read and 0 removed from 2015 (81), up 0% (66 to 100%)
52% read and 0 removed from 2014 (52), up 0% (25 to 100%)
77% read and 0 added from 2013 (39), up 0% (9 to 100%)
76% read and 0 added from 2012 (45), up 0% (11 to 100%)
93% read and 0 removed from 2010-2011 (108), up 0% (8 to 100%)
95% read and 0 removed from 2008-2009 (21), up 0% (1 to 100%)
93% read and 0 added from 2003-2007 (76), down 0% (5 to 100%)
100% read and 0 removed from 2002 and earlier (44), 0%
I realized last year that I need to track this differently because I
have a lot of e-books that I don't feel the need to get rid of, but I
also don't think the odds are high that I'll ever read them. These are
throwing off my percentages, since the goal of tracking this is to not
leave books I really do want to read unread. You know, the ones that
when you see them on the shelf they're giving you the stink eye. THOSE
are the books I want to track. Not so much the "digital library" of
books I have but don't care if I read or not. So I also excluded all of the e-books I technically own but know I'm not
going to read (why bother deleting them?). They are included in the
totals above though (I'll remove them for next year).
I
still have a lot of books I haven't read, but I think this
is going to be a marathon not a sprint. I'll be signing
up for this challenge in 2021 and I hope to continue making a dent.
7. Twilight by Meg Cabot
6. Haunted by Meg Cabot
5. Darkest Hour by Meg Cabot
4. Reunion by Meg Cabot
3. Ninth Key by Meg Cabot
2. Shadowland by Meg Cabot
1. Sarah, Plain and Tall by Patricia MacLachlan
Historical Bio (fiction):
Historical Lite:
9. England in the Age of Chivalry and Awful Diseases by Ed West
8. The Cholera Years by Charles Rosenberg
7. After Elizabeth by Leanda de Lisle
6. The Door in the Wall by Marguerite de Angeli
5. Rabid by Bill Wasik
4. The Lavender Garden by lucinda Riley
3. The Tea Planter's Wife by Dinah Jefferies
2. Vienna Nocturne by Vivien Shotwell
1. A Rose for Virtue by Norah Lofts
Books DNF'ed:
8. England in the Age of Chivalry and Awful Diseases by Ed West
7. How to Walk a Puma by Peter Allison
6. Panic in Level 4 by Richard Preston
5. The Cholera Years by Charles Rosenberg
4. The Broken Girls by Simone St. James
3. The Girl who Married a Lion by Alexander McCall Smith
2. After Elizabeth by Leanda de Lisle
1. Shadows on the Nile by Kate Furnivall
Challenge Basics:
Name: Read My Own Damn Books Challenge
Starts: January 1, 2021
Ends: December 31, 2021
Eligible Books: Books you own prior to 2020.
Levels: I'm going to try to read and/or DNF and get rid of 12 books I own.
Why I'm Interested:
Odds are looking fairly high that I will have another move in store for 2021, and I'm feeling old and achy and like schlepping "just okay" heavy boxes of books up and down three flights of stairs is not something I want to do anymore. So, I don't want to keep a bunch of unread print books on my shelves anymore. It's time to cull the herd.
And as for e-books? Well, I had so many books on my TBR that I didn't read when I was loving those genres and now I'm just not as interested in them anymore. So, I'd like to try to read as many of the books that have been languishing on my list that I'm still interested in reading so I don't miss the boat on them too.
Some books I'm considering:
Anything on my Own-Unread shelf that I acquired prior to 2021.
At the start of 2021, here's where I stand as far as what books I own and what percentage of them I've read:
31. Where the Broken Heart Still Beats by Carolyn Meyer (2020)
30. The Husband Hunters by Anne de Courcy (2020)
29. Horus and the Curse of Everlasting Regret by Hannah Voskuil (2018)
28. The Touchstone by Edith Wharton (2020)
27. The Odd Sisters by Serena Valentino (2019)
26. Mistress of All Evil by Serena Valentino (2017)
25. The Hundred and One Dalmatians by Dodie Smith (2017)
24. Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories (2017)
23. The Beast Within by Serena Valentino (2018)
22. Mary Queen of Scots by Jacob Abbott (2016)
21. The Diary of Mattie Spenser by Sandra Dallas (2018)
20. The Haunting of Maddy Clare by Simone St. James (2017)
19. An Inquiry into Love and Death by Simone St. James (2017)
18. A Trail of Broken Dreams by Barbara Haworth-Attard (2020)
17. Ghost on Black Mountain (2017)
16. Footsteps in the Snow by Carol Matas (2020)
15. The Blizzard of '88 by Mary Cable (2020)
14. Magna Carta by Dan Jones (2015)
13. Codename Celine by Jim Eldridge (2020)
12. In the Labyrinth of Drakes by Marie Brennan (2016)
11. Madame de Treymes by Edith Wharton (2020)
10. Miss Cayley's Adventures by Grant Allen (2019)
9. A Month in the Country by J.L. Carr (2020)
8. The Night of the Solstice by L.J. Smith (2016)
7. The Great Plague by Pamela Oldfield (2020)
6. Asleep by Molly Caldwell Crosby (2020)
5. Anne of Cleves by Sarah-Beth Watkins (2020)
4. By Royal Decree by Kate Emerson (2014)
3. All the Stars in the Sky by Megan McDonald (2020)
2. The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck by Mark Manson (2020)
1. The White Queen by Philippa Gregory (2018)
Books DNF'ed:
8. A Door in the Wall by Marguerite de Angeli (2020)
7. Rabid by Bill Wasik (2020)
6. The Lavender Garden by Lucinda Riley (2013)
5. The Tea Planter's Wife by Dinah Jefferies (2017)
4. The Mystery of the Clockwork Sparrow by Katherine Woodfine (2018)
3. Black Rabbit Hall by Eve Chase (2017)
2. Vienna Nocturne by Vivien Shotwell (2015)
1. A Rose for Virtue by Norah Lofts (2014)