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2020 Reading Goals

January 6, 2020 by Jana 7 Comments

If you follow me on Instagram, you saw that I spelled out my first quarter goals. They include:

  1. Earning an extra $500 per month
  2. Losing 15 pounds
  3. Writing 10 somethings (blog posts, articles for work, etc)
  4. Reading 20 books

This post helps me achieve #3 and also explain #4.

Ordinarily, the only reading goal I set for myself is the completely arbitrary and nonsensical goal I pick out of my ass for Goodreads (80 books this year), and I only do that for tracking purposes. This year, though, I wanted to make a concerted effort to tackle some parts of my reading habit and hobby I feel are neglected.

I don’t participate in reading challenges because I don’t like being told what I can and can’t read, but in 2020, I’m trying to focus on a few areas. It’s not necessarily a reading challenge but it might look a little like one.

Goal #1: Read some books I’ve been avoiding. On this list are Columbine by Dave Cullen, Night by Elie Wiesel, The Corrections by Jonathan Frazen, and finally finishing A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara (I read half and it was so fucking depressing I had to stop). There are probably others but this is a good place to start. And I own two of them so no excuses.

Goal #2: Read some modern classics. I have a loose definition of modern classic but overall, it’s a book written after 1900-ish, is prominently featured on “books to read before you die”-type lists, is written by an author who is generally revered, and you might find it on a high school English class curriculum. This list includes It Can’t Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, and The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson. Night would technically also fall into this category.

Goal #3: Deal with my NetGalley queue. It’s out of hand. I have books on there that are like three years old. They need to be read and reviewed. Not so much because I care about always getting approved for more books but because I feel like this list is torturing and mocking my ability to be organized and stick to deadlines.

Goal #4: Take a library fast. Without my local library, I’d be broke. I love it. I support it and I want all the people to use all the libraries. But between by NetGalley queue, the books I own on my Kindle, and what sits on my bookshelf, I need to pause how much I use it and read what I own. I don’t plan to do it for the whole year but for a few months here or there.

The best thing about these goals is that honestly, they’re not very hard. I’m not exactly reaching to achieve them. But it feels good to try.

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: goals, reading

Show Us Your Books, 2019 Recap

December 27, 2019 by Jana 16 Comments

This year has, in a word, sucked. Like, sucked A LOT. Not sorry to see 2019 go.

Despite its enormous suckassery, I still read my normal amount of books this year which is incredibly surprising. Granted, books I read in January feel like I read them 84 years ago but according to Goodreads, I read them this year.

So that’s fun news.

Before we get started with my favorites of 2019, I do want to take a moment to thank all of you who’ve participated. Doesn’t matter if it was once, twice, or the whole year. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. And this linkup would not be possible every month without my co-host and friend of many, many years, Steph, who has picked up the slack when I just couldn’t do it. So a big thank you to Steph as well.

Now that we’re all a little teary-eyed (even me, with my almost-black heart), let’s look at some 2019 reading stats. In the spirit of full disclosure, I hand-counted all of this so the numbers might not be completely accurate but they’re close enough:

  • Total books read: 81
  • Total pages read: 25,334 (thanks to Goodreads for this one)
  • Total DNF: 6 (a record for me)
  • Fiction books: 68
  • Nonfiction books: 13
  • NetGalley ARCs: 11 (more than I thought)
  • Modern classics: 2
  • Audiobooks: 2

I’m sure I could break this down more into how many female authors I read or how many books took place outside of the US, but I have the flu and it’s Christmas Eve and I’m also very lazy. If you want to know all of that stuff, let me know and maybe I’ll do another post with all of those fun facts.

As for my favorites of the year, my fiction favorites, in no particular order (and sorry for no photos but as I mentioned, I have the flu and it’s Christmas Eve and I’m very lazy). Oh, and favorites aren’t necessarily my highest-rated. They’re the ones I liked the most, even if they had a lower star rating.

  1. There, There by Tommy Orange
  2. Lightning Men by Thomas Mullen
  3. Your House Will Pay by Steph Cha (review coming next month)
  4. Ask Again Yes by Mary Beth Keane
  5. On the Come Up by Angie Thomas
  6. Take Me With You by Catherine Ryan Hyde
  7. Lawn Boy by Jonathan Evison
  8. Lady in the Lake by Laura Lippman
  9. The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead
  10. The Reckless Oath We Made by Bryn Greenwood

Honorable Mention

  • Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
  • The Good Father by Noah Hawley
  • The Lost Man by Jane Harper
  • Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes

Now we move on to nonfiction, which I am actually shocked I didn’t read more of this year. There were only 13 by my count, which I know is one per month plus a bonus, but I feel like it should be higher. But it is what it is, I guess. Since there’s such a small sample, I’m only picking 5 favorites with no honorable mentions:

  1. Born a Crime by Trevor Noah
  2. Maid by Stephanie Land
  3. Good Kids, Bad City by Kyle Swenson
  4. God Land by Lyz Lenz
  5. Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer

Alright. Now it’s your turn to share your 2019 favorites. Link up below and don’t forget to visit some others sharing their favorites so we all know what to read next year! And don’t forget that our first regular SUYB linkup for 2020 is January 14.

OH! One more thing! Mark your calendars for the weekend of January 18-19 because there will be another Show Us Your Books readathon coming your way! More details to follow as Steph and I work them out.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: reading, Show Us Your Books

Show Us Your Books, December 2019

December 10, 2019 by Jana 30 Comments


December. Hanukkah, Christmas, my child’s birthday, and, quite possibly the best part, two Show Us Your Books linkups! This one is our regular, standard one and in just a couple of weeks, we’ll host our annual year-end best of favorites linkup. That one is happening on December 26 so for the first time in (for)ever, we’re having a non-Tuesday SUYB.

And if that’s not enough, we have our annual holiday giveaway this time, too. As a gift from us, we’re selecting one lucky winner to receive both a $25 gift certificate to the bookseller of your choice (can be a big one, a small one, and indie one…whoever you prefer as long as we can buy a gift card online or call and have one mailed to you) and a $25 donation in your name to Read 718, a Brooklyn-based nonprofit dedicated to building strong, confident readers. 

So definitely get on that.

Show Us Your Books. Join the Link-Up! Talk books the 2nd Tuesday of Every Month

As for what I read since the last linkup, it was probably the best overall month I’ve had all year. So that’s cool. I think I rated every book in the 4-star range but that includes some round-ups. Nope. That’s a lie. I gave one book 2 stars. So maybe don’t trust what I say right now.

The Bookshop of the Broken Hearted by Robert Hillman. This was a NetGalley read. It was, quite honestly, terrible. To start, half of it took place during the Holocaust and if you’ve been around here awhile, you know I don’t like those books in general. I missed that in the description that made me request it, so shame on me for that. However, it was a mess, I didn’t care about most of the characters, and I only finished because of the one I did care about. Fun fact: this was the first of three books set in Australia that I read this month. Not sure how that happened.

Ask Again, Yes by Mary Beth Keene. 100% worth all the rave reviews. It hit me in all the places and was not what I expected – in a good way – and I am so, so glad I read it. You will be, too. I have Lindsay’s copy at my house (thank you, Lindsay) and she has graciously said I can pass it along. If you want it, let me know! 

All This Could Be Yours by Jami Attenberg. I was not a huge fan of All Grown Up but I didn’t dislike it enough to not give another book of hers a try, and since this is her newest, I figured I’d do that. It was about family and secrets and what happens when an awful, terrible person is dying. The ending was brilliant (at least I thought so).

The Place on Dalhousie by Melina Marchetta. Never have I read a book by this author that I have disliked, and the same goes for this one. Some of the plot felt a bit rushed, but overall, it will sit with you for days after you read it. Oh, and if you’ve read Saving Francesca, you will recognize many of the characters. I love it when books call back to other books. Australia book #2.

The Family Next Door by Sally Hepworth. For reasons I can’t explain, I thought this book was a thriller/murder mystery. It was not. It had mystery elements but it was more about domestic life and secrets and facades. Lots of domestic life books this month and while I didn’t like it as much as Ask Again, Yes or All This Could Be Yours, it was still solid. Australia book #3.

The Shadows We Hide by Allen Eskens. A sort of sequel/follow-up to The Life We Bury, this was probably my second favorite book of the month. It follows Joe Talbert on a search for his unknown father’s murderer, and it does not disappoint. If you didn’t read the first book, don’t worry about it. You can still follow and understand everything that’s going on.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. Confession: I did this as an audiobook. It was narrated by Sissy Spacek and it could not have had a more perfect narrator. I adore her. Anyway, this was a reread from like eighth grade and I definitely appreciate it differently now as an adult. I’m not at all shocked at how little in our justice system has changed since it was written, but it does make me sad. Also, I totally get why it’s lasted as long as it has and why so many people list it as one of their favorites. 

TL; DR: You can’t go wrong with anything I read this month, except maybe the Bookshop of the Broken Hearted. There are better bookish books to read. 

Currently reading: Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer.

Now it’s your turn! Link up and show us your books! Don’t forget to visit my co-host Steph and some other bloggers. And when you’re done, don’t forget to enter our giveaway.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

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Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books, reading, Show Us Your Books

Show Us Your Books, Five Year Anniversary edition

October 8, 2019 by Jana 40 Comments

HOLY FUCKING SHIT. GUYS. How is it the FIFTH anniversary of Show Us Your Books? Seriously. It’s bananas we’ve come this far.

And it wouldn’t have lasted this long without all of you. THANK YOU for sharing, participating, and most of all, reading every single month. Thank you for entertaining all of our other ideas, from our giveaways to our short-lived podcast to our readathon (I think maybe we should do that one again), and for always supporting books and other readers.

Because whatever else we have going on, from the good to the really truly awful, books are the one constant. Our touchstone. They make us feel better, deal with our emotions, escape, and always provide something to talk about. Readers are the best, and I (and Steph, I’m sure) am glad to have all of you each and every month.

As a thank you for five years, we’re holding a thank you giveaway.

That’s right, we’re giving up to $15 in books of your choosing–something you’ve read and would like to own, something you’ve been dying to read, something that’s coming out in the next few months you’d like to reserve a copy of so it’s delivered as soon as it hits the shelves, a book to give as a holiday gift, whatever you want–to FIVE lucky winners.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Since I missed last month, I have extra books to cover. I mean, I should. But what I also should tell you is that since Barkley passed away, reading has been difficult. I spent the first two weeks after hating absolutely everything I picked up, and I tabled about 4 books since I do want to read or reread them. It took me about 3 weeks to finish one that was mediocre, and I legit had to force myself through it. It was a fucking Flowers book, too, so that was sad and disappointing.

So let me apologize in advance for whatever is about to happen with these reviews. I also read 3 Paul Cleave books if that gives you any indication of what was making me happy. I realize that’s a little disturbing to say.

Show Us Your Books. Join the Link-Up! Talk books the 2nd Tuesday of Every Month

The Killing Hour, Collecting Cooper, and Cemetery Lake by Paul Cleave. I’m grouping all of these together because it’s basically the same feedback for all. They’re all exactly what you’d expect from a Cleave book–graphic, disturbing, interesting plot–but they’re also all early books and the writing isn’t quite as good as it is now. It was a good way to get perspective on how much he’s improved and why I can’t stop reading him, and it was a fun introduction to Theodore Tate, but not his strongest showing. But, since they’re his first books, they get a little bit of a pass.

Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes. I loved this book, and it’s not usually the kind of book I like. Or even try to read. It was exactly what I needed and it didn’t hurt that baseball featured prominently in the storyline.

Shockwave by John Sandford. That fucking Flowers DID NOT do it again. This book was horribly boring. Do not read. There are other ones in the series that are way better.

Lady in the Lake by Laura Lippman. Loved this one as well. It was well-written and creative and again, exactly what I needed. This is the second book of hers I’ve read (Sunburn was the first), and I am crazy excited for how many titles she has. Now that I’m almost done with Paul Cleave’s entire catalog, I need a new author. I think she’s it.

The Bookish Life of Nina Hill by Abbi Waxman. Speaking of authors’ entire catalogs, I think I’ve now read all of Abbi Waxman’s books, too (to be fair, there’s only 3). And she writes those quirky rom-com books I generally can’t stand, if that’s any indication of anything. I kind of liken her to Katherine Center but better.

Little Faith by Nickolas Butler. I think Butler’s writing is spectacular. I still have one of his books sitting on my shelf, and I didn’t even know he had this one (it’s his most recent), but I’m glad I found it. It’s based on a true event, which is always an interesting and sometimes dangerous choice, and if questioning religion and faith and more fundamentalist sects that eschew medicine and doctors is not for you, I do not recommend this book. If you can handle it, then put it on your list.

The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead. Another one based on true events and it is heartwrenching to read. Do not read and watch When They See Us in the same time frame. Wait at least a month between. TRUST. Also, I did not see the ending coming at all which is always a nice surprise.

Mrs. Everything by Jennifer Weiner. This book was…not what I expected but in a good way. It was inclusive and feminist and modern and relevant and all the things you want it to be, plus Jennifer Weiner is a great writer.

DNF: The Perfect Wife by J.P. Delaney. What a horrible fucking book. Reminded me of a less-good version of Foe by Iain Reid which, admittedly, wasn’t even that great. I gave no fucks about anyone or anything and it was a gigantic waste of my time to even attempt to read it. Pretty sure that’s not the *honest* review Netgalley is looking for by I don’t know how else to say it (I was nicer in my official review, though).

TL;DR: With the exception of The Perfect Wife and Shockwave, you really can’t go wrong with anything on this list. Paul Cleave is always a use your judgment kind of guy, but if you’re into that (clearly I am), then go for it.

Always my reading buddy. I miss him so damn much.

Currently reading Recursion by Blake Crouch. FINALLY.

Okay. Now it’s your turn! Link up and show us your books! Don’t forget to visit Steph and some of the other bloggers on the list, and don’t forget to join us on November 12 for the next one.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books, reading, Show Us Your Books

Show Us Your Books, September 2019

September 10, 2019 by Jana 13 Comments

Hi reader friends! There’s no recap from me this month due to a work trip and returning from that to a vet emergency. Everything should be back to normal next month, and I’ll cover all of my books then. I’m looking forward to reading all of your posts, though, and adding some of your recents reads to my TBR.

See you on October 8th for our FIFTH anniversary!

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: books, reading, Show Us Your Books

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Jana

I'm Jana ...

A book reading, nail polish wearing, binge watching, music loving, dog owning, reluctant cheer mom.
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