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Do you have a reading theme for the year?

I also try to read books that are being made into movies or have been made into movies, assuming the book or movie sounds interesting to me - that's another way I get to try new authors. Some books from that category include It and The Gunslinger.
As for series, I'm going to read A Dance with Dragons so I can be caught up for the release of The Winds of Winter...whenever that may be. I'm going to continue to poke along with my reading of the Enderverse (next one coming up will be Ender in Exile followed by Shadows in Flight) and also I'll try to get to Rama II since I read the first one a while ago but never got to the sequels. Also I'm reading the Discworld series occasionally, with next up being Equal Rites.



This year is Year of the Pioneer, but I don't have any books lined up yet.
I'm looking for books I haven't read which are about or heavily feature pioneering. SFF books about establishing frontier cities or civilizations. Think Red Mars, rather than Green, or Zoe's Tale. I read Allen Steele's Coyote Trilogy last year, and that's probably what kicked off my interest.
All of those are sf, and I hope to be reading more like them, but I'd really love to see this in fantasy, if it's out there. I don't really consider Red Country a good example.
Any suggestions?

I don't have theme but have some plans:
- all group challenges I committed to
- more female authors
- finish all series I am currently in especially the completed ones (Dagger and Coin, Mars trilogy, Magician, Discworld's Death arc)

This is my year of Brandon Sanderson where I'll only be reading books written by him. I'm starting off with the Mistborn trilogy, then moving on to Infinity Blade and Elantris.
Jevon wrote: "I'm starting off with the Mistborn trilogy, then moving on to Infinity Blade and Elantris...."
I thought the Infinity Blade novellas were terrible. It's a commissioned work based on a video game app. I suggest The Emperor's Soul novella instead.
I thought the Infinity Blade novellas were terrible. It's a commissioned work based on a video game app. I suggest The Emperor's Soul novella instead.


Whenever I read a series I never read it straight through, I have to at least alternate with other books, or even keep the series to one installment a month.


That works good for trilogies, but if there are more books in the series the I'll come back to it in a couple months.
My mind needs a switch in main characters every so often.

This reminds me I need to enter goals for the challenges.


I'm slowly reading the 2nd Wheel of Time book right now.
My theme is no bringing home new books until the pile under the computer printer is gone. (let's just ignore the 3 copy paper boxs, the book shelves, & misc books here and there)
I like to alternate genres.


In between those, I'll be reading review books for BFS, of which there are many, and trying to catch up on my TBR list a bit.

In 2018 I did all dragons, and in 2019 I did unicorns. I considered maybe fairies for 2020, or gods/angels/demons...but in the end decided that being restricted two years in a row was enough and dragons/unicorns were the two things I tended to intentionally collect but never got around to actually reading.
Instead, this year as I'm doing some housecleaning for Christmas, I'm pulling out books from series I've started but haven't finished (let's just say it's a BIG pile, and those are the ones I own, just wait till I see what the library has!) So that's my plan, make a dent in all those series I've left hanging, preferably before I forget the earlier books...which is too late for some series already, will have to do a "re-read" year perhaps for those!
I can finish things we started as a group like the Long Quartet, Riddle-Master of Hed, finally get around to the rest of The Dark Tower so I can finally get around to seeing the movie. There's the second half of the Amber books, the rest of Narnia... I'll definitely nominate the next Vorkosigan book soonish since that seems like a group yearly tradition so far :) Stuff like that. There are so many just from the group itself, let alone my own personal reading.
I will definitely have more books to read than can fit in one year, the trick will be picking which ones to tackle. For now I'm just putting them all into one massive heap.
And of course, I don't have a rule that says I can't start any new series, since I have some of those I want to do to ;) I still plan to participate in most, if not all, group reads. And there's the BINGO challenge which is always fun.




*snickers* My father thinks I should open one...

1 Star Wars - Star Wars books I haven't read and revisit a couple of classics. Nothing from the Disney era.
2 Rereads - LOTR, Harry Potter, and It by Stephen King. I'll read these three slowly through the year,
3 H.P. Lovecraft - I'll also read these slowly through the year.

Andrea wrote: "*snickers* My father thinks I should open one..."
How many?
It was around 1200 last time I tried to count. I'm sure it's 2000 by now.


That is an excellent question, I have absolutely no idea :) I'm the main reason for having massive amounts of books in the house but my sister has some, my Mom has a lot of cozy mysteries, we've inherited books from my great uncle, my grandmother, school text books (have one from my Dad about using programming using punch cards, hanging on to that since that seems so amusing to me a generation later). Still have some favorite little kid picture books. I hate parting with books, but I've been forcing myself to at least get rid of some as it becomes blatantly obvious that I'll be hard pressed to read all the books I currently own once, let alone keep them for re-reads.
Maybe as I'm dusting all those bookcases as I can do some quick counts to get an estimate of the total. I'm just won't tell my father what that count is ;)


*snickers* My father thinks I should open one..."
Haha funny

Andrea wrote: "*snickers* My father thinks I should open one..."
How many?
..."
How many? Oh dear I'm not even going to touch ebooks/amazon.
I have 4 large bookcases all but 1 are double/triple stacked the 1 that isn't is the bf's and he has books that are mine on that too. Medium height bookcase but longer in width that is normal stacked which houses a shelf of books belonging to my daughter (she has her own bookcase in her room too)
Also I have 3 sets of cubes that are double/triple stacked. I have on top of the cubes in teetering stacks are plies upon piles of books. I have a large milk crate full, I have piles in random places, I have a container in the basement with books. My book cart is overflowing. My dresser now has piles on it.
I have a slight book buying problem.

I guess I could add to my reading goals for next year to read at least a few books I have sitting around that I suspect I would be willing to give away after a single read (I simply cannot give away a book I haven't read unless it is on a topic I despise) so that I can make more room for the ones I'm sure I'll want to keep. But will only do a few of those, since don't want to prioritize so-so books when so many good ones still to read.
At least I don't pick up too many ebooks, I rarely buy something unless it's a great deal and I have reason why I'm reading it now (e.g. group read). And for the most part I've stopped picking up free indie books (some are great but some are terrible) since I find a decent amount of free professionally published books (Baen Free library, Tor monthly giveway, etc). I just prefer reading dead-tree books, ebooks I only read when out of the house, so they need to be something I can interrupt frequently as I switch buses, or if I stay home on a weekend and don't read for a few days in a row.
I also discovered OpenLibrary, so much stuff one can borrow from there for one's eReader (assuming you don't mind a few bizarre typos from the scanned conversion to ePub), or if you have a tablet can read the quality PDF's instead (PDF on an eReader is unreadable IMHO, especially in a moving vehicle)

Still a lot lot books downstairs to count so I'll definitely go over 2000, maybe 2500?


Someone recently gave me Disruption by Jessica Shirvington. Has anyone here read it?

Looking at my piles of books and overflowing bookcases that theme would keep me going for the rest of my life LOL But I can't help it, those bookfairs and used bookstores are just too much fun to poke around in, finding treasures you didn't even know existed so my piles keep growing faster than I get through them. It's actually taken COVID to slow my book acquisitions by closing the stores and cancelling the fairs!


Ironically in the Dark Tower series there was an Oz-esque themed scene, which made me wonder if it was "ka" (i.e. destiny/fate) that I should keep reading Oz stuff, but decided it was just a fluke, ka being a hard thing to grasp after all.


I'll probably also make sure to include some of my other neglected genres like Mystery and History, maybe one short series each. And of course there will still be some fantasy to mix things up.
Since I had to redo a wall where the plaster was bulging and cracking, and then realized the carpet was looking really faded and dirty, I had to pull all the books out of my bedroom, so when putting them back I start picking out all my SF ones, of which I have far more than I can read in a year. Will focus first on the big hardcovers (that way if I don't like it, it will empty out some shelf space), and those where I can read the whole series without having to buy more.
Dune kind of inspired it, since the movie came out I figured I'd reread the original 6 books...then might as well continue with the ones his son wrote, and from there, might as well go all out SF!

I'm impressed that you got through the second trilogy. I got about a third of the way into God Emperor and gave up. I never started the 5th and 6th books.

That's exactly what I'm planning on doing next year; but only those that I liked the first book of. So for example I'm finishing the Riyria Revelations next year, and the Lonesome Dove series; and I'm also planning on reading the First Law series in its entirety. Then I'll also be working on the First Mountain Man series, but that has like 48 books, so there's no way I'm finishing that in 2022, I'll also need 2023 for that. ;P

I also started clearing out my 2021 to-reads, I've got a pile that goes about up to my hip...not gonna happen in two months, so have to figure which ones I'll have to leave for another year. I already kicked out a bunch a while back, but from this last batch not sure what I'll feel like reading in December yet so hanging onto the rest for now. Good thing I'll have at least two weeks off work at Christmas time :) Of course might have some family actually visit this year, last year it was a Zoom get together, so that will cut into some reading time (annoying right? hehe).
So many books, so little time...

I have just started "Solaris" by Lem and plan to reread Dune, some Sheri S Tepper, Iain M Banks's "Culture" series as well as my current obsession with C J Cherryh's "Foreigner" series.

Also seems if I'm to dive into Asimov, I need to start with the Robot books and stories. And those are kind of tricky since there are a lot of anthologies that repeat various stories and hard to get them all with the minimal of duplicates, but I found a suggested list for that, I'm only missing one (Robot Dreams byt the library will save me there). So another 8 added for a total of 196. I'll save Empire and Foundation for some other year.
I may toss in a few classics like Lynn is doing, because it would be weird to do an SFF year and missing certain books/authors but I'll see how it goes :) Solaris would actually be one of them

I agree that if you want to do the full Asimov Future History trip, starting with the Robot series is best. However, a number of the short stories in I, Robot and The Rest of the Robots, and The Complete Robot are not set in his Future History timeline - some of them aren't even Robot stories.
If you were to read I, Robot followed by the 4 novels - The caves of Steel, The Naked Sun, The Robots of Dawn, and Robots and Empire - that would certainly cover all the relevant stories.


Books mentioned in this topic
Tiamat's Wrath (other topics)The Emperor's Soul (other topics)
Red Country (other topics)
Zoe's Tale (other topics)
Red Mars (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Lois McMaster Bujold (other topics)James S.A. Corey (other topics)
Brent Weeks (other topics)
John Scalzi (other topics)
Ann Leckie (other topics)
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But that was last year. This year, my plan is to catch up on many different series I've started, particularly ones that have already been completed by the authors. So I just finished the Powder Mage trilogy, part way through the Mallorean after re-reading the Belgariad, got most of the books of the Dark Tower series, and of course my regular ongoing ones like the Chronicles of Elantra and The Dresden Files (assuming Butcher gets the next one out).
But in addition to that, I've been catching up on books already read by this group. Last year I already started on some of the short stories that I could download for free, but I also own a lot of books that have already been covered like The Martian, or the Amber series, so will see if I can squeeze some of those in.
So what about you? Do you already have an overall plan for the year or you just kind of go along with whatever you feel like at the moment you need to pick a new book?