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New Year Reading Resolutions
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Teresa
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Jan 01, 2013 11:02PM

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Leslie wrote: "I have a long list of reading resolutions - the one most appropriate for here is to finish my "read the USA" challenge which I started in Aug or Sep."
ROFL...you seriously do not want to know how long I've been working on that challenge. I tried to finish it in 2012--and did tick several states off my list--but still have thirteen to go. I have books for most of them, just didn't get to them. :-\
ROFL...you seriously do not want to know how long I've been working on that challenge. I tried to finish it in 2012--and did tick several states off my list--but still have thirteen to go. I have books for most of them, just didn't get to them. :-\
Heather, join the club LOL... I began the challenge the first time... and I've not finished it yet :'-(

Good luck! I read Ulysses for the first time this past fall and it was not for me!


I did the same thing. I really feel overwhelmed.



ANY goal is easier than a weight loss goal;)

I agree! But I keep making the resolution nontheless :)



Now I could wish for this with my husband. He will hardly read. Too funny.

I sincerely tried reading Ulysses when I was younger. Started it 3 times. Maybe I should give it another shot; I finally got through Foucault's Pendulum which was rather a challenge, too. Not that these two books have anything in common.
My husband pretty much gave up on reading when he got bifocals, so I justtell him about every book I'm readling*LOL*.

I agree! But I keep making the resolution nontheless :)"
Yes, reading is a more satisfying goal during the process.
Elaine wrote: "Leslie wrote: "Brenda wrote: "ANY goal is easier than a weight loss goal;)..."
I agree! But I keep making the resolution nontheless :)"
Yes, reading is a more satisfying goal during the process."
Teresa wrote: "I am re-reading Ulysses (this time carefully and with great joy) in a a brand-new book (not in my Nook this time), with the goal of finishing slowly, just in time for Bloomsday. It will be a huge ..."
I agree! But I keep making the resolution nontheless :)"
Yes, reading is a more satisfying goal during the process."
Teresa wrote: "I am re-reading Ulysses (this time carefully and with great joy) in a a brand-new book (not in my Nook this time), with the goal of finishing slowly, just in time for Bloomsday. It will be a huge ..."


:) There isn't enough time in a single year for me to do that if I include books on my Kindle!


As for reading resolutions, I'd like to e..."
There are some really good nonfiction that would classify as "cozy". I loved The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York

I combine TV watching and reading quite well, love hockey too lol. I don't do crafts. i have a combination of OCD and hyperness so not conducive to crafts.


You're far more ambitious than I!! I have no idea how long that would take me!! LOL


It's another book site. () It's been around for awhile but not really on anybody's radar until GR started censoring reviews and shelf names while at the same time started marketing itself to media outlets as a place for authors to market their books. These two things really turned off a lot of people, so there was a mini-mass-exodus of sorts and we all trundled off with our books and our reviews in a huff and went to BookLikes. :)
It's a very different layout from GR. You still shelve your books any way you'd like, rate them (they use a 5 star system and allow 1/2 stars) and review them. But the reviews are set up sort of like a blog. I am not a fan of blogging, but it turns out this style is pretty nice. You follow whomever you'd like to follow and their reviews appear on your dashboard (a bit like the update feed here on GR, but much more nicely fleshed out).
BookLikes adds new features to the site based on user requests every Thursday. They added book discussion groups a couple of weeks ago and they've said they'll keep adding to that discussion group functionality, so the social aspect has started to build. They respond to emails almost always within 24 hours too.
They still have a ways to go yet before they offer the same experiences you can find on GR. I'm not reviewing here any more, and I'm not going to contribute anything of value to this site any longer, but I won't give up my groups - I think the people here in the Cozy Mystery group are great and I'd miss them and their book recommendations a great deal! :D


You can, but it's funny you ask that at the moment. :) GR has an export function but they just turned it off yesterday. They said so many people were exporting their books it was slowing down the site, so they're working on the export function to make it more efficient. They don't say how long it will be down for, but hopefully not too long. A lot of people use it just to create a back up of their books and reviews after there were reports of reviews and books missing from some users' shelves.
But once it's back up and running, then yes. You can export a .csv file from GR and import that file directly into BookLikes. But if you'd like to explore the reviews over there, you can do so without exporting/importing books. Just sign up for a free account and start reading. Or, if you just want to see what it looks like, you're welcome to take a peek at my blog: jenn.booklikes.com. It's just the bog standard, I haven't customised it or anything, but you can get a little bit of an idea.


Also - for anyone reading this who exports for backup: The export function is back up.


It's another book site. () It's been around for awhile but not really on anybody's radar until GR started censoring reviews ..."
Hmmm, I hate censorship. Thanks for informing me about this. I may just mosey on over there in the new year! And quit ŷ, because I don't like having accounts in so many sites. Why the hell would they censor reviews!?

It's a massive drama - to put it concisely as possible: readers posted reviews, (some) authors commented on the reviews in a vitriolic way, readers started creating shelves with names indicating they'd not read books by those authors because of their bad behaviour and started calling those authors out on their bad behaviour in reviews. Authors lost their minds over this and started demanding GR do something. So, about 9 months ago, they started hiding reviews that weren't *strictly* about the book itself. Authors didn't think this was enough, so in September GR started deleting both the shelves and reviews.
GR has refused to post a site wide announcement letting people know that shelves/reviews may be deleted and laying out the rules for "acceptable reviews".
Here's the whole thing in all it's glorious drama: /topic/show/... Warning: it's a HUGE thread.


No worries. I'm happy to do so, although I try to do it in as objective a way as possible (I don't always succeed...).
I can say that to my knowledge none of the badly behaving authors have been cozy authors. :)
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