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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: November 1st, 2023

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  • Up to $20 for a physical book if it doubles as a cool souvenir to bring home from an overseas trip (so it’s got a nice cover and is sturdy). For ebooks, about $12 if it’s a new release by an author I already really like, but preferably single digits, and low single digits if it’s a new to me author.

    I don’t care at all about special editions or signed copies or whatever.

    Also, I’m surprised that multiple people in this thread apparently think r/books subscribers have never heard of libraries.


  • I don’t usually keep a TBR, but I have one right now because I have a number of books I want to finish before year-end, and my strategy is simply not reading anything that’s not on that list unless or until everything is finished. I expect it to take me pretty much right up to December 31st or a couple of days before.

    I will say, I see the massive TBRs people have on Goodreads and it just seems pointless and stupid. I don’t see what value a 1000+ book TBR has if you only read 20 books a year.





  • I turn wasted time to reading time. Read on my lunch break, read on the bus, read while waiting in line or waiting for people. My chore load at home is really low because I have a batch system where everything is taken care of on the weekend (cooking, cleaning, errands) in a really efficient way. I also have a short walking commute to work, don’t work overtime, and don’t watch tv or have a smartphone.



  • Right now I’d say it’s this strange work by a priest in 1600s Germany, Cautio Criminalis by Friedrich Spee von Langenfeld. It’s nonfiction, and basically just a really interesting and convoluted argument against the witch trials that were commonplace at the time. His reasoning is really interesting because it needs to be logically and theologically sound, but also oppose widely accepted and standard church practice, so it’s a bit of a dance to say the least.


  • I wish my parents had pushed classics more when I was a kid, because the children’s classics I’ve read as an adult have been so unbelievable charming and lovely and just leagues above Pee Wee Scouts and whatever other crap I was reading when I was six or seven. I also have a ton of gaps in my reading with regards to popular books and classics, though I’m hoping to focus on that with my reading in 2024.

    I was actually surprisingly unpicky as a child reader, probably because I didn’t have anywhere near the selection to choose from as I do today - small town, no bookstores, teeny library. My books were mostly stuff pushed at me by other people.








  • This year I’d only read 23 across all categories, which is way less than normal. I’ll probably try some other ones from the longlists in the new year.

    I’m SO GLAD they finally split romantasy out of fantasy. I like both, but they’ve diverged enough that they have totally different fanbases and I really think it makes sense for them to be separate categories.

    I was surprised they axed graphic novels, poetry, and children’s books, though I don’t generally read any of that so I’ve never voted. If I was in charge I would change up the nonfiction to lump together the biography/autobiography/memoirs, have a separate category for science, and then have all other nonfiction books together.

    My votes:

    • Fiction - Yellowface
    • Historical Fiction - Lady Tan’s Circle of Women
    • Mystery - The Last Devil to Die
    • Romantasy - A Soul of Ash and Blood
    • Fantasy - The Will of the Many
    • Science Fiction - Starter Villain
    • Horror - How to Sell a Haunted House
    • YA Fantasy - These Infinite Threads
    • Nonfiction - Cobalt Red