According to my Goodreads list, the only books I've read in November are not ones that were in the proposed list, which suggests that they were already read at the point that I made that list, so I'm not counting them. After valiant effort, I've abandoned (and returned to the library) Hark! A Vagrant and 100 Years of Solitude. I've also had to return The Stars Askew so as not to attract library fines. I would still like to read it, but I probably won't end up reborrowing it in November.
New list, at least as far as I've thought about it:
1. The Moonlight Dreamers (Siobhan Curham) -- recently purchased 2. Jackie French's Chook Book -- TBR long term resident 3. A Skinful of Shadows (Frances Hardinge) 4. All Systems Red (Martha Wells) -- new from library, already 1/2 the way through 5. Exit Protocol (Martha Wells) -- new from library
Beyond that, there isn't anything on my 'currently reading' list (which is still 34 books!) that inspires me right at the moment. I'll see what I end up grabbing off the shelf. There are a lot of hard-work non-fiction books on that list at the moment, where I've read the chapters that were relevant at the time, but want to read the rest (two on depression, one each on organisational strategies, version control, statistical methodology, and history). Which brings me to
6. At least one non-fiction book from my currently reading list.
My complete unwillingness to specify eight books instead of six makes me wonder whether I should be revising my goal.
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Date: 2018-11-10 01:09 am (UTC)New list, at least as far as I've thought about it:
1. The Moonlight Dreamers (Siobhan Curham) -- recently purchased
2. Jackie French's Chook Book -- TBR long term resident
3. A Skinful of Shadows (Frances Hardinge)
4. All Systems Red (Martha Wells) -- new from library, already 1/2 the way through
5. Exit Protocol (Martha Wells) -- new from library
Beyond that, there isn't anything on my 'currently reading' list (which is still 34 books!) that inspires me right at the moment. I'll see what I end up grabbing off the shelf. There are a lot of hard-work non-fiction books on that list at the moment, where I've read the chapters that were relevant at the time, but want to read the rest (two on depression, one each on organisational strategies, version control, statistical methodology, and history). Which brings me to
6. At least one non-fiction book from my currently reading list.
My complete unwillingness to specify eight books instead of six makes me wonder whether I should be revising my goal.