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Tag: project read the TBR (Page 1 of 3)

Project Read the TBR wrap-up

We’re down to the last few hours of December, so I’m wrapping up my project to read the TBR. Here’s my last few reads for the year, which includes a sort-of cheat: Empire in Black and Gold is my current read I just started on the 27th, and at 600+ pages there is very litle chance I’m going to finish it before we ring in the New Year – even at my best reading speed.

As you can see from the table above, my reading slowed right down over the last few weeks, due to my mum passing away in November.  Nonetheless, Project Read the TBR was a success. I had an informal goal of getting down to under 100 books in the queue, and according to Goodreads, my “Mount TBR” shelf is currently sitting at 98. Yay, me etc. Of course, since I *actually* read a total of 110 books in 2024, clearly I could have read a lot more. A few books also had to be added to/removed from the shelf mid-year because a) I read some series openers that I then decided not to continue with, and b) I am an idiot who cannot be relied upon to maintain my Goodreads shelves accurately.

But on the subject of series openers, in the course of this project I discovered some crackers, many of which I had been sleeping on for a number of years, including:

  • Eternal Sky – Elizabeth Bear
  • The Redwinter Chronicles – Ed McDonald
  • Rook & Rose – MA Carrick
  • The Tower and the Knife – Mazarkis Williams
  • The Divine Cities – Robert Jackson Bennett
  • Memoirs of Lady Trent – Marie Brennan
  • The Craft Sequence – Max Gladstone
  • Planetfall – Emma Newman
  • Shades of Magic – VE Schwab
  • Spellcrackers – Suzanne MacLeod
  • The Bone Season – Samantha Shannon
  • The Laundry Files – Charles Stross
  • Weather Warden – Rachel Caine
  • The Shadow Campaigns – Django Wexler
  • Wolfhound Century – Peter Higgins
  • Winternight Trilogy – Katherine Arden
  • The Greatcoats – Sebastien de Castell
  • Drowning Empire – Andrea Stewart
  • The Blackhart Legacy – Liz de Jager

These were all thoroughly enjoyable, all for different reasons, and I want to read on. As a result,  my list of ongoing series now numbers 48, so 2025’s TBR looks, to use a seasonally-appropriate phrase, somewhere between “Ouch” and “boi-oi-oi-oing”.

There goes my pocket money.

 

Project Read the TBR: autumn edition

Time for a further upate on my attempt to clear the outstanding books from my TBR pile. It’s been a productive couple of months, reading-wise, and the pile is now down to just 102. No chance I’m going to clear it by the end of the year, but I have made a significant dent.

Since the end of July I’ve read (or attempted to) the following books:

 

Sadly, right out of the gate I had a DNF: Caraval, by Stephanie Garber. I don’t DNF books often. Usually I’m pretty good about picking ones I think I will enjoy, but sometimes I just don’t vibe with the prose style or the characters, and I have to put it down. In Caraval‘s case, I think I simply wasn’t the intended audience, and rather than struggle through to the end I moved on.

Another DNF was Hope Mirrlees’ Lud-in-the-Mist. Whilst I wanted to love it, and indeed moments charmed me, I quickly grew tired of the narrator and the very mannered prose. Perhaps it was simply a case of the wrong book at the wrong time, but I found that once I put it down I was not motivated to pick it back up.

Stand-out reads:

  • The Golem and the Jinni was a delight: easy to read, with an exquisite sense of place. Two non-humans learning how to be people – immigrants to humanity, as well as to New York.
  • I was utterly captivated by Mudlarking: Lost and Found on the River Thames by Lara Maiklem. What a treasure trove of history and glimpses into the daily life of our ancestors, rich and poor alike, as well as a love letter to the river itself. Recommended for anyone who – like me – has an irresistible urge to pick up treasures on the beach or from the forest floor and take them home.
  • Kate Elliott’s Unconquerable Sun surprised me with rather more pew-pew battles than I was expecting, but also did not stint on the intrigue, characters, culture and worldbuilding. More. please.
  • The Thousand Names by Django Wexler. Imagine Sharpe’s Rifles transported to alt-North Africa, with a dollop of fantasy on top. Enormous fun.
  • Wolfhound Century by Peter Higgins. This had absolutely bags of atmosphere, oppressive and unsettling: part Soviet spy thriller with the serial numbers filed off, part tone poem exploring the clash between man’s ruthless enforcement of systems and the built environment onto the natural landscape and its denizens. Left me quite breathless.
  • The Bear and the Nightingale was a gorgeous Russian fairytale, which I ate up in heaping helpings. Worthy of the praise that has been heaped upon it.
  • Nunslinger by Stark Holborn. I have previously enjoyed both Triggernometry and Advanced Triggernometry by this author, and this book serves up more Old West, lean prose and quick-fire pace. I am eager to sample Stark’s scifi now, too.
  • Traitor’s Blade by Sebastien de Castell. A rollicking adventure: fast, fun, and the instant I finished I was dying to pick up the next one. The fact that the copy I read was an ARC given to me by the publisher Jo Fletcher will tell you how long this one had been sitting on the shelf patiently waiting for my eyeballs. I know, I should be shot.
  • Andrea Stewart’s The Bone Shard Daughter was another absorbing read, with just enough creepy to keep me turning the pages. Another I’ll be reading the sequels to, in due course.

None of the books I haven’t highlighted were bad, by the way, even the ones I didn’t click with; the list above is just the ones that stuck in my memory as I was writing this post. Needless to say, as a result of this exercise my list of continuing series has grown: I am currently midway through no less than 43 series, and it shows little sign of slowing down.

And I am not sorry.

 

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