Reading Bingo 2018

bingo-card-new-2018

Seeing the posts by FictionFan and by Susan at A Life in Books, reminded me how much I look forward to the annual ritual of Reading Bingo.  I never pick books in order to fit the squares – I’m not that organised in my reading – but it’s fun to look back at the books I’ve read in the year and try to match them with the categories.

I’m happy to say, I’ve managed it again this year – how about you? Click on the book titles to read my review.


A Book With More Than 500 PagesMacbeth by Jo Nesbo

A Forgotten ClassicThe Crowded Street by Winifred Holtby

A Book That Became A MovieHeat and Dust by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

A Book Published This YearEntanglement by Katy Mahood

A Book With A Number In The TitleSix Stories by Matt Wesolowski

A Book Written By Someone Under ThirtyThe Dark Tide by Vera Brittain

A Book With Non-Human CharactersThe Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar

A Funny BookDear Mrs. Bird by A. J. Pearce

A Science Fiction or Fantasy BookThe Things We Learn When We’re Dead by Charlie Laidlaw

A Book With A MysteryThe Power-House by John Buchan

A Book With A One-Word TitleHold by Michael Donkor

A Book Of Short StoriesThe Word for Freedom by Amanda Saint & Rose McGinty (eds.)

Free Square: A Literary Prize Winner The Gallows Pole by Benjamin Myers (The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction)

A Book Set On A Different ContinentThe Emperor of Shoes by Spencer Wise

A Book Of Non-FictionThe Long and Winding Road by Alan Johnson

The First Book By A Favourite AuthorThe Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

A Book You Heard About OnlineThree Things About Elsie by Joanna Cannon

A Best-Selling BookThe Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker (#75 in W H Smith fiction Chart)

A Book Based On A True StoryThe Good Doctor of Warsaw by Elisabeth Gifford

A Book At The Bottom Of Your To Be Read PileThe Good Father by S. R. Wilsher

A Book Your Friend LovesMiss Marley by Vanessa Lafaye and Rebecca Mascull

A Book That Scares YouGothic Tales by Elizabeth Gaskell

A Book That Is More Than 10 Years OldCarol by Patricia Highsmith

The Second Book In A SeriesI Will Find You (Seal Island #2) by Daniela Sacerdoti

A Book With A Blue CoverThe Blue by Nancy Bilyeau

My Year in Books 2017

As this is only my second end of calendar year as a book blogger, I’m still finding it fun to look back over the year and review what I achieved. Last year at this time, I’d only been blogging for just over a month. In fact, it was interesting to look back at my reflections then and the bold plans I had for 2017.  Click here if you want to take a look too.

Bookish Statistics (courtesy of Goodreads)

Longest bookAnd The Birds Kept On Singing by Simon Bourke (642 pages)

Shortest bookTremarnock Summer by Emma Burstall (Goodreads insists this was 12 pages although it was actually 384 pages). Not sure what my actual shortest book was.

Most Popular BookLittle Women by Louisa M Alcott which another 1,422,028 have read. Published in 1862, this was also the oldest book I read.

Least Popular BookA Countess in Limbo: Diaries in War and Revolution by Olga Hendrikoff and Sue Carscallen which no-one else has read (see also Hidden Gems below)

Favourite Genre – Historical fiction (no surprise there)

Average rating – 4.2 (Hmm, I’m more generous than I thought or I’ve just read a ton of good books this year…)

Top rated books – I gave forty-three 5-star ratings although some of those would actually have been 4.5 star ratings rounded up.  My lowest rating was 3 stars (given to 19 books).

Hidden Gems

Here is a list of books to which I gave 5 stars on Goodreads but which fewer than 100 people have rated/reviewed on Goodreads. I’ve ignored books published after 1st October 2017 as they simply may not have had enough time to acquire many reviews. I am frankly astonished at some of them…. Click on the titles to read my review.

A Countess in Limbo: Diaries in War and Revolution by Olga Hendrikoff and Sue Carscallen
Miss Boston and Miss Hargreaves by Rachel Malik
Shelter by Sarah Franklin
Ares Road by James L Weaver
Crimson & Bone by Marina Fiorato
A Reluctant Warrior by Kelly Brooke Nicholls
The Watch House by Bernie McGill
Catherine Dickens: Outside the Magic Circle by Heera Datta
The Wardrobe Mistress by Patrick McGrath
A Dangerous Woman From Nowhere by Kris Radish
And The Birds Kept On Singing by Simon Bourke
The Crows of Beara by Julie Christine Johnson
Fortune’s Wheel by Carolyn Hughes
The Last Train by Michael Pronko

Outside My Comfort Zone

Here are a few books I read – some for blog tours, some in response to review requests from authors – that were outside my usual genres but I still enjoyed. As always, click on the titles to read my review.

Zenka by Alison Brodie (humour)
The Summer Springsteen’s Songs Saved Me by Barbara Quinn (women’s fiction)
The Smallest Thing by Lisa Manterfield (YA)
The Thirteenth Gate by Kat Ross (fantasy element)
And The Birds Kept On Singing by Simon Bourke (long book!)

Reading Challenges

Goodreads – I read 160 books (including two I’ll finish before tomorrow not showing in my total currently) against a target of 156. More than double the 70 books I read in 2016 which goes to show what book blogging does for you!

From Page to Screen – I haven’t managed to read all the books on which the films I’ve seen are based. I need to apply myself to this more next year.

Classics Club – Talking of which, I’ve only managed to read 7 of the 50 books on my list. I’m really going to have to go some to get through the list by the end of 2018 but I’ve included as many as I can in other reading challenges I’m signed up for in 2018.

NetGalley & Edelweiss Challenge – I achieved the 25 books for Silver level that I originally set as my target but was aiming for Gold level – 50 books. I’m going to fall a few books short of that.

Blog

Top 5 Most Viewed Book Reviews

These Dividing Walls by Fran Cooper
Miss Boston and Miss Hargreaves by Rachel Malik
Vindolanda by Adrian Goldsworthy
Mussolini’s Island by Sarah Day
Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor

Top 5 Most Viewed Other Posts

What Does You Book Blog Say About You?
Temptations of a Book Blogger
Top Ten Tuesday: Ten Favourite Books of 2017
Should Bloggers Act as Proofreaders?
10 Book Blogs I Love

Reading & Blogging Goals for 2018

You can read about the challenges I’ve set myself next year here.

However, there is one thing I’d like to see less of in 2018 – the word ‘unputdownable’ (if it even is a word) when used to describe a book.  You mean you literally did not put it down during all the time you were reading it? Not even to make a cup of tea or coffee, go to the bathroom or make yourself a snack?   If you did indeed not put it down whilst doing any of those things, then hats off to you. If you didn’t actually, then please think up a new word to encapsulate your admiration for a book.  Rant over.

I don’t want to end the year on a grumpy note, so I’d like to thank everyone who has followed my blog this year and read, liked, commented on or shared my posts.  Thank you also to the publishers, tour organisers and authors I’ve worked with this year who have contributed to such a satisfying and rewarding Year In Books.

Happy New Year!