#TopTenTuesday Reading Goals I Still Want to Accomplish Before the End of the Year #TuesdayBookBlog

Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl.

The rules are simple:

  • Each Tuesday, Jana assigns a new topic. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want.
  • Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post.
  • Add your name to the Linky widget on that day’s post so that everyone can check out other bloggers’ lists.
  • Or if you don’t have a blog, just post your answers as a comment.

BlogMilestones_GoalsThis week’s topic is Reading Goals I Still Want to Accomplish Before the End of the Year, which is also an invitation to update our previous post from back in January, Bookish Goals for 2023. Perhaps it’s my previous life as a project manager that means I like setting goals for myself. But when you go back to review them, what a way to bring you down to earth and confirm once again that you were wildly overambitious. (Not all my projects overran, honest!)

  1. Achieve my Goodreads target of reading 120 books87 books read so far so just about on track
  2. Read at least 50 books that have been in my TBR pile for longer than two years, i.e. acquired prior to 1st January 2021only 13 of the books I’ve read this year fall into this category so it looks unlikely to be achieved
  3. Attend Henley Literary Festival and, if possible, at least one other literary festival in person – I’ve already attended three events at Henley Literary Festival which is taking place this week and have a couple more coming up. And the stars have aligned so a planned holiday in Falmouth, Cornwall the week after next coincides with Falmouth Book Festival
  4. Take part in – and complete – the following reading challenges: When Are You Reading? Challenge 2023, What’s in a Name Challenge 2023, 20 Books of Summer, Historical Fiction Reading Challenge 2023I have one more period to match to complete the first, two more categories to match for the second, I failed miserably again on the third (owing to my own stubbornness) but I’ve already exceeded my target (50+ books) for the last
  5. Read all the books on the Walter Scott Prize 2023 shortlist – if possible, on the longlist – before the winner is announcedI read eight of the twelve books on the longlist but not before the shortlist of seven was announced and I still had two of the shortlisted books left to read when the prize was awarded… and I still haven’t read them
  6. Complete my own Backlist Burrow challenge by reading two books from the backlists of each of the six authors I’ve chosenI’ve been spectacularly unsuccessful with this one. I’ve only read one on my list and seven of the books I don’t even own copies of yet! That might change as I wandering around Henley-on-Thames this week…
  7. Read and review all new NetGalley approvals (from January 2023 onwards) by their publication date. (Yes, I know, haha!)Haha, indeed. So far I’ve read 50 NetGalley titles that were approved since the beginning of 2023 but only managed to review eighteen of them before publication, although some were only one or two days late. At the moment, I have nine books on my shelf with future publication dates. And on the positive side, I now have a 94% feedback ratio 
  8. Be a better blogger pal – leave comments on posts, share posts on social media, etcA work in progress but I’m trying… 
  9. Refresh my blog – new theme, archive old posts, etcGiven you’re looking at the same old blog, that will be a no!
  10. Be more active/creative on InstagramAnother work in progress but I have increased my followers so I must be generating some things of interest 

I’m going to give myself 5 out of 10 but with the possibility of 7 out of 10 if I apply myself over the next couple of months.

If you set yourself any reading or blogging goals for this year, how are you progressing? 1

#WWWWednesday – 27th September 2023

WWWWednesdays

Hosted by Taking on a World of Words, this meme is all about the three Ws:

  • What are you currently reading?
  • What did you recently finish reading?
  • What do you think you’ll read next?

Why not join in too?  Leave a comment with your link at Taking on a World of Words and then go blog hopping!


Currently reading

The Book of FireThe Book of Fire by Christy Lefteri (Manilla Press via Readers First)

This morning, I met the man who started the fire. He did something terrible, but then, so have I. I left him. I left him and now he may be dead.

Once upon a time there was a beautiful village that held a million stories of love and loss and peace and war, and it was swallowed up by a fire that blazed up to the sky. The fire ran all the way down to the sea where it met with its reflection.

A family from two nations, England and Greece, live a simple life in a tiny Greek Irini, Tasso and their daughter, lovely, sweet Chara, whose name means joy. Their life goes up in flames in a single day when one man starts a fire out of greed and indifference. Many are killed, homes are destroyed, and the region’s natural beauty wiped out.

In the wake of the fire, Chara bears deep scars across her back and arms. Tasso is frozen in trauma, devastated that he wasn’t there when his family most needed him. And Irini is crippled by guilt at her part in the fate of the man who started the fire.

But this family has survived, and slowly green shoots of hope and renewal will grow from the smouldering ruins of devastation.

Byron and ShelleyByron and Shelley by Glenn Haybittle (eARC, Cheyne Walk via NetGalley)

The characters in Glenn Haybittle’s first collection of short stories are all caught in moments of life that bring about a revelation of identity.

A young woman who, after the war, catches sight of the guard who knocked to the ground her blind grandfather on the platform at Auschwitz. The backstory of the man accused of murdering Martin Luther King. The experience of a young girl on Kristallnacht and the subsequent tragic upheavals in her life. A dance teacher accused of sexually abusing one of his young students. A man constrained to return to his mother and look after her while she goes through dementia. A CIA operative grooming a patsy to take the blame for an assassination.


Recently finished

Night Train to Marrakech (Daughters of War #3) by Dinah Jefferies (HarperCollins)

North Woods by Daniel Mason (John Murray Press)

A Day of Reckoning (A Time for Swords #3) by Matthew Harffy (eARC, Head of Zeus via NetGalley)

The Merchant’s Dilemma by Carolyn Hughes (eARC, Riverdown Books)


What Cathy (will) Read Next

In Two MindsIn Two Minds (Teifi Valley Coroner #2) by Alis Hawkins (Dome Press)

Harry Probert-Lloyd, a young barrister forced home from London by encroaching blindness, has begun work as the acting coroner of Teifi Valley with solicitor’s clerk John Davies as his assistant.

When a faceless body is found on an isolated beach, Harry must lead the inquest. But his dogged pursuit of the truth begins to ruffle feathers. Especially when he decided to work alongside a local doctor with a dubious reputation and experimental theories considered radical and dangerous.

Refusing to accept easy answers might not only jeopardise Harry’s chance to be elected coroner permnantly but could, it seems implicate his own family in a crime.