A challenge of relative ease and merriment discussion
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Pocki
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Jan 24, 2016 05:01PM

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I find that pretty much any interesting book as been banned somewhere, and there are so many awards out there. I am curious about a book my mother is reading that won a Swedish book award last year, so might pick that one up. I'm also going to read The Alchemist by Paulo Coehlo and that has definitely won awards, and all his books are banned in Iran XD I'm really just going to leave those categories and kinda see what falls in by accident.
As for microhistories I highly suggest looking at this list: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1... and just picking whatever strikes your fancy. I have the first five already lined up actually.
As for microhistories I highly suggest looking at this list: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1... and just picking whatever strikes your fancy. I have the first five already lined up actually.


As for 2016 releases I am considering this:

I don't know anything about the book or author, more than what's said here in GR. I found it on a list of 2016 releases, it sounded interesting, and it has a pretty cover. Welcome to my decision making process.
I am currently reading this:

Sofie, I think I told you when you picked it up that I found Wheel of Time beyond boring when I read it in my teens. Glad we can agree on that one ;) And so looooong.
These are all books to be released this year that I want to read or at least check out. All possible to fit into other categories as well:
These are all books to be released this year that I want to read or at least check out. All possible to fit into other categories as well:










Cathrin wrote: "If you're talking about Jonas Hassen Khemiri, DO read it. "
Ah no. I am talking about a couple of books for younger readers by Jacob Wegelius which received the August prize for children and youth litterature. So rather prestigious.
Ah no. I am talking about a couple of books for younger readers by Jacob Wegelius which received the August prize for children and youth litterature. So rather prestigious.

Which of his book do you recommend? I looked up the author and recognize some of his works, but don't know where to start :)

Thank you! I might take a walk to the library after this fantasy book. I feel like reading something with a little more substance. I have ordered two short story collections that I have really high hopes for, but they will probably arrive next week with my luck, so I might need something to read in between there :)

So, how do you choose which book to read next?
Goodreads seems to be involved a lot of the time. I see what my friends read and sometimes that looks interesting. Or I click a book and I see what else is related to that. Or find a list. Or I feel like I want to read more about death and I find books almost by accident related to some book I've read or heard of. I follow a few authors on Twitter and sometimes they post about booklists they've been included in and I find books there. And sometimes I look for a book for a friend and I find books for myself (like Sofie hadn't heard of cozy mysteries before and I tried to find her one about knitting, which I've never bene interested in. And I found one that mixed cozy mystery with witches AND knitting and thought it sounded like they crammed everything in there at once and I got curious. And then I read it in one single day) Basically it's a mess and I always have way more books that I can read.

Usually I am in the mood for a specific genre, and then I go all in and add ALL the books in that genre in my to-read-list, and then I kind of pick the prettiest one and go from there. Or if it's anew genre I might try the most popular one.
I try to set som goals for myself every year though, which of one is to read at least a handful of the books I already own but have not read. So that happens sometimes too.
And right now I'm super in to book reviews on youtube, so I watch a lot of those and add a lot of books that seem really interesting to my to-be-read.
It seems I don't have a very clear pattern when it comes to book choosing.
I agree with Sophie: it's so much about the cover and title! Which I think might be why non-fiction appeals to me so much right now. The titles are always so enticing.


Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. After a while you kinda learn to read the covers somehow. I mostly use it to gauge the genre and "atmosphere". Of course there are always exceptions, but it mostly works for me.




One thing that also works for me is to go to a physical bookstore. Even if I don't buy while I'm there, they are making a real effort to market the books, so I always see a lot of things I might want to check out at the library, or even buy, if I'm sure enough I will like them!
I also like to look at lists of books on sites like Buzzfeed Books, io9, etc. The lists here are fine, but the other sites compiling the lists describe the books a little differently, which can be more persuasive. I almost always come out of a book list with new things I want to read. ^_^ Examples (yes, I bookmark these lists!):
http://www.buzzfeed.com/lincolnthomps...
http://www.buzzfeed.com/spenceralthou...
http://io9.gizmodo.com/5924625/10-sci...
The covers thing works for me sometimes, sometimes not. . . I think it's important to give yourself permission to stop reading something if you hate it. An old friend once said that her dad told her she had to read 10% of a book to give it a chance, and I've always thought that was fair (though writer friends tell me that if you stick it out until 25%, you're more likely to find the thing that's supposed to grab your interest--I just think that's too much to ask if I hate it enough to abandon).
And, of course, if you're looking for something in a certain genre, and browsing the shelves here isn't helping, ask! We'd all be happy to recommend things, but sometimes I think it's even better to ask someone in real life. . . all of us here have been sipping the same GoodReads Kool-Aid, but if you ask a coworker, sibling, parent, etc., sometimes they recommend something you might not have heard of otherwise. ^_^

I log graphic novels and manga, but not single issue comics (which makes Star Wars Shattered Empire annoying cause I have read the single issues that are included in the collection, except for an old comic they threw in as an extra, and I don't feel like buying the collection just for that). But then again, I also log picture books for children!

As far as graphic novels that are a little more lengthy, like Allie Brosh's book, or Fun Home, or books by Daniel Clowes, yes, I definitely log those.
I haven't read manga, so I can't speak to that directly! I imagine I would count it, as long as it's new to me. The only things I don't really count are children's books that I read when I was a child and don't feel the need to log just because I re-read them. (If they make an impression on me, though, sometimes I do review them.)

While we're at this: How do you guys do with audio boks? Do you add them as audio books without any page count, or do you ad them as a book book with a page number that will add up to your total of read pages on goodreads? (Hope this makes sense).

With audio books, I just log them as whichever edition is the most popular one. As I make progress, I mark it as percentage. . . the fact that I'm not technically reading pages in text doesn't bother me. ^_^
I'm like Laura I suppose. If I listen to an audiobook I pick whatever edition is the first/automatic when i search for the book. I like to have audiobooks count as pages. I mean I spend even more time on them than I probably would when reading with my eyes.
I usually have an ebook version of it too where I can check the page count for where I'm at, and I use that for adding progress (since I usually read on my iPad I need to do some math anyway and mark whatever page is appropriate compared to the correct page number)
I usually have an ebook version of it too where I can check the page count for where I'm at, and I use that for adding progress (since I usually read on my iPad I need to do some math anyway and mark whatever page is appropriate compared to the correct page number)