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I'm following several currently--The Dresden Files, the Leandros Brothers, The Rivers of London, the Raven Cycle, the Books of Faerie, the Alex Verus series, the Gentlemen Bastards, and Discworld. I've read only one of the Matthew Swift books but intend to read more.
I've reread the Harry Potter books anywhere from 2-5 times each and read most of the Dresden books twice; but not necessarily in prep for a new one coming out.

In the case of the great majority of these, I've only read the first book, and my appetite is now whetted for the rest. The problem is, many of these are open-ended, long-running series with no end in sight; and I've obviously started a LOT of them without any clear plan or timetable for followup! (But so many of these series openers were so tempting --and that's true of so many more on my to-read shelf....)



Alexander McCall Smith writes many light and witty series, and I do read them all! The Sunday Philosophy Club, The #1 Ladies' Detective Agency and Portugese Irregular Verbs (hilarious).
I've been re-reading another series (for a bookclub, as I rarely re-read just for myself); it is a story set in ancient Rome: Mark of the Lion

I have The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency somewhere in my mountainous physical to-read piles. "So many books, so little time!"

Since my post last March in message 4, I've finished the Bright Empires series (drum roll!). Barb and I jettisoned the Darksword trilogy (which we were reading together), because we just couldn't get into the first book. And I decided to bite the bullet and not continue with the Kate Daniels and Mercy Thompson series (although the opening novels were four-star reads) in order to concentrate on the Jane Yellowrock and Dresden Files series, which I like even better.
That would reduce the list in message 4 to 15. BUT, in the meantime, Barb and I have started Suzanne Arruda's wonderful Jade del Cameron historical mystery series (set in Africa right after World War I) and definitely intend to eventually read it through; and I've started E. J. Fisch's action-SF Ziva Payvan series and am hooked on it. At least, though, the list is down to 17, a measure of slight progress! I hope to chip away at it next year, too.

Yes; I actually consider the chance to find good homes for my unwanted books a second important benefit of such a group, in addition to the free books I do want!






On the other hand, I finally decided to bite the bullet and not continue with two series beyond the first novel, after all: Jan Karon's The Mitford Years and Deborah Cannon's Elizabeth Latimer, Pirate Hunter. In both of these cases, I enjoyed the series opener, and I'm glad I read them. But I don't think, in either case, that reading more of the series would materially add to my enjoyment; my aesthetic experience is already complete with the first novel, and I'm not so engaged with the characters that I feel a yen to spend more time with them. So, now I'm actually juggling "only" 14 series. :-)




Yes, I want very much to read To Kill a Mockingbird one day, but I have zero desire to read Go Set a Watchman --which is NOT a sequel or prequel to Lee's masterpiece. Rather, it's an unpolished first draft of what became the masterpiece after it had constructive editing. There's a reason why that draft was changed, and never published; and from what I've read, if the aged Lee hadn't been cynically imposed on by others, it would never have been published now.

To Kill a Mockingbird is amazing, and I have no desire to read Go Set A Watchman.

Charly, even though I haven't read the book yet, I have seen the outstanding movie adaptation with Gregory Peck; and I can assure you that I wouldn't change Atticus (or any of the other characters) for any amount of money!



Totally relate to that problem, Blaine, though I'm trying to do better! Like you, I really liked the first two Barchester books; but I doubt if I'll ever make time to read any more of the series.

In the science fiction genre, I've wet my feet with two more series in the last couple of months: the Transgressor Trilogy by my Goodreads friend E. M. Swift-Hook, and the Eric John Stark corpus created by SF great Leigh Brackett. I plan to follow both of these; but of the former, only the first book, The Fated Sky, is available in paperback. (So it doesn't really count as a series that has to be juggled with the others, yet). And my total hasn't increased, since I've decided to drop the Ziva Payvan series. (My interest in that one was high when I finished Dakiti, but it's ebbed in the time since.) So, one step forward and one step back; but that beats two steps back, or no steps forward! :-)



Nicole, I've decided to drop Amelia Peabody, too. The Curse of the Pharaohs, the second book in the series, still got five stars from me; but after that book, on reflection, Amelia's character seemed to be developing in an overly vain and self-promoting direction that I could see getting old quickly. I decided that there are a lot more continuing characters out there that I'd enjoy spending time with more.
One series character that both my wife and I have always enjoyed spending time with, and would have continued to, is Jade del Cameron, Suzanne Arruda's photographer/writer and amateur sleuth in post World War I Africa. But the author has stated that Devil Dance, the seventh installment which we recently finished, will be the last novel in the series. So that's a rare case where I've crossed a series off the "dangling" list by actually finishing it. :-) We'll miss Jade!


On the other hand, the book Barb and I just started, Miranda Warning, is the opening book of Heather Day Gilbert's mystery series A Murder in the Mountains, set in contemporary West Virginia and featuring amateur sleuth Tess Spencer. We're hoping to fall as much in love with this series as we did with Arruda's Jade del Cameron books. And the book we just finished, The Blacksmith's Bravery, is the third novel of Susan Page Davis' Ladies' Shooting Club trilogy. I'd thought the other books were permanently out of print; but according to Amazon, the paperbacks are available again. So based on our reaction to Book 3, the other two will be must reads for us! :-)

I didn't really get tired of Amelia herself. While it made sense that the older characters might start taking a back seat in the adventures to the children as they grew up, I don't find adult Ramses and Nefret as interesting as Emerson and Amelia.


Um --similar, but not identical. For instance, as I finish reading a new book in a series, etc., I won't add a new post to the thread to tell about it. Rather, I'll just use the small "edit" link at the bottom of my post above (message 43) to update it. New posts can be added to the thread, if other members want to create one for keeping track of their own ongoing series reading; and they'll update theirs similarly. (And of course, people can also add new posts to the thread whenever they want to comment about a series, etc.) Does that make sense?

And I think Charly's suggestion would help keep posts more organised.

Charly, good question! No, edits do NOT show with a red "new" whenever a person logs into the group; only the original post does, when it's first posted. They also don't show in the daily bundled updates from your groups that Goodreads e-mails to you, if you get those updates (I think that's the default setting).
IMO, a date at the beginning of an edit would be confusing, because the material added in various edits wouldn't be grouped one after the other at the bottom; rather, it would be scattered all through the original post. For instance, I arranged my series alphabetically by author. Next month, I might add a book to a series whose author's last name starts with W (I'm just using that as an example!), and the month after that add one to a series by someone who's last name starts with C. I'd eventually have a crazy quilt of dates, and they wouldn't serve any real purpose.
The idea behind this system is actually that people aren't pestered with notices whenever I add something, if they don't happen to be interested at the time. But if, sometime, anyone wants to find out how I'm coming along with series reading, he/she will know where to find that information, and can find it all in one place. (Ditto for anyone else who creates a similar post of their own.) I actually think it's a good, practical system; it's used in the group I mentioned for several other challenges, too.

For most of my groups I get notifications for just the threads I'm interested in. For two other groups, I get notifications for all posts. Those groups are Litwit Lounge and Christian Goodreaders. This works for these two groups because they aren't particularly busy groups, but they're my favourites.
I understand why Goodreads has chosen this method. But I've lost my enthusiasm for your idea.
Sorry Werner.

Charly, your suggestion is one that hadn't even occurred to me (and I'd already adopted a different approach before you posted it!), and much appreciated as a wise compromise suggestion. But I'm guessing that many people would probably find the need to copy and paste their previous posts something of a nuisance.
When I discovered the thread in the other group; I'd seriously debated between just going ahead and posting there, or trying the idea on this thread. Since I'd already started this thread, I finally opted for the latter approach; but I think we can honestly say now that it's had a fair try. So, I've moved my post to the other group's thread (and deleted it here), and will plan to update it there. That will serve my want for a venue to do that just as well, and be a win-win situation for everyone. As my library director at work often says, "It's all good!" :-)

I do like the idea of keeping track of what series/trilogies I've read, but I might do that on my own shelves.
Books mentioned in this topic
Miranda Warning (other topics)The Blacksmith's Bravery (other topics)
Devil Dance (other topics)
The Curse of the Pharaohs (other topics)
Dues of Blood (other topics)
More...
In the course of my reading life so far, I've read in many series, etc. ever since I was a kid. A few of those that have a finite number of books and a definite end, I've read in their entirety; others I've abandoned. In some cases, I've really liked a series opener, like Dune or 1632, but felt it said all that needed to be and never had any interest in following it up. Other series, like the Star Wars and Star Trek books, I've sort of become sated with or, like Don Coldsmith's Trail of the Spanish Bit, I've been away from for over 20 years and no longer feel familiar in the milieu.
Recently, I did a count (Goodreads facilitates doing analysis of that sort!) and found that currently, there are 18 series I've started with some intention of reading more (and that doesn't count things like Agatha Christie's Poirot or Miss Marple canons, where there's no progressive development of the characters or circumstances and the books don't have to be read in order). That's quite a few to be juggling! And, especially with long, open-ended and ongoing series, my reading has often been subject to the vagaries of second-hand acquisitions of the books, rather than systematically seeking them out. This year, I've had the intention of being more intentional about finishing some series (at least some of those that have an ending as such), and at least reading further in others. It's really rewarding to complete a series that forms a unified story arc, like the Harry Potter books or Twilight Saga, and those are worth the investment of time they demand. Of course, how I'll do with this remains to be seen. (I've completed one duology this year, but started two new series....)
How about some of the rest of you? Do you read series books/sequels/trilogies? If so, do you read the whole corpus of material back to back, or vary it with other reads? Do you start multiple series before you finish any of them, or do you stick with just one until you've read the whole thing (or as much as you decide you're going to)? Have you ever decided that your experience of a series was complete with just one book, or do you feel a need to read the whole thing in every case?