- Firstly, as of yesterday I'm back on my book buying ban. Although ideally I'd go the whole year without buying a book, I don't think this is particularly feasible and so I'm just going to try to go longer than I did last year which was three months and a week. I think this is manageable. I'm limiting myself to one swap a month as well, and hopefully it will encourage me to use the library tons more.
- I'm also planning to go the whole of 2012 without using Amazon to buy anything. For reasons why, see this post.
- Make a list every month of what I intend to read and one at the end tracking the books I've managed to complete.
- Continue to read more non-fiction that I did last year
- Complete all of the challenges that I sign up for, and remember to post a link-up every month for the Telling Tales Challenge.
- Comment on blogs and make an active attempt to discover new blogs. I did this a lot until about half way through the year, at which point I inexplicably stopped and I think it's time to start up again!
- Schedule posts for the week on Sunday nights. I started doing this a little while back, and while I've been better at it some weeks than others, I find it really helps me keep my momentum.
- In 2011 I read 151 books. Of these, I didn't get round to reviewing 58 of them. Although this is gigantically better than I thought, my goal this year is to review 75% of what I read, and to review all my five star reads which I failed dismally at this year.
- Participate in RAK every month. It's a fantastic event, and I love that I can make people happy by giving books, and as they're gifts they don't count for my ban so it's like I'm buying them but without them actually accumulating in my house. It's a win-win situation!
- Get over my illogical aversion to reading YA. I get really annoyed when people read only YA, and for some reason this means that anybody recommending me any YA will just get sighs and eye -rolling. Having said that, when I caved in a did read some this year, it was incredible! The Hunger Games trilogy, When You Reach Me, An Abundance of Katherines... Clearly, I've inherited a view of what all YA will be from somewhere and am refusing to rethink despite evidence to the contrary. Help me! All you people who read YA, I am appealing to you for recommendations of the best you've read!
- I want to re-vamp the blog a bit, but I'm totally crap with design type stuff. If anybody knows anybody/is willing to give me a hand I'd be eternally grateful!
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Monday, 2 January 2012
2012 Goals & Resolutions..
Happy New Year everybody! This is the first year I have started as a 'blogger' proper, and I thought I'd mark the occassion by making myself some goals for this year.
You've got some great resolutions there! I wish I had the willpower to pull some of these off, but I know I'd fail miserably.
ReplyDeleteI think I'll just aim to CUT DOWN - cut down my book buying, cut down my Amazon use - and try to get stuck into Mount TBR with a vengeance this year! Best of luck for doing what I blatantly can't... ;)
awesome resolutions! good luck with all of them, i'll try (and probably fail) to follow your lead :)
ReplyDeletealso if you need help in the art/graphics department i'm always happy to help just let me know what you want :)
Yay thanks Esther! :-)
ReplyDeleteAnd Ellie, I probably will also fail drastically but ah well...
I know what you mean about *only* YA, but i read nine in 2011 and had fun with most of them. Everything in moderation :) When You Reach Me was one of my 2010 favorites.
ReplyDeleteI'm one of those readers heavily (although not exclusively) into YA. You've listed some good titles above. I'd probably add (if you haven't already read them):
ReplyDelete*Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco X. Stork, about a young man on the autism spectrum forced by his father to come intern at his NYC law firm. (My second-favorite read of 2010 after When You Reach Me.)
*Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book, about a boy raised by ghosts in a graveyard after his family is brutally murdered when he is an infant.
*The Book Thief by Markus Zusak is about a girl in Germany during WWII, narrated by Death. (Warning: will make you weep buckets, but it'll make you glad you read it.)
*Hugo by Brian Selnick, about an orphaned boy living in a Parisian train station in the 1920s. (The 3D movie currently in theaters is also excellent.)
Oops. I see you already reading The Invention of Hugo Cabret and you've seen the film. I hope you liked the book, too. There were definitely some things that were changed (both omissions and additions) for the movie, but I felt like they were even-handed.
ReplyDeleteSprite- thanks for the recommendations! I've actually read The Graveyard Book as well as I'm a huge Neil Gaiman fan, but I will definitely give the others a go! Hugo Cabret was brilliant with such beautiful artwork!
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