We bookaholics
would say you can never have too many books, but I’m beginning to think I have too many on
my TBR (to be read) list. I can’t help
myself. I see book reviews in the paper
and add books to the list; I get Amazon emails with book suggestions and add
more to my list; I get BookBub emails and do the same; my friends make
suggestions on GoodReads and many of those titles go on the list. Do you see my problem?
Never mind
reading all these books; the way I keep my list is problematic too. I scribble titles and authors on scraps of
paper by my easy chair or near the glider on the screened porch. Eventually, those scraps make it to my office
and then three different lists take shape.
I start by
checking the library online to see if they have the books either in hard copy
or in e-book form. Reading two books a week means the library is always the
first stop. If I’m lucky enough to find
the titles there, I put them on my library wish lists so I can later place the
book on hold. Because the library system tracks e-books separately from hard
copies, I have two lists there.
If the books
aren’t available at the library, which is the case for books early in a series or for many of the British mysteries I
like, then I visit Amazon. There too, I
can add books to my wishlist. This process means I am constantly updating three
different lists, and sooner or later I have to find time to order and read the
darned things.
Don’t get me
wrong, I live to read. I must read for at least 30 minutes before I
turn out the lights at night. Often, the time stretches to two hours, yet I
can’t even begin to get to all the books on my multiple lists. Perhaps if I hadn’t taken up writing, I could
devote more time to reading, but that’s another story entirely.
Curious
readers may wonder, “What books are on these lists?” Let’s start with a handful
from the hard copy library list, and, omigosh,
there are 55 books on that one: Finding Atticus, My Sister’s Grave, Eleanor
Oliphant is Completely Fine, The Janus Stone, The Butterfly Garden, The Case of
the Baker Street Irregulars, The Wife Between Us, Let the Devil Sleep.
On the e-book
list are those that aren’t available in paper or a few that I may want to take
on a trip, where Kindle reading is preferable. Phew, there are only 15 there:
Body on Baker Street, Sweet Little Lies, Every Last Lie, Different Class, The
Storied Life of A. J. Fikry, A Spool of Blue Thread.
Last but not
least, there’s the Amazon list: Don’t Let Go, Sherlock Holmes and the Shakespeare Globe Murders, Queen of
Camelot, European Travel for the Monstrous Gentlewoman, The Forever King.
If you look
these titles up, you’ll find mostly mysteries, many set in England or Europe. A few books dubbed literary fiction also
show up, as do one or two about dogs or cats.
What, you
may ask, is wrong with having long lists of books to read? Perhaps it’s
realizing there’s no chance I’ll ever get
to read them all unless I cease adding new
titles. Cease adding new titles? Horrors. Any bookaholic will tell you that’s not
likely. And so, I may have to resign
myself to never reading all the books that interest me. I guess there are worse problems for a gal to
have.
PS. 'Tis the season. If you're looking for unique gifts, please visit my website or Amazon page. My little books make great stocking stuffers, hostess gifts, and more. A customer at the local Hallmark shop recently bought SIX of each book for Holiday gifts.
PS. 'Tis the season. If you're looking for unique gifts, please visit my website or Amazon page. My little books make great stocking stuffers, hostess gifts, and more. A customer at the local Hallmark shop recently bought SIX of each book for Holiday gifts.
Find my books “The Ink Penn: Celebrating the Magic in the Everyday,” “Lord Banjo
the Royal Pooch,” and "Coloring with Lord Banjo" on Amazon. Contact me at inkpenn119@gmail.com, and
follow me on Facebook, www.facebook.com/KathyManosPennAuthor/.
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