Resolutions for 2024

Well, we made it. Got through 2023, and here’s a fresh new year.

Reading-wise, 2023 was pretty good. I read 82 books in total, including a couple on December 31st. I’d originally set my goal at 52 on the basis that a book a week is pretty good for me, then promptly smashed through it sometime in mid-August.

January, as you can see, was a cracking month for reading. Helped somewhat by having already started a book on 31st December, then by the way the holidays fell and ultimately by catching Covid and being confined to the sofa, not able to go anywhere or do anything.

Monthbooks read
January13
February3
March4
April5
May9
June5
July9
August8
September7
October7
November6
December6
books read in 2023

Breaking down the numbers, 58% of the books I read were crime, with only 25% sci-fi or fantasy. Definite shift from previous years! I suspect the crime book numbers were influenced by going to the Theakson Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate in 2023. I’m very much looking forward to going again in 2024 and not being the newbie this time! 

My favourite books of the year, part 1 and part 2

I also only read six non-fiction books this year. I’m not sure how many I usually read, but fairly sure it’s more than that. Three cracking books made my favourite books of 2023: non-fiction edition list.

Also, considering that I call myself a book blogger, I’ve only written 27 blog posts this year, and not all of those were reviews. Ooops.

So for 2024 I’ve set my goal at 52 books again. But I also have a couple of aims.

Read some big chonky books that I’ve picked up over the years. You know, the big 500+ page monsters. I’ve been putting those off as they take a while to read, so slow down the OMG MUST HIT MY TARGET.

Take my time with a crime book and see if I can figure out whodunnit. I almost want to break it down chapter by chapter – who have we met? What do we know about them? What clues do we know? Maybe turn this into a series of (spoiler-filled) posts. Pick a classic crime novel and play detective!

Have a go at @runalongwomble‘s 2024 Booktempter’s TBR Challenge. I love the idea of having different aims for a month and Womble has come up with some great ones here!

Read more non-fiction. I’ve got a bit of a backlog of books building up, so it’d be good to get through some more of them.

Review more books! Really, as a bookblogger this should be taken as read (there’s a pun in there somewhere), but I’m going to try and be better at keeping notes and writing up reviews as I go.

On that note, I also want to catch up with my NetGalley backlog. I have 47 books on my NetGalley shelf, but somewhat embarrassingly I’ve read half but either not written up a review yet or not posted one up. Ooops. No more NetGalley books until I’ve caught up!

Right, that’s more than enough I think.

Do you have any bookish aims for 2024? I’d love to hear about them!

    Favourite books of 2023: part 1

    It’s the time of year when a bookblogger turns to their list of books and tries to wrangle a top ten list together. This year I’ve read more books than ever before, so we’re back to the ‘here are some of my favourites’ list.

    Kicking off with one I read in 2022 (hey, it’s my list, I can do what I like)

    Children of the Sun, by Beth Lewis [Hodder, March 2023]

    One of my all-time favourite authors, Beth Lewis has given us some incredible books. The Wolf Road is just stunning, and last year’s The Origins of Iris was wonderful. Dark, raw and startlingly original, it will linger long in the memory after you turn the last page. It took me a while to recover myself after reading. Children of the Sun is an incredible book about cults and family and belief and loss. Lewis’s writing is, as ever, just beautiful. Hugely recommended.

    Moving onto 2023, we started the year with

    End of Story, by Louise Swanson [Hodder, March 2023]

    Oh, this book is amazing. Loved Louise’s earlier books (writing as Louise Beech), this is her first foray into a dystopian sci-fi. 2035 and fiction has been banned. Writing novels is a crime. Reading stories to children is punishable by law. The writing is beautiful, the setting is horrific, and it finishes with an ending that’ll leave you stunned. Hugely recommended.

    Needless Alley, by Natalie Marlow [Baskerville, January 2023]

    From a dystopian future to Birmingham, 1933. William Garret, private enquiry agent, specialises in helping men with divorces, but it all goes awry when he meets the beautiful Clara, the wife of one of his clients. Gloriously gritty Brummie Noir. A hugely impressive debut, and one which I highly recommend.

    The Devil Takes You Home – Gabino Iglesias [Mulholland, 2022]

    Utterly stunning. A father takes a job as a hitman to save his daughter and goes on a journey into darkness. Dark and bleak, but breathtakingly good. Not for the faint-hearted, but when I finished it, I knew that it would be top of my books of the year list, and I was only eight days into the year. It’s THAT good. If you read one from this list, read this one.

    Games for Dead Girls – Jen Williams [HarperVoyager, March 2023]

    Huuuge fan of Jen Williams’ books, so very excited to get my hands on an ebook proof of Games for Dead Girls. Played out over dual timelines, a macabre game in the past turned into tragedy, whilst present-day Charlotte returns to the caravan park to research local folklore and uncover the secrets of what went on all those years ago. Stitch-faced Sue is a fantastically spooky creation that will linger long after you’ve finished. Just hope she doesn’t come for you…

    Grave Danger/Grave Suspicions – Alice James [Solaris, 2023]

    Murder and mayhem with everyone’s favourite estate agent by day, necromancer by night, Lavington ‘Toni’ Windsor. These books are funny, dark, gory, a love story with a side order of whodunnit. What more could you want? Hugely recommended, if you hadn’t guessed.

    All Of Us Are Broken – Fiona Cummins [Macmillan, July 2023]

    The short version is simply this: Go buy a copy. Brace yourself, for you are not ready for what is about to unfold. Read it, take a deep breath, then tell all of your friends. Quite simply, it’s her best book yet. And those other books, my friends, are really bloody good.

    Beautiful Shining People – Michael Grothaus [Orenda Books, April 2023]

    Beautiful Shining People is a book that just wraps itself around you and refuses to let go. Part love story, albeit an unusual one, meshed in literary science fiction. Like the title, this story is beautiful, the characters shine and you watch entranced as they come together, each with their own secrets and past, each trying to figure out where and how they fit in this strange new world. It’s a world of superpowers battling with deepfakes and AIs rather than conventional weapons. Of quantum computing and how it’ll change our society. Of Big Corporations and whether they’re good or bad. And how humanity is dealing with all of this.

    Blacktop Wasteland – S.A. Cosby [Headline, 2020]

    It’s an exploration of character and family, but also of place, with the sweltering heat of rural Virgina oozing off the page. It’s also very gritty and graphic in places, and the story moves as fast as Bug’s superior driving skills. Combining heart in your mouth action scenes with heart-rending, moving moments with Bug’s family, Blacktop Wasteland is brilliant. Short and perfect, and a book I will pester you to read. This is me pestering you to read it.

    The Associate – Victoria Goldman [Three Crowns Publishing, September 2023]

    Goldman has followed up her excellent debut with another great installment of the Shanna Regan mysteries. Long may the series continue. As with book 1, The Redeemer, there’s a strong theme exploring Jewish identity and life here, and it’s fascinating to see this side of the community. Not something I’m familiar with, and not something I’ve seen much of in crime fiction. It’s interwoven throughout the novel, and I really enjoyed the twists and turns that Goldman throws into the narrative. 

    The Only Truly Dead – Rob Parker [Audible, 2023]

    The first two books in Rob Parker’s superb Thirty Miles trilogy were (and indeed are) superb. Book three just cranks the dials hard over to eleven and beyond. Proper edge of your seat stuff, the stakes have been raised and no-one is safe.

    I really can’t recommend this book highly enough. Warren Brown (DI Ripley from Luther) is back for a third turn at narration duties and elevates what is already a superb story to stratospheric heights. The first book accompanied me on dog walks, the second on the college drop off and pickup, but book three was with me in every spare minute I had. Utterly brilliant, hugely recommended.

    All The Little Liars – Victoria Selman

    Deliciously dark tale of secrets and lies, toxic relationships. A young girl goes missing from a party by a lake. But did her friends kill her? Told across two timelines, this is Selman on fine form. Absolute edge-of-your-seat stuff!

    Nice round dozen to get you started! Stay tuned for part 2…

    Review: My Criminal World

    My Criminal World
    My Criminal World by Henry Sutton
    My rating: 4 of 5 stars

    Really enjoyed this – interesting idea too, a struggling crime writer getting caught up in his work a little too much. I liked the way you got snippets of the fictional author’s book throughout the main story, and got to experience some of the frustrations of being a writer, seeing how it all pans out. Great fun.

    View all my reviews