SABBATICAL: Year in Review 2020

One of my favorite activities as the year winds down is to take stock of what I have read and whittle down my favorites list to 10 or 12. This is my final Year in Review sabbatical re-post.

2020 was such a weird year all the way around. But it was an unusual reading year for me because two of the top books of the year were re-reads. That has happened before, but it’s unusual. The other thing that catches my attention is that the sequel to my top book, Crownchasers, is releasing later this year. Watch for Thronebreakers in October. I cannot wait! You can read the whole year in review post here:

Year in Review 2020

SABBATICAL: Year in Review 2019

One of my favorite activities as the year winds down is to take stock of what I have read and whittle down my favorites list to 10 or 12. My Sabbatical posts the rest of this week will be links to my past favorites. Today, it’s my list from 2019.

Wow, 2019 was a great year of reading for me. So many of the books from this year’s list are ones I recommend over and over, or ones I re-read myself. The book in the number 1 slot, Polaris Rising, was one I read twice during the year and loved both times. And I’ve read it at least once a year since. The whole Consortium Rebellion series is great, but the first book is my favorite.

The top books in 2019 are a solid mix of YA and adult titles, including one of my most favorite Enneagram resources. Since there weren’t any kids books in my top 12, I added some honorable mentions. So there’s something on this list for everyone! Take a look:

Year in Review 2019

SABBATICAL: Year in Review 2018

One of my favorite activities as the year winds down is to take stock of what I have read and whittle down my favorites list to 10 or 12. My next few Sabbatical posts will be links to my past favorites. Today, it’s my list from 2018.

One of the first things I thought when I pulled up this post is how my #1 book, Kill the Queen, has stood up to multiple re-reads. I enjoyed the whole  Crown of Shards series, and the first book in the spin-off Gargoyle Queen series, Capture the Crown, released last week. I have a signed copy on its way to me. I can’t wait!

The other thing that I notice when I look back at this post are the middle grade novels on this particular year in review list. I remember how incredible those books were and how often I have recommended them to kids over the last few years. Be sure to check on the books in this post:

Year in Review 2018

SABBATICAL: Year in Review 2017

One of my favorite activities as the year winds down is to take stock of what I have read and whittle down my favorites list to 10 or 12. My next few Sabbatical posts will be links to my past favorites. Today, it’s my list from 2017.

In 2017, I added some of my year-end stats as well as my list of favorite books. The thing that stands out so clearly to me from this post is the top book – A List of Cages. I absolutely adore this book. I’d love to re-read it, but it wrecks me emotionally, so I have to be in just the right space and time to deal with the gut-wrenching sobs. The book is stellar. There are actually two books on this list that make me ugly cry. But there’s also two non-fiction books – they often don’t make it onto a best-of-the-best list, so that’s noteworthy of 2017. Check out the full post.

Year in Review 2017

SABBATICAL: Year in Review 2016

One of my favorite activities as the year winds down is to take stock of what I have read and whittle down my favorites list to 10 or 12. My next few Sabbatical posts will be links to my past favorites. Today, it’s my list from 2016.

Not all of these books have full reviews on The Neverending TBR since I started posting in September. But this is a GREAT collection of books. More than half are books that I still think of fondly as some of the best I have read. And several are on my re-reading rotation. Check out this list of five great middle grade stories, two for teens, and three for adults.

Year in Review 2016

SATURDAY SMORGASBORD: Sabbatical

No list post today, no update on my Enneagram reading from the last year like I usually do in July. Something different and overdue.

Recently a friend posted on Facebook that due to a variety of life circumstances, she was taking a break, a sabbatical, from her beloved job – with their blessing – to do some regrouping. I was so impressed with her self-awareness and her company’s regard for her and for her work that they made this happen for her.

I started a full time job at the beginning of June. I’m still in those early days of feeling like a substitute teacher in someone else’s classroom. I’m sure my new boss is weary of my questions. I really want to do well in this, and there’s a HUGE learning curve. But while I took on this new responsibility, I had every intention of doing all the same things I did before.

It’s not working.

You might have noticed that a couple weeks ago I didn’t post a Thursday YA review, but instead posted adult reviews two days in a row. This week, I didn’t even post Wednesday. I thought it was the adult books slowing me down and keeping me from getting to the YA book in a week’s time, but in reality I have 45-ish fewer hours of time each week than I did this spring.

In the first 5 months of 2020, I was averaging 7 books a week – a pace I have been on for a few years now since I left my last full time job. For the first five months of 2021, I was down to 5 books a week – still a pace that allowed me 3-5 reviews a week and an occasional book read just for me. For June, for the first month of this new job, I have finished 11 books for the WHOLE MONTH. That’s not quite 3 books a week, and it is showing as I try to get to the books on my publishing schedule. This is not sustainable. I am resenting everything – the job, the books I do get to read, the ones I’m not getting to, the ever-present feeling of being trapped.

Something has to give.

So, I am taking the month of July off.
A sabbatical.
A bookmark in the journey to hold my place for a few weeks.

I have all of the Book News posts done and scheduled to post. I also have links to some past posts to keep you in book ideas for the month that I am away. When I come back in August, there will probably be some changes coming to my posting schedule. But I am also hoping to return with a fresh perspective on this space I have invested in and carved out on the internet for almost 5 years now. I also hope to come back with some reviews of books I have enjoyed just because I wanted to read them.

Yes, this means the reviews I have promised for books releasing this year will be late. And there may be some I choose not to review. It’s going to tank my review rate on Netgalley. But it’s essential that I take a break and re-evaluate.

So happy summer! I’ll see you back here in August. In the meantime, check out some fun posts from the last almost-five years of blogging and discover some reading treasures you might have missed the first time around. ♥

SATURDAY SMORGASBORD: My Summer Reading Plan 2021

As weird as 2020 was, I was feeling like 2021 would be an even harder year to pull off our annual Summer Reading Challenge, but my family was committed to keeping up the tradition. We’ve made some changes again this year to reflect a busier season. We also changed up our incentive system. In the past, the “reward” for finishing was higher for the first person done than for the second or the third person. This was a dis-incentive for the person who read the least/slowest. And that person, year after year, would just give up. So this year, the “prize” for completion is the same for everyone. We all feel much better about that.

Our Summer Reading kicked off Monday May 31st and will end on July 31 – 62days of reading. Here are the details for 2021. (You can read about past years here.)

Family Reading Challenge


This summer we are each choosing 2 books for each of the other members of the household to read for a total of 4 books each. Then each of us is also choosing a personal reading selection. The only stipulation was that picture books would not count. But anything else – graphic novel, a re-read, a new book, one that’s been languishing on a TBR pile – was fine.

I will be reading one TBR book (Enchanted, selected at random) and one favorite (Alien Nation, also picked at random) chosen by my teen. My husband chose Star Trek Picard: The Dark Veil and the new book by Stacey Abrams, While Justice Sleeps, for me to read. My personal choice book will be Star Trek Discovery: Wonderlands which just released in May.

For my teen I chose Kill the Queen, a favorite from 2018. I also gave him some YA books to choose from, and he picked The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes. He’s enjoyed some of her other books in the past, plus he enjoyed the Westing Game feel of the description.  My husband chose the first Orphan X book as well as The Gray Man, two thrillers, for my son to read.  Then my son chose Quantum Prophecy: The Awakening, an old favorite, for his personal choice book.

For my husband, I chose Alien in the House which is his next book in the Kitty Katt-Martini/Touched by an Alien series that I adore. He usually gets one of those each year. This is one of my most favorite books in the series, so I am eager to have him read this one. I also chose The Blacksmith Queen for him. It’s a favorite from 2019 AND 2020 for me. I hope he gets a kick out of them. My teen chose the latest Baldacci book, A Gambling Man, for my husband to read this summer as well as Star Wars: Thrawn: Treason. Then my husband picked up one of my favorite John Scalzi novels, Redshirts, as his personal choice for the challenge.

#Bookaday


I have been doing the Bookaday summer challenge for 6 or 8 years now, but that was when I was off for the summers. I’m actually starting a full time job this summer, so I’ll be happy to stay on top of my ARC reading and the five books I have for the challenge. Therefore, I won’t be doing #bookaday this year.

 

ARCs


Speaking of ARCs, I have over 60 review books to read between now and the rest of the year, many of them releasing this summer. Here are some of the ones I’ll be reading and discussing in the coming months. And while there are other books I’d like to get to as well, the ARCs are my priority. We’ll see how many I get to!

SATURDAY SMORGASBORD: Publishers – St. Martin’s Press

Back in February I posted the first of my publisher spotlight posts about Crooked Lane Books. Then, in April, I did a spotlight on Kensington. This month I want to highlight St. Martin’s Press which is a division of Macmillan and includes the imprints of St. Martin’s Paperbacks (Nora Roberts books, Stephanie Plum mysteries, cozy mysteries),  Griffin (contemporary paperbacks – fiction, puzzles, etc.), Minotaur (crime fiction), Castle Point (nonfiction including gift books, cookbooks, activity and coloring books), and Wednesday Books (YA) among others.

Here are reviews for some of my favorite St. Martin’s Press/Griffin and St. Martin’s Press Paperback titles and series:

The Bakeshop Mystery series by Ellie Alexander
(and other cozy mystery series – Noodle Shop, Apron Shop, Cookie House, House-Flipper, Paw Enforcement,
Ten Rules for Faking It
The Love Scam
A Sweet Mess
The Christmas Town

Here are reviews for some of my favorite Minotaur titles and series:

Andy Carpenter series by David Rosenfelt
The K-Team series by David Rosenfelt
The Meg Langslow series by Donna Andrews
The Ancestry Detective series by S. C. Perkins
The Mercy Carr/Mercy and Elvis Mystery series by Paula Munier
The Orphan X series by Gregg Hurwitz
The Mace Reid K-9 Mystery series by Jeffrey B. Burton

Finlay Donovan Is Killing It
The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes
A Royal Affair
The Dog Dish of Doom

Here are reviews for some of my favorite Wednesday Books titles and series:

Amelia Unabridged
Tweet Cute
You Have a Match
Not Now, Not Ever

In Another Life
The Mall
You’d Be Mine
Only Mostly Devastated (♥♥♥♥½)

SATURDAY SMORGASBORD: Publishers – Kensington

Back in February I posted the first of my publisher spotlight posts about Crooked Lane Books. Today I want to highlight Kensington Publishing which also includes Lyrical Press (e-books), Dafina (fiction and nonfiction with a focus on race and identity), Zebra Books (romance), and other imprints.

According to their website, Kensington Publishing Corp started in 1974. They are proud to be an “independent” publisher, meaning they aren’t one of the “big” publishing houses. They are a “family” business and started out publishing historical fiction, but today their offerings run the full range of genres including cozy mysteries, thrillers, westerns, nonfiction, Amish fiction, contemporary romance, etc.

Here are reviews for some of my favorite Kensington titles and series:
The Scarred Earth Saga by G. A. Aiken
The Countess of Harleigh Mystery series by Dianne Freeman
The Rosalind Thorne Mystery Series by Darcie Wilde
The Amish Matchmaker Mystery Series by Amanda Flower
The Amish Candy Shop Mystery Series by Amanda Flower
The Poppy McAllister Mystery Series by Libby Klein
The Cider Shop Mystery series by Julie Ann Lindsey
The Savannah Reid Mystery series by G. A. McKevett
Bait and Witch
Piece by Piece
Portrait of a Sister

From Dafina:
The Cowboys of California series by Rebekah Weatherspoon

From Zebra Books:
The Amish Fairy Tales series by Sarah Price
The Petersheim Brothers series by Jennifer Beckstrand
The Amish Cookie Club series by Sarah Price

From Lyrical Press/Lyrical Underground:
The Trouble With Murder
Capturing the Earl
Paw and Order
Deadly News
Scone Cold Killer
Escape Claws

SATURDAY SMORGASBOARD: 2020 Cybils Awards

[I received an advanced reader copy of The Land of the Cranes and Show Me a Sign from the publisher for review purposes. Both will be passed on to a classroom teacher when life gets back to normal. The rest of the books were either ones I already read or ones I read from the library. All opinions are my own.]

The Process


Once again I had the privilege of serving on a committee for the Cybils Awards. This is the third year I served with the group choosing the winner in the Middle Grade Fiction category. You can see my posts about previous years’ work here.

Now that our committee work is done, I am able to talk about the finalists we read this year. These are my personal thoughts on each of these books and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the full committee who presided over this category.  Keep in mind that another committee determined what books we would be choosing from. These seven were not our personal best of 2020, but the ones chosen by another committee of readers based on nominations. Books here are listed in alphabetical order.

One summary note – of the 7 books in our list, I only read one of them on my own, long before the finalists were chosen. Two more hit my radar, and I posted about them in Book News. The rest were unfamiliar to me. These were not books I would have necessarily chosen for myself. Several of these are examples of books that are objectively good but also ones I did not personally enjoy reading. All of the nominees deal with some weighty issue(s), which – to me – can sometimes limit their appeal for readers. I believe the winner we chose was the best option of the seven both on its own merits and also to appeal to the widest circle of readers.

The Books


Echo Mountain – Ellie and her family move to Echo Mountain during the Great Depression, making due with what nature has to offer and the negotiations they can make with their neighbors. When Ellie’s father is injured and goes into a coma, she seeks out the mysterious “hag” who might be able to help him. This isn’t the sort of novel I would pick up on my own, but I enjoyed the characters in this one. There’s a magical element to Ellie’s instincts for medicine and healing that was interesting. ♥♥♥♥

 

 

 

Efrén Divided – Efrén’s parents are undocumented immigrants, and when his mother is deported, Efrén steps into more responsibilities to help his family. I liked the kids in the book, but the story is sad. I appreciated that the complications of the situation were reflected in the story – there are no simple solutions offered by the end. I think this could be a great story to introduce kids to contemporary issues on immigration, but it’s a heavy story which might keep some kids from giving it a try. ♥♥♥♥

 

 

 

Fighting Words – [TW: sexual abuse, sexual harassment, suicide] (Older Middle Grade) – When the older of two sisters who have been through a considerable amount of trauma tries to commit suicide, the younger sister thinks it might be time to make some noise about what they are going through. This is an excellent story – probably my second favorite from this list – but it is a *hard* read. This is definitely for older middle grade readers (10+), and even for that group, it’s a pretty weighty story. This is another book that could help readers feel seen and know they aren’t alone. But this is also a title that I believe will appeal to a subset of readers who are mature enough to handle the content. ♥♥♥♥½

 

 

From the Desk of Zoe Washington – A girl preparing for a baking challenge is secretly investigating the crime that put her father in prison – the one he says he didn’t commit. This was the one book from the list I had already read before receiving the list of nominees. I loved this book, and I’m thrilled that it was our team’s choice for the Cybils Award for Middle Grade Fiction. You can read my full review here. ♥♥♥♥½

 

 

 

King and the Dragonflies – Kingston, grieving the loss of his brother, is convinced his brother has become a dragonfly. Kingston has no one to talk to about his grief or this theory because just before he died, Kingston’s brother told him to stay away from his best friend, Sandy, because he is gay. Being Black is hard enough; Kingston doesn’t need people thinking he might be gay, too. This is another heavy story. The writing is terrific, but the story itself felt dark and sad to me – there’s racism, harassment over sexuality, grief/loss, and also child abuse. This is the sort of book that can help some readers feel seen, but not all kids are looking for such a hard-hitting story. ♥♥♥½

 

 

Land of the Cranes – This is a novel in verse, also about immigration. This time, though, the main character is the one who is detained, making the the story sit much closer to the reader than Efrén’s story. This was hard to read, and I didn’t enjoy it. It’s enlightening, but another difficult, serious subject. ♥♥♥

 

 

 

Show Me a Sign – An OwnVoices story about a Deaf community in Martha’s Vineyard in the 1800s. A young scientist comes to Mary’s village to figure out why there is such a large population of Deaf people in the community, but his personal biases lead him to make dire choices that impact the community as a whole and Mary directly. This was a fascinating story, although it, too, was dark. The things that happen to Mary in the story were awful, and as a reader, I could feel her panic at being trapped without a way to communicate her thoughts, feelings, and experience in order to get the help she needed. There’s a lot of infuriating injustice in this story. Not only does the story address Deaf culture and communication and community, but it also touches on land disputes with Native Americans and other racial issues of the time period. This was my third favorite of the seven books we read; there will be a sequel to this one, Set Me Free, later this year. ♥♥♥♥