For posterity, chronicling my experience with this book in its own post. What fun!
For my Goodreads Review, with a slight spoiler at the end of it, Click Here.
And now to my updated Q1 Blurb. Read below.
Uh oh. Lizzie has a thought. Lizzie's gonna blog about it. What could it be this time? Keep reading to find out!
For posterity, chronicling my experience with this book in its own post. What fun!
For my Goodreads Review, with a slight spoiler at the end of it, Click Here.
And now to my updated Q1 Blurb. Read below.
Welcome to my 2021 Quarter One TBR. This list covers the months of January, February, and March 2021.
Consider the following my hub for a 2021 year-long TBR. It is obviously subject to change, and this post is specifically geared towards my general Quarterly Goals, including information regarding the specific 2021 reading challenges I intend to participate in.
I have spent a day or so selecting my reads for nearly the entire year in these challenges. These are The Uncorked Librarian 2021 (#UncorkedReading2021) as well as for 2020 (#UncorkedReading2020) which I will be attempting at the same time, and GirlXOXO's Monthly Motif challenge for 2021 (#MonthlyMotifGXO). I'm not sure how I will format my general Quarterly Goals from month to month, but my goal is definitely to make my selections prior to the quarter's start.
But first, a little explanation...
November 15, 2020
So I was a bad girl. I got through G's explanation of how she used her rating system, downloaded the file and went to town. I didn't bother to finish watching the video where she explains how to use the Google Drive file.
Meaning, that when I downloaded it to use in Excel, I broke it. I broke the stats sheet. Bad girl.
This is why the sheet wasn't populating like others said it did, let alone how G intended it to work. Ooops! My bad.
As I've shared before, I have never completed a Goodreads reading challenge. Granted, this is only my 3rd year participating, but after the summer I spent as a teen reading 50 books every two weeks... I kept thinking I could do better. I forgot about adulting.
In 2018, I read 57 of the 100 I wanted to, and the only reason I got to 47 of the 50 I pledged in 2019 was because of audiobooks and LeVar Burton reading me short stories on his podcast... I made a pledge in 2020 using logic. I determined that I could probably read about 5 books a month, totaling 60 for the year. That was more than last year, but breaking it down by the month, like a monthly goal, it didn't seem so daunting.
I don't know about you, but because planners are expensive, my crafty side decided, "I can make that", and when I went to start making my planners, the first thought I had was, "what size do I make it?" Right after that, my thought was "It has to fit cute pre-mades that I might want to use later."
So then I'm searching for dimensions. And frankly, a purse that the planner will fit into. I don't eyeball things that should be standardized, things that need to be consistent. I just can't. Too much wasted product and too many wasted supplies. But there is no be-all-end-all standardization in the planner world any more than there is in the fashion industry. (I'm looking at you, pants pile! Every pair in a different size, different shape, and yet all fit various parts of my lower half.)
I have had a very difficult time coming up with an objective way to subjectively rate books I have read for many years. I recognize that rating a book, particularly fiction, is unadulteratedly a subjective exercise. A book that I absolutely adore is going to be seen as little better than trash by someone else and vice versa.
However, I also felt that just using the EGM (Enjoyment or Emotional Gut-based Method) right after reading it resulted in a lot of books getting ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ratings from me. Books that should have probably received ⭐️⭐️⭐️ or ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ were being unfairly lumped in up with the truly greats.
The EGM has now caused problems as my tastes aged and changed, as well as my ever deepening appreciation and understanding of what were actually just good books and what were outstanding books. That gut of mine previously rated a book ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ but that one is no where near as good as this book I just read! They can’t both be 5s!
So for the past 2 days, I have fruitlessly scoured the Internet for guidance on how to create my own rating system. What categories are other readers using to base their ratings on? What criteria do others require for the individual stars they give?
Everywhere I turned, people explained how they broke down their EGM into the 5-star system. I need a bit more guidance than that. I need a set of categories or checklists so I know I’m being uniform in my assessments.
Working on the previously mentioned book planner, I also reconfigured my current Franken planner... Again. I found a list of 20 in 20 that I had started prior to the craziness that is this year, and saw a couple things book related on said list.
I’m not a BookTuber (yet...) but as I have been working on my planner collection this year, I found that trying to include my reading habits in my daily planner was just too much. And the collection wasn’t all together in one spot, making a quick glance at the total record for the year near impossible.