Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
2019 Plans
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The 52 Topics for the 2019 Reading Challenge

I used Emily's template but made several changes, especially in the stats section.

– two bingo boards (randomised the numbers before the mods came up with the ordered list, so there is no bias! There's also no overlap)
– two printable lists (1 horizontal, 1 vertical)
- interactive PDF versions of everything
image preview
dropbox link

Excuse me while I geek out for a minute, but it was asked...
Here's part of mine. The first tab is my 2018 list and I have one of these for each of my challenges. For week 46, column H has all of the books that originally fit for this prompt (I keep this in there to be able to make suggestions later). Column G originally had everything from H but I deleted all the books that I already read, so I only have Strange the Dreamer left. It wasn't a great fit, so when I came across The Cloud Roads, I replaced that as my planned choice in column F (green is I either own or have borrowed from the library and orange is on hold). I also have a conditional format to show any duplicates in my planin this column. When I finish a prompt it goes in column E and I delete F and G to clean it up.
My library tab shows my overdrive wishlist and I have it for both libraries I belong to. The number is the order it is in on the wishlist. The title is conditional formatted to show duplicates, almost all book and audio. Author, type, length (pages or hours), holds and copies (to show which ones may be hard to get), Goodreads add date, a formula to show what page in the wishlist it is, and then if the book is in Brooklyn, NYC, or both libraries. I also have what prompt I currently have it penciled in for (W for ATY, P for Popsugar).
Once it's up and running, this has been pretty easy to maintain and made it easier for me to pick and choice when I was looking for something that meets a specific criteria.
That printable is gorgeous! I will definitely upload it to the group :)
eleen, if you have any interest in designing new avatars/banners for the main group page (at the top), I would definitely post them. We lost our graphic design wizard partway through the year. So if you're ever feeling bored...
eleen, if you have any interest in designing new avatars/banners for the main group page (at the top), I would definitely post them. We lost our graphic design wizard partway through the year. So if you're ever feeling bored...

– two bingo boards (randomised ..."
That's fantastic! Thank you!

As for me, I would rather use today reading... and figuring out January's books when it comes.


(I think it was modeled after one i saw on here?) but i think i will add some of the elements on these. We have some really talented members in this group!

It will be interesting to see how much I adhere to my plan this year since I actually do have plenty of time to plan.
Thanks to all who have shared your spreadsheets and the printables! I already copied Emily's but I am going through the others and will be incorporating bits from each!

Laura — I'd be happy to! Just let me know what you need!
We typically change the avatar and the main banner seasonally. So we do fall, winter, spring, and summer options. I changed them to the generic design ones but if you felt like making a fall or winter option for each then it would be appreciated :)

I have 2019 releases pencilled in on my list where they fit a prompt. New releases are the main reason I won’t read in order. I can basically spend a few minutes planning at work here and there so it’s not eating into reading time either. My plan is more a reminder of books that I want to read that will fit prompts but by no means a set in stone reading list for next year.
Ellie wrote: "Edie wrote: "Okay, am I the only person who doesn't spend hours PLANNING. It's two months before I can read books for this challenge... and I am not good at waiting to read something and even less ..."
I have a goal next year of reading 8 books from my 40 Before 40 list and all of the physical books that I own (30ish of them), so I'm planning so that I don't end up forgetting to read something!
This year I hardcore planned and less than half of the prompts were filled with books that I planned for them. For me, planning is half of the fun! (And I'm in a bit of a slump and also 8 books ahead on my reading goal, so I can afford the time to plan haha!)
I have a goal next year of reading 8 books from my 40 Before 40 list and all of the physical books that I own (30ish of them), so I'm planning so that I don't end up forgetting to read something!
This year I hardcore planned and less than half of the prompts were filled with books that I planned for them. For me, planning is half of the fun! (And I'm in a bit of a slump and also 8 books ahead on my reading goal, so I can afford the time to plan haha!)

My results for Popsugar were very similar, 32 stuck to planned book, which leaves 15 substitutions. I started planning for Popsugar as soon as the list came out in November 2017.

I'll see what I can do!

Thanks to the mods, spreadsheeters and everyone else for feeding my reading obsession!


I went by which month each Sunday fell in. September 30 is on a Sunday. So it just depends on how you lay out your weeks and if you would prefer to place it in the month that has the majority of days or which month the week starts during.

Can't wait to start going through my TBR list and seeing recommendations for each prompt.
I shifted this list a bit so that the weeks would match the weeks on the homepage. The homepage will have each week going by the first of the year for 2019, with the "weeks" running from Tuesday-Monday.
I personally have my weeks starting on Sunday, regardless of where the 1st falls but I know some would rather it all be consistent.
I personally have my weeks starting on Sunday, regardless of where the 1st falls but I know some would rather it all be consistent.

That's the way I lay out my weeks too... so no wonder I liked what you did so much.




I suspect that I wouldn't get nearly as much reading done if I went rogue. I've done the challenges for 3 years now but I just have too many distractions so I have a feeling I would enter into a major reading slump.
But as Sophie said, definitely stick around for the general group activities :)
But as Sophie said, definitely stick around for the general group activities :)

What are your thoughts? I may do something entirely different, just my thoughts.
Edit: I just realised, there is an abundance of books named tequila mockingbird...
Johanne wrote: "I know this probably doesn´t have an easy answer, but I wanted to link the two-book prompt with something title-related, for example an original book and one that has a word-play of the original ti..."
That was a topic I suggested, and I intentionally narrowed it to the contents of the book (since we have quite a few title and cover prompts as is). So I'm personally sticking to it.
That being said, your challenge, your rules! If using the titles got you excited, I say go for it.
That was a topic I suggested, and I intentionally narrowed it to the contents of the book (since we have quite a few title and cover prompts as is). So I'm personally sticking to it.
That being said, your challenge, your rules! If using the titles got you excited, I say go for it.



I've compromised by deciding to look at titles for the four book prompt. For the wedding categories, I'll be reading books with "Old," "New," "Borrowed" (or borrow, or borrower - this word was hard to find many choices so I broadened it), and "Blue" in the title.
No Country for Old Men
The Last Days of New Paris
The Borrowed
Baltimore Blues

I had a similar idea! I had been waiting for Thunderhead by Neal Shusterman to come out and Thunderhead by Douglas Preston kept coming up. I finally read the one I wanted and my friend randomly suggested the other one this weekend. Seems like I was meant to read both.


My brain likes connections, patterns and puzzles of all sorts. And connected by genre or theme just seems too ...easy... so my brain wants to make up other connections. I could just let it go and see what I read that fits. This year I´ve read multiple books about grief, set in space/other planets, dystopias and more.

Milena wrote: "I am taking the connection one super literally. I plan to read Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addiction and Tweak: Growing Up On Methamphetamines...."
Milena, that sounds amazing!
I'm doing fiction/nonfiction on the same topic, and I have a few that I'm looking at. Mental illness, cults, serial killers, feminism, and WWII are a few topics that I'm choosing between, then I'll pick my books based on the theme I choose.
I hope that for the weekly threads, we get these two prompts in one thread... I'd like to see the connections people are using in one thread!
Milena, that sounds amazing!
I'm doing fiction/nonfiction on the same topic, and I have a few that I'm looking at. Mental illness, cults, serial killers, feminism, and WWII are a few topics that I'm choosing between, then I'll pick my books based on the theme I choose.
I hope that for the weekly threads, we get these two prompts in one thread... I'd like to see the connections people are using in one thread!


Moby-Dick or, The Whale/Ahab's Wife, or The Star-Gazer
Anne of Green Gables/Marilla of Green Gables
Beowulf/Grendel

Moby-Dick or, The Whale/Ahab's Wife, or The Star-Gazer
Anne of Green Gables/Marilla of Green Gables
Beowulf
And the Ocean Was Our Sky is also Moby Dick told from the whale´s perspective. I thought of that connection as well, but I already have some massive books and will probably steer clear of Moby Dick :)
This cool nonfiction book about zombies (Danish sorry) came out recently - I could read that and pair it with some zombie fiction.


Books mentioned in this topic
Anna Karenina (other topics)The Walking Dead, Book One (other topics)
The Walking Dead, Book One (other topics)
Do Zombies Dream of Undead Sheep?: A Neuroscientific View of the Zombie Brain (other topics)
Do Zombies Dream of Undead Sheep?: A Neuroscientific View of the Zombie Brain (other topics)
More...
I like making a list too but won't follow it as I can't bear to have my reading planned out for a whole year! It's good to know what I have on my shelves that works even if I end up reading something else.