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March 2020 Recap

How is everyone doing??? We are hanging in there. We have had various illnesses during this quarantine but none too serious. It's been a huge adjustment for the extroverts I live with for sure. I, despite an abundance of extra time, feel listless. It actually feels harder to get these done. I actually read 12 books this month but most were rereads. I'm having a focus issue right now, so rereads are working better for me.


The Favorites of the New Reads:

Love Lettering by Kate Clayborn
Sal and Gabi Break the Universe by Carlos Hernandez
Undercover Bromance by Lyssa Kay Adams

January in Numbers:
Total: 12
New: 4           Rereads: 8
MG: 1             YA:  1             Adult: 10
Contemporary: 2
Historical: 9
Fantasy: 0
Science-Fiction: 1
Non-Fiction: 0

April has a couple of releases I'm really looking forward to, so hopefully my focus and attention span will return. I have both of these beauties on pre-order:


I hope you are all safe and well. If you've read anything great, please tell me about it in the comments.

Comments

Kim Aippersbach said…
Oh, right, a new Hardinge! Worth getting excited about!

I definitely know what you mean about rereading because it's hard to focus, but that was what last year was all about for me, so I'm trying to read new stuff now! But new stuff from favourite authors is the best! I enjoyed The Secret Chapter, the latest instalment of Cogman's Invisible Library series, Paladin's Grace, another novella by T. Kingfisher, and Crosstalk, a recent Connie Willis I hadn't read yet. Snow Day is a fun short story from Andrea Höst. Sabrina Chase is a new-to-me author I've been enjoying (I should really review some of her on Goodreads).

But at the moment I'm rereading the Steerswoman series by Rosemary Kirstein, because in The Decameron Project (https://www.patreon.com/m/4119564/posts) she has a chapter from book 6 of the series! (She's still working on both book 5 and 6, but I'm heartened to know there's progress being made!)
I'm also looking forward to Deeplight. I've only read two Hardinge novels (enjoyed them both) but this one in particular sounds fascinating.
Scandiserv Blog said…
Thank you for wrriting this

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