Skip to main content

Help Me! Reading Challenge 2016

Dear Internet-

Being a PhD student means a variety of things. In particular, it means that I spend a lot of time reading. Sadly (or happily on some days) it means I read a lot on a very, very narrow topic. And as much fun as reading about theology and the Holocaust and politics is (sarcasm loosely applied- some of it is actually fascinating, albeit maybe not fun), it means that in my scant free time I've stopped reading much else. Instead I spend a majority of my free time either on the computer or watching TV, neither of which is good to do before bed for an insomniac.

So here's my new plan for 2016: In the hour and a half before I go to sleep, I'm going to be "screen" free, relatively speaking. In this time I'm working on journaling and reading through the Bible via a 365 Day reading plan. But I also just want to read- and I have a plan.

What if I read 10% of a different book every night for 10 weeks? I can read about 20-30 pages per hour, but have a hard time concentrating on a single book, probably because I have to concentrate on one thing for so much of my day in general. My thought was that at any given point, I will be reading 7 different books for 10 weeks each.

And here is where I need your help- I need book recommendations. I have the first 10 weeks already planned out. My long read for the year is The Brothers Karamazov which I have been trying to read for years but keep getting disheartened by because it's soooooooo long.

The first 10 weeks look like this:

Sunday- The Brothers Karamazov (Dostoyevsky)
Monday- Discernment (Nouwen)
Tuesday- The Gospel According to Heretics (Wilhite)
Wednesday- The Trick is to Keep Breathing (Galloway)
Thursday- Yes Please! (Poehler)
Friday- Love in the Time of Cholera (Marquez)
Saturday- Things a Little Bird Told Me (Biz Stone)

As you can see, this is a fairly diverse list of books, from fiction to historical theology to memoir to business (thanks to a recommendation from Jack). What else should I read??

Please tell me what I should read. Here are some basic guidelines:

- 300 pages or shorter (that's realistically how much I can read with this plan)
- not graphic novels
- I prefer non-science fiction and fantasy, although I've been surprised by some before
- I don't mind Young Adult fiction
- Kindle books are okay
- In general, not self-help books, the last thing I need while trying to fall asleep is a list of things I could be doing better with my life.
- Not a book I would read for my thesis (I have a long enough list of those)

Okay- I need roughly 24 books. Go!

Comments

  1. Someone recommended UPSTAIRS AT THE WHITE HOUSE: MY LIFE WITH THE FIRST LADIES by J.B. West to me this year, and I really enjoyed it. I also liked OUTSIDE THE BOX: WHY OUR CHILDREN NEED REAL FOOD, NOT FOOD PRODUCTS by Jeannie Marshall. Both of these are non-fiction but read like a great story and a memoir.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oh, and for some real light and super enjoyable reading: Unabrow. It's a memoir from someone who grew up reading Sweet Valley High too.

    http://www.amazon.com/Unabrow-Misadventures-Bloomer-Una-LaMarche/dp/0142181447

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Claire tries cooking! Pineapple Chicken Quesadilla and Figgy Balsamic

We are the typical American family when it comes to food habits. In that, we eat a rotation of approximately the same 5 meals: - Chicken Tacos - BBQ Chicken - Sauteed Salmon - Spaghetti - "Meatloaf" Pies Every once in a blue moon, I'll add something "fun" to the mix: - Stir Fry - Pretzel Chicken - More different fish - Roast Chicken Fun meals ceased to exist once baby boy showed up, but now that he's able to sit in a high chair AND has a bit of a schedule during the day, cooking is incrementally becoming an easier task. Last night I found a slow cooker magazine (yay Better Homes and Gardens!) and realized that I'm bored with the same 5-6 meals. Trying to find new permutations of said meals is also a task I don't completely enjoy. Only Tuesdays should signal a specific food (e.g. Taco Tuesdays). So here goes a novel experiment - I'm going to try and cook something "new" once a week. Full disclosure - I'm a big fan of

Book Review: Inspired by Rachel Held Evans

I was anxiously awaiting the email that arrived. The day before, via facebook, a notification had been posted to fill out a form, hit submit, and cross your fingers to receive an advanced copy of Rachel Held Evans' new book,  Inspired: Slaying Giants, Walking on Water, and Loving the Bible Again, and being a part of the book launch team. The email arrived, as did the golden ticket (aka the PDF of the advanced copy). To put this in perspective, I have been an RHE fangirl since 2012 when I first read A Year of Biblical Womanhood.  I was just out of seminary, recently married, and trying to figure out life. The humor in her writing amidst her earnest questions about what the Bible calls women to be versus what a conservative, evangelical society told women. I loved it. On top of that, my church had RHE come in 2014 and I was able to meet her (and be her chauffeur) and she was just as gracious and funny as her voice in her writing posited her to be. I never had the same affi

The Syllabus for the Next 18 Months

I decided at some point in the last week that I wanted to make a checklist of 30 things to do before I turned 30. Creating a list of 30 things is harder than I imagined it would be. But, to quote Julie Andrews (which I suppose is actually quoting Rodgers & Hammerstein), "let's start at the very beginning, a very good place to start." There's nothing magical about turning thirty. I imagine that on July 2, 2015, when I wake up, my eyes will still be blue, my fingers will still number ten, my instant desire will be to go back to sleep. That said, it is one of those watershed points in life. The idea of approaching thirty is both reassuring and daunting. At least I'm theoretically past the point of having a quarter-life crisis. What I want to do is be able to look back at my 20s and tell my future kids about all the adventures their parents had before they were thirty. Creating this list isn't going to create those adventures. We've already had s