2025 Reading Challenge discussion
ARCHIVE: Monthly Challenges
>
December Challenge: Advent Calendar

All up to date! I haven't decided what story to read/count for today yet, but I'm itching to read several of the ones you all have listed...!


3/24 "Dance in America" by Lorrie Moore (Birds of America)
4/24 "Agnes of Iowa" by Lorrie Moore (Birds of America)
I'm really loving this short story collection so far. I've read a novel by Moore, but her short stories are so much better.

My first four stories/poems:
December 1st- A Dream Within A Dream (poem) by Edgar Allen Poe --- I like poetry but I am not good at interpretation, if anyone reads this poem please share with me what it means to you, I am just curious.
2nd- 38th Street by Micah Ackerman in Stories on the Go: 101 Very Short Stories by 101 Authors
3rd- Suzanne Valadon: A Woman Who Dared by Caddy Rowland in Stories on the Go: 101 Very Short Stories by 101 Authors
4th- This challenge inspired me to finally finish Casting Off by Hugh Howey in the Wool Omnibus. I LOVE the omnibus so far, it's just taking me awhile because I'm reading it and not listening to the audio which is how I mostly "read".

Yesterday I finished a couple more stories from The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher: Stories:
- The Long QT
- Winter Break
3/31

Sorry to Disturb
Comma
2/31"
I've been reading out of that and I loved Sorry to Disturb, I plan on finishing it up this month.

Story: Variations on an Apple: A Tor.Com Original by Yoon Ha Lee. Another free online from Tor. I loved this, but it has gotten very mixed reviews. YMMV.
Poem: One Art by Elizabeth Bishop. Revisiting another favorite.
4/31 and 4/31

Thanks for that, Alisia. I love vignettes, so I'll give it a try.

Read 4/24: today I finished The Fifth Dragon by Ian McDonald, available on the Tor.com website. It is the precursor to Luna: New Moon, which I'm reading at the moment.

Great choices, Reija! I want to read that Stephen King collection too. :)
I just noticed the short story collection [book:Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Distu..."
I picked Trigger Warning voting lists actually. I really love King's short stories, I think you can find his finest works there, with Gaiman I have to do more work, I usually almost gets his idea and hopefully after this I understand his works better.
It's funny both of books have short introduction of stories before hand, King has right before story and Gaiman one long story before stories. I have to say that while reading this books from Kindle, I prefer King's way.

Not so keen on "Some Gods of El Paso" by Maria Dahvana Headley
but loved Hello Hello by Seanan McQuire from Future Visions: Original Science Fiction Inspired by Microsoft

Finished "Cat's Paw" from Connie Willis' Miracle and Other Christmas Stories. It was a fun little detective story, with a bumbling assistant, primates galore and absolutely no plum pudding.

Really enjoying this challenge. I don't plan them out beforehand so every day is a new short story surprise. Today I opened When You Are Engulfed in Flames to a random page and read "Of Mice and Men"
Actually I do have one story planned in advance. I will read Tenth of December on the tenth of December.
~

Today's story for me was "Beatrice" by Karin Tidbeck, from her collection Jagannath. Really liked this one, looking forward to the rest of her stories.

4/31

#1Taste
#2 Lamb of the slaughter
#3 Man from the south
#4 My Lady Love, My love
#5 Dip in the pool
All of them belong to Tales of the Unexpected. So far I am in track.
the novel that I am reading is The Witches: Salem, 1692 and so far here I am also on track. I will report my progress in the next days...

Have a question: I am reading more than one short story or poem on some days--do I count the number of days I've read, or the total number of stories/poems read?

Offenses Against the Person
How Shall I Know You?
The Heart Fails Without Warning
Terminus
The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher
5/31

6/24 "The Cut-Glass Bowl" by F. Scott Fitzgerald (Jazz Age Stories)
I'm certainly finding I generally like Fitzgerald's short stories more than his novels.


Beyond Lies the Wub - Philip K. Dick
Containment - Susan Kaye Quinn
Both were good, but I really loved Containment.
6/31

thank you for sharing I actually bought this

Sorry to see you go, Theresa. Good luck on those projects, though! Happy Holidays~

-
*Everyone else is updated to here.*
-
I'm really enjoying my morning short story and spiced tea! Maybe I want to keep this ritual for the coming year.
Yesterday I read a triplet of stories - "Spores", "Fruiting bodies" and "Resistance" by Seanan McGuire, from the triptych of Apocalypse anthologies: The End is Nigh, The End is Now and The End Has Come. (This is set of anthologies for which contributing authors were specifically encouraged to contribute sets of three stories - before the apocalypse, during the apocalypse, and after the apocalypse. I really like the idea, although I admittedly sorta hate skipping between so many volumes on my kindle to read the stories in their appropriate sets of 3...)
Aaand today I've had another Karen Russell one, "Children's reminiscences of the westward migration". I'm listening to this collection in audio - it has surprisingly good narrators all over.

Story: "The Outsider" by H.P. Lovecraft from The Complete Works of H.P. Lovecraft
December 6
Story: " The Music of Erich Zann" by Lovecraft
December 7:
Story: Oral Argument: A Tor.Com Original by Kim Stanley Robinson (Hated it.)
Poems: Spring and Fall by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Pied Beauty by Hopkins
And the Sea by Patrick Ryan Frank
I wasn't going to use any of the stories from the Lovecraft collection I'm working through, but I didn't get any other reading done this weekend. Read three poems today to make up for the two poems that didn't get read this weekend (and read Hopkins to make up for Lovecraft, kind of).
Avoid that Tor story unless you like current politics in your fiction (I don't).
I'm not sure that last poem is going to still be available at that link tomorrow. It's short and I kind of liked it, so here it is:
And the Sea
by Patrick Ryan Frank
Once, I wanted to be Hemingway.
But so did Hemingway. That act is hard—
dumb facts decked out as art, and anyway,
who gets what they want? And then who cares?
What matters when the water at your feet
is running out without you? I grew my beard
and bought a little boat on credit, named
it after myself and painted all of it blue,
then put us out to sea. And when it’s calm
and when the sun is out, we disappear.
We’re gone. What else was I supposed to do?
7/31 and 7/31

I'm thinking you have to read a story on each day. No opening the chocolates early.
~Progress: 8/24

Books mentioned in this topic
The Complete Works of H.P. Lovecraft (other topics)The Lady Astronaut of Mars (other topics)
Some Gods of El Paso (other topics)
Variations on an Apple (other topics)
Operation Arcana (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
H.P. Lovecraft (other topics)Kim Stanley Robinson (other topics)
Yoon Ha Lee (other topics)
Maria Dahvana Headley (other topics)
William Carlos Williams (other topics)
More...
Nicole W. (Msg. 57)
Goal Met So Far: 4/24