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What is the Most Important factor in deciding on book to read next
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I have a huge to-read pile (legitimately huge, around 10 feet tall - photo in my profile), so I generally have a wide range of choices.
This past week I wasn't sure what I wanted to read, so I opened a number of books and read the first page of each. That led me to finally read A Natural History of Dragons and start Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking.

^This
I always have lists of books to read but I almost always default to: what am I in the mood to read?

I tend to make a few lists of various books I'm interested in at the moment (some for challenges, some that I've recently acquired, often organised by genre) so that I don't get lost in my somewhat vast collection. And then, well, it comes down to that question.
(And sometimes I just scroll through my Kindle book list and pick one at random.)

Like probably almost everybody else mentioned, whatever I feel in the mood for. Currently I am in the middle of a grimdark fantasy book and feel like reading a book on popular math next.


1. Continuations of series that I enjoy.
2. Favourite authors.
3. Anything that looks interesting in the genres I like.

2. Is it part of a series(that earns mega points).
3. Recommendations
4. Author

1. Are my goodreads friends reading and loving it?
2. Do I own it?
3. Am I in the mood for it?


Strongly connected with "Recommendations" both from friends and here on Goodreads.
I have learned the hard way for every book that I plan to read, to request the free Kindle sample in order to see for myself how the book is.
Best regards,
Andy


Also, depends what genre I seem to be going through at the time - I tried to read the more frequently cited books for that genre.

Then, when I need a new book to read, I scroll through the list and pick one based on the following factors:
- My mood
- Rating on Goodreads
- The genre (I like to mix it up. Reading the same genre over and over again bores me.)
- The length (Long books tend to discourage me. That's why I'm not sure if I'll ever get to Infinite Jest even though it's on my list.)

However, aside from those, I have so many books on my to-read list (over 400) that it's difficult to decide, so I mostly let fate decide for me. I loaded them all onto my kobo. On the kobo you can see the last 5 books loaded on the front screen. So I pick one of them. That way I only ever have to choose between 5 books, rather than 400. Each time I read one it disappears off the front screen and I get a new book to go into my selection of 5. It's always fun to see what will pop up on the front screen next.
Of course, that system would work even better if I didn't keep buying new books and loading them onto the kobo. And it doesn't work for print books.


If I read a book that’s the first in a series, and if I like it well enough that I want to read the rest of the series, then I’ll immediately finish the rest of the series before I move on to something else. I feel like I appreciate the payoffs and catch more nuances when the details of previous books from the series are fresh in my mind. I hate that feeling that I’m reading something that should mean something to me but I can’t remember what.
Other than finishing up books in a series, I almost always choose something from my backlog. I’ve mainly been reading the ones that either aren’t part of a series at all, or else they’re part of a series that’s complete. Aside from that, I’m not too particular about which book I choose. Mainly I just try to mix it up a bit using a combination of genre, year published, and page length. I think synopses usually give way too much information about a book and spoil a lot of the fun, so I try to pick a dozen or so different books and load them on my Kindle in advance. By the time I actually read a book, I often don’t remember much about what the synopsis said. This means that I'm not usually choosing a book to read based on what it's about. I just pick from whatever genre I'm in the mood for and I tend to alternate between longer/shorter books and older/newer books.

I'm not in any way consistent. But a rough flow-chart would be:
1) Is it from the library,
* high on my list
* and due back soon?
* Especially if I had to request it, and there's others in the queue so I won't be able to renew it
2) Did I commit to discussing it with someone? (Beta reading, ARC copies or something I've committed to review)
3) Research I need for something
Otherwise, any of:
4) Catches my eye
5) Feel like something different
6) It's been sitting on my Kindle for a long time
7) I'm reading for some specific reason
8) Book club discussing it now/soon
9) Next in a series (used to drive straight through, now I bounce around much more)

Sometimes I like a good standalone before going into a Book 2.


I have a huge to-read pile (legitimately huge, around 10 feet tall - photo in my profile), so I generally have a ..."
Yep. Depends what mood I'm in. I tend to read true crime, historical, science-fiction and classics as well as fantasy. I'm more likely to pick up something from an author I've read before or a book I really like the look of.
Been on my kindle for a while.
Found it on the shelf - thought I must read that....


Like the other posters I do like to mix it up. (I love J.G.Ballard but can't imagine just downing one book of his after another. I've been reading his collected stories for several years now.) If I read a genre novel, a fantasy, I'll read a contemporary novel or a crime novel. This keeps the genres fresh to me because I'm fresh to them, not jaded.
Great question, btw.


♥,
Cat at Galaxy Press

If there's nothing on my shelf that catches my eye I set my 'sub' list to the oldest added book and read that. I actually made a 'soon' shelf here on Goodreads for books I suggest to myself to read. Haha. :)
But these are also selected by factors of 'this sounds interesting right now', 'oldest book on my list' and the like.
Continuing a series ... well, I have to admit, if a series gets me hooked extremely I get myself all the books of the series and read it in one go but that doesn't often happen.
So far I haven't been re-reading any books in the last couple of years but I guess I'll do that next year. :)

Browse.
Find a title/cover that looks interesting.
Speed read the book to see if I like the writing style, general plot and ending. (Yes I always check the ending first)
Buy the one(s) I like most.

Other factors:
Author [not only if I like a given author, but I quite enjoy trying out new ones]
Impression I get from the sample (I almost always check the sample first)

I also like to intentionally pick something every 6 months or so that is outside of my normal SF/fantasy comfort zone, just to keep me grounded. Usually I pick something "classic". Recent choices include Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury and As I Lay Dying, One Hundred Years of Solitude, The Third Policeman, 1984, Miller's The Crucible, and Camus's The Stranger.

Browse.
Find a title/cover that looks interesting.
Speed read the book to see if I like the writing style, general plot and ending. (Yes I..."
I have to say, this is the best one so far.
♥,
Cat at Galaxy Press

I always have multiple lists to compare against when picking within a category.

I have a huge to-read pile (legitimately huge, around 10 feet tall - photo in my profile), so I generally have a huge to-read pile (legitimately huge, around 10 feet tall - photo in my profile), so I generally have a wide range of choices.
This past week I wasn't sure what I wanted to read, so I opened a number of books and read the first page of each...."
Me too!
I do try and preference library books that I have to return, or if I joined a buddy read on goodreads (although I've gotten to the point where I won't join a buddy read until AFTER I've started reading the book). I also tend to read in cycles. Science fiction / fantasy / horror is about a third of my reading. I'll read several books linked somehow -- like -- "literary" 19th century British novels, then I'll pick up Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, followed by lighthearted fantasy novels, then I'll hit a grittier fantasy novel, so I'll read a few of those, then it's on to a set of Non-fiction European Medieval History books (written for the educated lay reader), then to lighten the mood maybe a lighthearted historical romance novel, followed by historical mystery novel, and so on. Goodreads / challenges pushes me to try novels outside my normal round of topics/genres. I've looked at my reading lists and about 2/3rds of the books I read are new-to-me authors. I don't normally do re-reads (except for Leo Tolstoy).
And ... I've been blest with a son who likes to read so I'll read whatever he's reading when I'm invited to do so! He's into thick Russian novels, non-fiction modern European history, and science fiction novels that also exist on film (like "Game of Thrones" or "Star Wars"-inspired novels).
Books mentioned in this topic
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (other topics)A Natural History of Dragons (other topics)
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking (other topics)
1. Favorite Author
2. Continuing Series that I liked
3. Is it at library (that is free)
4. Genre (I try not to read books in same genre repeatedly so this is a double edged sword. Is it in SF, fantasy or thriller, history, and am I interested in this genre at this time
5. Continuing Series that I read a book
6. New author
7. Recommendation, blurb
8. Length
9. Cover art
10. Did I buy it and have not read it yet
What is your process? What makes you read a certain book more than another book? Beside club reads, does any particular reviewers or recommendations lead you to read a specific book ahead of another.