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2022 Reading In Order


I'm not going one book a week, but I am reading in order and trying to keep the months contained.. so I'll be reading the first five prompts (in order) in January, then supplementing that with side reads. Then I'll pick up the next four prompts in February, and when I'm finished with those, I'll side read until March.
Last time I read in order (2019, my second year of doing the challenge), I still finished really early, so I'm hoping this helps me pace myself a bit.
Last time I read in order (2019, my second year of doing the challenge), I still finished really early, so I'm hoping this helps me pace myself a bit.



1. A book with a main character whose name starts with A, T, or Y 9/1/2022
2. A book connected to a book you read in 2021 16/1/2022
3. A book with 22 or more letters in the title 23/1/2022
4. A book that fits your favorite prompt that did not make the list 30/1/2022
5. A book by an author with two sets of double letters in their name 6/2/2022
6. A book with an image of a source of light on the cover 13/2/2022
7. A book related to psychology, neuroscience or the mind 20/2/2022
8. 3 books set on three different continents - Book 1 27/2/2022
9. 3 books set on three different continents - Book 2 6/3/2022
10. 3 books set on three different continents - Book 3 13/3/2022
11. A book from historical fiction genre 20/3/2022
12. A book related to glass 27/3/2022
13. A book about a woman in STEM 3/4/2022
14. A book with fewer than 5000 ratings on Goodreads 10/4/2022
15. A book without a person on the cover 17/4/2022
16. A book related to Earth Day 24/4/2022
17. A book from NPR's Book Concierge 1/5/2022
18. A book by an Asian or Pacific Islander author 8/5/2022
19. A book that involves alternate reality, alternate worlds, or alternate history 15/5/2022
20. A fiction or nonfiction book that is set during 1900 -1951 22/5/2022
21. A book with one of the Monopoly tokens on the cover 29/5/2022
22. A book with a Jewish character or author 5/6/2022
23. A book that features loving LGBTQIA+ relationship 12/6/2022
24. A book related to inclement weather 19/6/2022
25. A book less than 220 pages OR more than 440 pages 26/6/2022
26. 2 books with the same word in the title - Book 1 3/7/2022
27. 2 books with the same word in the title - Book 2 10/7/2022
28. A book that won an award from Powell's list of book awards 17/7/2022
29. A book set on or near a body of water 24/7/2022
30. A book related to mythology 31/7/2022
31. A book published at least 10 years ago 7/8/2022
32. A book where the main character is a female detective/private eye/police officer 14/8/2022
33. The next book in a series 21/8/2022
34. A book with an academic setting or with a teacher that plays an important role 28/8/2022
35. 2 books related to flora and fauna - Book 1 4/9/2022
36. 2 books related to flora and fauna - Book 2 11/9/2022
37. A book that uses all five vowels in the title and/or author's name 18/9/2022
38. A book by a Latin American author 25/9/2022
39. A book from the TIME list of 100 Best YA Books of All Time 2/10/2022
40. A book related to one of the 22 Tarot Major Arcana cards 9/10/2022
41. A book with a theme of food or drink 16/10/2022
42. A book with a language or nationality in the title 23/10/2022
43. A book set in a small town or rural area 30/10/2022
44. A book with gothic elements 6/11/2022
45. A book related to a game 13/11/2022
46. A book with a non-human as one of the main characters 20/11/2022
47. A book with handwriting on the cover 27/11/2022
48. A book posted in one of the ATY Best Book of the Month threads in 2021 or 2022 4/12/2022
49. A book connected to the phrase "Here (There) Be Dragons" 11/12/2022
50. A book that involves aging, or a character in their golden years 18/12/2022
51. A book published in 2022 25/12/2022
52. A book with a time-related word in the title 1/1/2023

I am going to try to hit 2-3 of the prompts for each month. But I'm reading a lot of series, so those will get me out of sync with the monthly prompts.
And I'm making some seasonal adjustments. I'm reading MLK on his birthday in January, I'm reading spooky books in October, and lighter books in December (when I usually have too much to do.)
I guess I'm reading in order-ish.


It helps me narrow down what to read. I can look at whatever month I'm on and narrow down my up-next shelf to the ones that fit those particular prompts to help me choose my next few books to read. Otherwise I have trouble deciding what to read next and then I guess I would have to scroll the entire list of prompts to see where a particular book fits. That seems like more work to me. And then the prompts that are harder to fill would get left until the end.

I just thought it would be a fun extra challenge to try. I do a lot of challenges so always looking to do different things


For me, I just want to add an extra challenge layer to it. I do several different reading challenges throughout the year, I read a lot of books that don't end up on this list anyway, and I nearly always finish ATY (sometimes all except for one especially tough one) kind of early in the year, when I have done the prompts in any order I want. So I'm just trying to make it more of a challenge and add a little extra twist to the game, while hopefully letting it feel like more of a year-long thing, rather than something I complete in a few months.
This year I went back to just reading and assigning prompts after, and I ended up finishing the entire challenge twice because it was a bit too easy. I'm excited to have the structure of reading in order again this year.
Tracy, it's definitely personal preference... for people who only read 52 books a year, I can see the appeal of reading out of order, but I'll be supplementing my ATY with side reads so I like that it adds a bit extra challenge.
Tracy, it's definitely personal preference... for people who only read 52 books a year, I can see the appeal of reading out of order, but I'll be supplementing my ATY with side reads so I like that it adds a bit extra challenge.

As others have said, reading in strict order gives them an extra challenge.
However, everyone's life is different. Some people don't work and their reading availability doesn't change. Other people have months where they are more busy or less busy. If people pre-plan a book for each prompt, they may want to move thicker books to less busy months and smaller books to busier ones. It all depends on your life and whether you are pre-planning or not.

Having said that, I have a few library books in the plan for 2022 so I'll read them as soon as possible, in case they aren't available when I would get to them in plan order, and then go back to reading in order for the books I own.
I'll be setting my own pace, not sticking to one a week or four/five a month. I'm doubling up on a few prompts next year so I've got 58 to get through and that's quite a lot for me, so the quicker I can read them and build up a little lead, the more relaxed I'll feel.

For 2022 I was originally thinking I would do like Emily and keep the tasks within their months so I couldn't finish early (I would have to read for December tasks in December). But now I seem to have taken on a whole lot of other challenges (how did that happen? LOL) so I think I will go back to the easy way for 2022 (fitting books read to any prompt).
But still in a future year I would like to try keeping to the months. And then maybe to the actual week. That would be hardest if you are also reading for other dated challenges!

Thank you to Joanne, Meg, Anna, Roxana, Emily, Dubhease, Marie, and Rosemary for giving me your varied and personal takes on "reading in order". Some of these I hadn't even considered. Maybe I'll try doing that this year, should my library availability allow. A couple of years ago I would have thought just reading 52 books in a year was challenge enough, but this year I'm on track to read 66 (or maybe a bit more)!
I'm thinking about doing it in order again next year. I've done it both ways in the past. This last year I went random, and I naturally left myself the hard ones for the end.
Sheena wrote: "I will be reading in whatever order my library holds come through."
LOL, that does change up my plans fairly often!
LOL, that does change up my plans fairly often!


I'm so excited to get started with all of you tomorrow! (Or today, for some of you Oceania members!)
Will your first book of the year be the book you chose for ATY Prompt 1?
Will your first book of the year be the book you chose for ATY Prompt 1?


I haven't decided if I'm going to stick to the one book a week or just read in order regardless of week/month. I like to read spooky books in October and Christmas/winter books in December, so typically like to be done or almost done before then to allow me to free read.
My first up from prompt 1 is Such a Fun Age, one of the main characters is named Alix (I'm listening to the audio and thought the other MC is Amaya but it's actually Emaya, but since the prompt is "one of the main characters" it still works).
Nancy, that's a great way to start the challenge. I'm beginning with The People We Keep, which has a main character named April.


I read Kukum for the first prompt. Almanda and Thomas are the main characters! I highly suggest it for anyone interest by the first nation (Innu) in Canada/Quebec.

Sherri, I have Razorblade Tears slotted in for week 4 (GR choice award)! Looking forward to hear what you think.

I liked it as much as Blacktop Wasteland. It was hard to put down.

Aimee, that's why I went back to reading in order this year... the decision fatigue and not knowing what to read next! Now I can either decide "next ATY' or "side read" and then pick a book randomly for side read if I decide to go that route. I really like the structure of reading in order!

Yep I can totally see why, I'm definitely going to stick with it!

I'm totally with you on this...and actually have already read out of order. my first read was #15 and today I read #1. Both of these were not the books I had planned to read for those weeks.


My original plan for this was either The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August or The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba but neither was available on audio and I'm reading something else on Kindle. I do still want to read both of those so need to figure out if I can put them somewhere else, either for ATY or PopSugar.
Oh that was such a fun one, Nancy! I was surprised by how light and happy it made me.
What prompt is everyone using for week 4? Have y'all decided, or will you go the route of picking a book and fitting it in with a prompt?
What prompt is everyone using for week 4? Have y'all decided, or will you go the route of picking a book and fitting it in with a prompt?


I always like the GR Choice Award prompt as a way to fit in a popular fiction book I've wanted to read and didn't get around to. I'm in the middle of Beautiful World, Where Are You, and I'm really enjoying it!

My plan this year seems to have a lot of non-fiction in the first few weeks but I am doing my best to stay in order. I'm enjoying the added challenge and it is nice to only think about 1 prompt at a time. I don't feel as guilty for having side reads either.

I'm a little behind at the moment. I'm trying to get through The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society but it's a bit too twee for me. It's like visiting a small town that knows it's a cute small town and is trying a bit too hard to be exactly what tourists want. The main character reminds me a lot of Jess from New Girl in the way that I can understand why people like her but I don't.
Jackie wrote: "I'm a little behind at the moment. I'm trying to get through The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society but it's a bit too twee for me. It's like visiting a small town that k..."
Yes, that book fits the trope of a single woman always finding a desirable, employed single man available in a small town when she (a) goes back to her old hometown or (b) goes to someplace she's never been to learn about someone from the past, or (c) inherits a house/business from a relative unexpectedly. I did like the fact that I learned about the Channel Islands during the WWII, I had no idea they were involved and the children sent away.
Yes, that book fits the trope of a single woman always finding a desirable, employed single man available in a small town when she (a) goes back to her old hometown or (b) goes to someplace she's never been to learn about someone from the past, or (c) inherits a house/business from a relative unexpectedly. I did like the fact that I learned about the Channel Islands during the WWII, I had no idea they were involved and the children sent away.

We're going to have to get that prompt on the list next year. I read quite a few newer Books-about-books recently, and there are still many more I want to read. I especially liked The Sentence by Louise Erdrich. It was partially set in a bookstore but it didn't have that cutesy vibe some of them have. Main character is named "Tookie."

Books mentioned in this topic
A Man Called Ove (other topics)The Reading List (other topics)
The Year of the Flood (other topics)
The Book of Cold Cases (other topics)
Greenwich Park (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jandy Nelson (other topics)Louise Erdrich (other topics)
Are you setting any parameters for yourself? One book a week, only reading the prompts within the month, or just allowing yourself to go at your own pace? I'd love to see your ideas!