Harlequin Presents Readers discussion
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Shelf Title Thoughts
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After reading a book, I tag it the rating, heat level, location, tropes and series (if it's part of one). To group shelves together, I start each type with a specific word, so I have "rating-4-stars", "rating-4_5-stars", "location-usa", "location-england", "trope-inherited-baby", and "trope-fake-engagement".
I've also started using the 'Private Notes' section when I wrote a review to put things that will make the book standout when I'm trying to remember what it was about a few months from now (e.g., "hot scene on the hero's private island beach").


I find the idea of backlogging read books daunting as well! I've done a couple of books that were memorable, but there are some that I think I'd have to at least have to skim to remember details. Especially when the cover blurb is generic (e.g., Hero and heroine were in love, but she ran when she thought he had an affair. Three years later, he runs into her and her two-year-old son who has very familiar eyes...).

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I'm a theme reader, so a lot of my shelves are arranged according to specific themes. I might also have a shelf based on what kind of hero or heroine or my reaction to them. I also arrange books according to genre and sub-genre.
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Danielle The Book Huntress , Harlequin Presents are my crack!
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I haven't gone back and reshelved older reads. Too many. If I come across one, I might shelve it when I have it pulled up on goodreads.

Am still trying to find the perfect shelf name for one of my favorite tropes, the hero who thinks he can't marry the heroine. (Ex:


I love that you have a shelf for heroes that wear glasses! It makes me realize that there aren't enough glass-wearing heroes in Presents.

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Danielle The Book Huntress , Harlequin Presents are my crack!
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Just wanted to share that I found another book where the hero wears glasses and he is shorter then the herione and a virgin!
The Mistress Deception
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Danielle The Book Huntress , Harlequin Presents are my crack!
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Love willa's shelves... And V's crack me up. I'm going to have to check out Kate's and the rest of you. Just started using the private notes to add things that I don't even want to put under spoilers.
Who was it that had one called 'like-warm-hot-chocolate'?

I just recently started adding location b/c I'm in a couple different 50 state challenges, with the word 'setting' in front instead of 'location'.
And I love that you have your historical divided up within decades.
I'm tempted to add steam rating shelves... the only trouble is, I sometimes can't figure out the steam factor. I do have a 'one-foot-on-the-floor' shelf (which has some of my favs!).
The only original one I thought up was my 'mrs-robinson' shelf for older women/younger men.
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Danielle The Book Huntress , Harlequin Presents are my crack!
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As far as heat level, I think it's really up to individual preference. To me, a PG-13 is when that doesn't let the reader into the bedroom with the hero and heroine; R means the reader is in the bedroom during sex but it's "conventional" sexual situations; NC-17 is for erotica or sexual situations that push the limits (like a Blaze I read involving a robotic dildo that the engineer/hero built).
Books mentioned in this topic
The Mistress Deception (other topics)Savage Courtship (other topics)
The Duke (other topics)
I have a tendency to make my shelf titles things that I can search by later. For example I want to be able to think "What was that book? I remember that the heroine had a miscarriage or that the hero was an airline pilot." So I have a 'miscarriage' shelf and an 'airlines-pilot' shelf. I do notice that others have shelves like 'hero needs a bat upside the head' or other titles that seem to imply part of the review like 'snoozer' or 'loved it'.
What do you all think is the best way? What purpose should shelf titles fulfill?