Historical Fictionistas discussion
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How do you choose your next book?

I try and read a paperback, then a hardback, then a paperback (and so on). As I'm buying mostly hardbacks these days, the paperbacks I still have unread are relatively few. Though I am in the midst of several series where I have them in paperback, so I will be buying more paperbacks as the months go on.
When the weather is bad here - in Denmark - bad enough so I can't cycle in to work, I'll read on my iPhone. I have the iBooks and the Kindle app, so I switch between the two, as above. I buy from iBooks, but there are plenty of giveaways for Kindle to keep me going. Amazingly, I can't download from my 'nearest' Amazon store in the UK, I have to download Kindle books from the US.
My longer term aim is not to have a backlog, to have enough to take me to the next new release. I buy a lot of first editions, signed where possible.
I try and shift time periods, never two from the same time in a row, never two by the same author in a row. Just so I can come at each book relatively fresh.
I review the books on my blog. Mainly for the challenge of trying to put into words what I feel. I like the problem solving aspect of blogging, if other people like what I say, fine. If not, fair enough.


Don't you run out of room buying so many books or do you purge every once in awhile?


I envy those who have the room for large libraries. Mine fills up way too fast! But, it does keep me from being a book hoarder.

Library is now on the Kindle. I have given away boxes of books to charity book sales. One can get things like the complete works of Thomas Hardy for a few dollars on Kindle. it's brilliant. Books in South Africa cost a fortune. Transport and import tax. I now find books annoying.. Pages blow in the wind, one loses one's place, can't look up words instantly as on Kindle and hardbacks are clumsy and heavy in bed.... I've now discovered bird identification apps for my iPhone and so even my bird books look endangered!!
Goodreads is a great source for books to read and I also follow book reviews in newspapers and kindle also recommends books. It's a great new world where books are so instantly available and portable. Reading has never been so cost effective and easy.

Amen, amen, amen! I share the same love for reading digitally and have also given away many of my books to our local library. I also love the convenience of having the built in dictionary feature and highlighter with an ereader. But above all else, I love the portability and cost effectiveness. Now my massive library fits on a small hard drive. :)

When I moved from the UK to Denmark ten years ago, I purged right back to the bone. I only took with me the books that had some sort of personal significance. The rest I took down to charity shops.
The shelves here are full with books I've bought/read since moving. The wife isn't too keen on too much clutter - typical Scandinavian - so there are three book cases full in the main room, with more spreading out into the 'Games Room' (the previous owner of the house had a large room built outside the house where he had a Billiard table, amongst other things, hence 'the games room'), we now have our computers out there now. And books.

Jackie wrote: "Yikes. My shelves are at their max. I just started the proces of purging last week, but I still have a lot I can't get rid of yet because I haven't read them. I don't even buy physical books often,..."
We have the same problem --- not a lot of room and my husband and I are both book-ish people. The difference is I buy and put on a shelf for some day. He really only buys when he needs a new book, but he likes to keep them afterward. I almost always give away a read book to my SIL, a friend or the library. When my husband moved in (after we got married), I had to purge a lot of unread books, but I would make sure that they were available in my county library system.
We have the same problem --- not a lot of room and my husband and I are both book-ish people. The difference is I buy and put on a shelf for some day. He really only buys when he needs a new book, but he likes to keep them afterward. I almost always give away a read book to my SIL, a friend or the library. When my husband moved in (after we got married), I had to purge a lot of unread books, but I would make sure that they were available in my county library system.

I usually glom an author's books but find that after so many titles some authors really don't interest me. But still, I have wonderful memories of their books that did talk to me.




I have an online acct with my public library in Los Angeles. It sends me an email when I book have on hold has arrived and, more important in your case, an email alerting me that a book I've borrowed is due in 4 days. Maybe your library has the same service.

I also stick to genres I like such as HF, mysteries,thrillers and the like. Although when I have ventured outside of that such as Mosquito Coast (much better book than the movie) I have felt rewarded. So, I also look at the cover, read the back, read about the author to see if it piques my interest. This is the most I've ever posted in one note on this site. Thanks to whoever asked the question!


You can use random sorting here and just pick the first one. It's easier that way.


(1) ought to read (includes a lot of highbrow lit that often never gets read);
(2) cozy or escapist reads (romance novels, murder mysteries), which I turn to when in a bad or sad mood;
(3) read for karmic reasons (mostly novels by other struggling authors, whose works I read and review in the hope that someone will read and review my own); and
(4) read in order to put off writing (this includes any research relating to my next book project—there’s always another source I can study before actually putting pen to paper or finger to keyboard).
Generally, the categories get read in this order: 4, 3, 2, 1.

1. Recommended by people I trust, i.e. my daughter or sister. Unfortunately there are many more of these than I have time for.
2. Others in my genre {Jewish women's fiction] so I can stay up to date on what my potential readers are likely reading.
3. Historical fiction that I have been asked to blurb. I try to be gracious and help out other authors but some of the self-published stuff I get sent is pretty amateurish.

Sounds like a plan! I have been known to walk into the room where I keep my library books, close my eyes and just grab one! Other than that, I try to alternate between genres - mysteries, historical fiction, YA - mixed with something literary and then a light fiction.






I did the same thing and just binged on the whole series because I knew if I stopped I was unlikely to pick it up again lol. Same thing happened when I discovered Gina Damico's Croak trilogy.
I try to make up a small list for what I want to read each month -- these usually correspond to GR reading challenges or doing buddy reads with friends to keep me motivated. As of right now I'm booked (harhar) through May, although my lists are constantly subject to change because one book might take longer than I anticipated, etc.











What a great idea!!!

I'm also guilty of the author binge. :)

Other than that, I read whatever catches my fancy.
Used to be on author binge earlier, especially the time when I read mystery novels starting with the works of Agatha Christie.

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If I start a series, I usually see that through (while I might have another book going on the side, probably a mystery or a textbook).
If I'm not on a series kick, I might just stare at my bookshelves until one jumps out at me (judging a book by its cover, and all that! :P), or maybe I'll read a few dust jackets until something screams "READ ME!"
If one of my favorite authors has a new book out, though, that one usually goes automatically to the top of the to-read list :)
I could probably be so much more picky, haha! :)