Submitted by basketsnbeer t3_yri45m in books
So for the first time ever, I made an official reading goal this year. Plan was to read one book every two weeks. The purpose is to make sure I'm consistently reading (I'm happier when I have a book going), try books I might not normally give a chance, prioritize reading over TV, etc.
For the most part it's gone well. I'm on track, and actually a little ahead of schedule. That said, I have some issues. I realized it's actually kind of disincentivized me from reading certain books, for example longer ones or ones that take a while to read (i.e. denser non-fiction), because I don't want to "fall behind". I've bought a good amount of books where I think "I can't wait to read this, but next year because I need to make sure I get my reading goal done". I'm not the fastest reader, so there's a sense of anxiety that occurs sometimes.
I still want a sort of goal to keep my accountable, but I need to reshape it for next year. I'm thinking maybe a page count rather than a book count? I'm curious to see what other people's goals look like.
iskandrea t1_ivtt4je wrote
I think specific themes can be fun as goals. Like, read a book set in every state/province in your country, read a book that starts with each letter of the alphabet, read a book focused on each of the five senses, read books by authors with your same first name, etc. If you love a certain author, you could make a challenge of reading their entire backlist. You can find your very specific subgenre of interest and read every book that covers the topic. For example, I’m super interested in sci-fi/fantasy + exploring archaeology/ancient ruins, so I’ve made a list of every book I can find that focus on these things and am working my way through the list. I think focusing on themes makes a reading list more fun and hobby-like than trying to achieve a total book count. And if you want to keep book numbers as a goal, maybe focus on amount of time (ex: 30min a day) or pages (25 pages a day) instead of total books read.