Sunday, December 28, 2025

Read Harder 2025: The End

Well, let's see...when last we caught up about Read Harder, I was working on Cantoras and Information Hunters. I have since finished Cantoras, which was beautiful and sad and hopeful. Still working on Information Hunters, but I'm getting close to being done. Like I said, it's interesting, but a bit slow and a bit dry. Plus it doesn't help that I read it before bed, so I usually only read a couple of pages at a time. I'll get it done.

I was not a very good library steward, I kept Braiding Sweetgrass until I finished it. 😬 Sorry, people who were waiting for their hold to come in! I did also check out the audiobook, though, so I listened to it when I couldn't sit and read the book and read when I couldn't listen to the audio, and that helped me get through it a little faster. I also finished Earth Keeper, discovering in the process that apparently I've read it before? Who knew! Somehow I accidentally put a different edition on my TBR without noticing, silly me. Hey, a good read twice, nothing to complain about!

The cozy book challenge, Her Good Side ended up being SO good! I still couldn't tell you if it's fuckin cozy or not, but I found it delightful - sort of To All the Boys I've Loved Before-esque, a different vibe but just as cute, and I loved the main character, her love interest, and all her friends. I was eager to add the author's other books to my TBR after being so into it, but as it transpires....that's her only YA book. Le sigh.

Last but not least, reading a holiday romance that isn't Christmas! Sadly, The Matzah Ball was a dud - the story centered around I guess friends/lovers to enemies to lovers, but the whole "friends/lovers" bit was when they were TWELVE at summer camp, and the way that they were both still SO fixated on their camp drama was deeply weird. Age them up and make them camp counselors and maybe it would have made more sense, but as it stood...uncomfortably strange. Maybe that by itself would have been something I could look past, but the rest of it was just...so boring. I gave it 200 pages and then gave up. Fortunately, my beautiful new library opened, so I got my copy of A Holly Jolly Diwali, and I found that adorable. I wish there had been a little more focus on the actual holiday, which happened pretty early in the book, but I found the characters mostly likeable and I thought the romance was very sweet. 

And now...Read Harder, 2026 edition! 

A journal with color-coded Read Harder challenges written down for each month

I'm telling y'all, 2026 is going to be my year. I've already rolled for each month's challenges, I've got a journal set up to track titles and keep notes, and I'm working on getting the books chosen for the first few months of the year. My goal this year is to pick as many books as possible from my existing TBR on the Storygraph, so I can attempt to whittle that behemoth down. It will never happen, but I'll continue to fight the valiant fight. I'll also probably pick two options for each month, just in case I really hate one and give up on it or really like one and finish it super fast. 

For January, here's what's on deck:

#6: Read a gothic novel published in the last ten years. (Did I have to google what a gothic novel was to be sure I was picking something in that vein? Yes, I did.) My choices for this are The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson, which seems somewhat spooky, and My Dear Henry by Kalynn Bayron, a retelling of Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde. Intriguing!

#19: Read a book by an intersex author. Unsurprisingly, can't really filter for intersex authors on my TBR! I ended up searching for lists of recommendations, and I found three that I'll be trying out - Trans Liberty Riot Brigade by L.M. Pierce, Rought Paradise by Alec Butler, and A Proper Young Lady by Lianne Simone. Excited for all of these!

And there you have it. Let the 2026 Read Harder challenge begin!

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