Goodreads Reading Challenge 2025 [Updated 4/30/25]

Hello! I hope you have had a fantabulous April. Mine has been…well, I guess I’d say wash, rinse, repeat. Lol. Same shit, different month. However, I did read six books, so that’s at least one improvement, right?

Here are the books I finished with my ratings.

Every Summer After (Carley Fortune)

Rating: 4/5

A Peach of a Murder (Livia J. Washburn)

Rating: 3/5

The Stranger in Her House (John Marrs)

Rating: 4/5

The Scarlet Letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne)

Rating: 2/5

Murder in Cottonwood Springs (Dianne Harman)

Rating: 2.5/3

Home Before Dark (Riley Sager)

Rating: 3.5/5

***

I am currently reading Wuthering Heights (Emily Bronte), No Place Left to Hide (Megan Lally), and The Cheerleaders (Kara Thomas).

Progress: 22/50

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2025 [Updated 3/30/25]

March has been a slow month for me. I’m not really sure why, but I’ve only finished four books over the past thirty days. Here they are, with my ratings, and may I do better in April!

We Used to Live Here (Marcus Kliewer)

Rating: 4/5

To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee)

Rating: 3/5

The House Across the Lake (Riley Sager)

Rating: 4/5

The October Society: Season Two (Christopher Robertson)

Rating: 4/5

***

I am currently reading The Stranger in Her House (John Marrs) and Every Summer After (Carley Fortune).

Progress: 16/50

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2025 [Updated 2/28/25]

I finished six books in February! And one of those was A Tale of Two Cities (finally). Unfortunately, the Dickens novel was my only classic this month. I’ll do better in March.

Anyway, here are the books I read over the past 28 days, and my rating of each.

The Murder of Sleepy Hollow (Michele Pariza Wacek)

Rating: 4/5

Unholy Magic (Stacia Kane)

Rating: 4/5

Where the Crawdads Sing (Delia Owens)

Rating: 5/5

Babydoll (Christopher Robertson)

Rating: 4/5

Nettle & Bone (T. Kingfisher)

Rating: 4/5

A Tale of Two Cities (Charles Dickens)

Rating: 3/5

***

I am currently reading We Used to Live Here (Marcus Kliewer) and The House Across the Lake (Riley Sager).

Progress: 12/50

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2025 [Updated 1/30/25]

January has been a slow month, but I still read six books! (The number isn’t my best; in my defense, it took a while to get through Watership Down and The Hobbit.)

Here are the novels I finished and my rating of each.

The Bell Jar (Sylvia Plath)

Rating: 4/5

‘Twas the Knife Before Christmas (Jacqueline Frost)

Rating: 5/5

Watership Down (Richard Adams)

Rating: 3.5/5

Horror Movie (Paul Tremblay)

Rating: 4/5

The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)

Rating: 4/5

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe (C.S. Lewis)

Rating: 4/5

***

I am currently reading The Murder of Sleepy Hollow (Michele Pariza Wacek) and Unholy Magic (Stacia Kane).

Progress: 6/50

My 2025 Goodreads Reading Challenge

Hey, y’all! It’s time to start my annual reading challenge via Goodreads. If you’re new here, let me tell you now: I love books. I am a certified bibliophile. And each year, I set a reading goal on Goodreads – a goal I typically break and reset at least twice.

This year, my goal as of today is only 50 books. But there’s a reason for this. I have decided to have a theme for my book choices in 2025. I saw a list of 100 classics everyone should read, and I wrote down those that I have never read. That number was 36. (Before you think I’m exceptionally well-read, be aware that the list included the “complete works of William Shakespeare,” then also included some of those works individually, just to hit their goal of 100, I guess.)

So, I have 36 classics to read, and I’m giving myself 14 books of my choosing. This should be fun!

I am currently reading The Bell Jar (Sylvia Plath), Twas the Knife Before Christmas (Jacqueline Frost), and Horror Movie (Paul Tremblay). I have also started The Murder of Sleepy Hollow, the fifth book in the Charlie Kingsley series by Michele Pariza Wacek, but it’s more of a read-for-a-few-minutes-before-bed kind of thing.

If any of you are fellow readers, recommend some books! Or tell me your favorite read of 2024!

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2024 (12/27/24)

A belated Merry Christmas to you all! I hope your holidays have been festive and cheery and filled with love.

So, last month I hit my goal of 75 books for 2024 (I actually surpassed it). However, that doesn’t mean I stopped reading! And since I did complete a few more books, I decided I needed to post a reading challenge update for December, as well.

Chaos at the Lazy Bones Bookshop (Emmeline Duncan)

Rating: 3/5

The Quiet Tenant (Clémence Michallon)

Rating: 5/5

Nothing More to Tell (Karen M. McManus)

Rating: 4/5

Mother Dear: A Slasher Novel (Ivy Tholen)

Rating: 3.5/5

***

I read 80 books in 2024. Some bad, some good, some absolutely memorable and definitely re-readable! I guess I’ll see y’all back here for the Goodreads Reading Challenge 2025!!!

Want to check out my year in books?

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2024 (11/30/24)

Happy (belated) Thanksgiving!!! I hope y’all enjoyed your holiday, however you chose to celebrate it. Next stop: Christmas!

I have achieved my reading goal for 2024. Surpassed it, actually, and have three more books I’ve started. I may not finish those, though, because I like to reread the Harry Potter series this time of year.

Here are the books I completed in November.

Finale (Stephanie Garber)

Rating: 4/5

One of Us is Lying (Karen M. McManus)

Rating: 4/5

One of Us is Next (Karen M. McManus)

Rating: 4/5

One of Us is Back (Karen M. McManus)

Rating: 4/5

Good Girls Don’t Die (Christina Henry)

Rating: 1/5

Thanksgiving Day Massacre (Brian G. Berry)

Rating: 3/5

***

I am currently reading The Quiet Tenant (Clémence Michallon), Nothing More to Tell (Karen M. McManus), and I’m still working on Chaos at the Lazy Bones Bookshop (Emmeline Duncan).

Progress: 76/75

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2024 (10/30/24)

It has been a doozy of a month, and not in a good way. That’s very unfortunate, since October is typically my favorite month of the year. I still found time to read, though. I’ve been on a streak of interesting books, but I actually had one that I quit without finishing. The story was shaping up to be okay; however, the author couldn’t leave their personal opinions about racism out of the equation – which is fine to an extent, I just don’t need to read about it once every freakin’ paragraph.

Here are the books I did finish in October. I’m in a rush as I write this, so I will rate them but won’t bother with a short review.

Rune (Christopher Fowler)

Rating: 4/5

The Only One Left (Riley Sager)

Rating: 5/5

The Dead Children’s Playground (James Kaine)

Rating: 4/5

As someone who is from Alabama, I had to read this novel that focused on the stories surrounding Maple Hill Cemetery and the Dead Children’s Playground. Let me tell you – it did not disappoint.

The Cotton Candy Massacre: Part Treats (Christopher Robertson)

Rating: 5/5

Buried in a Good Book (Tamara Berry)

Rating: 4/5

***

I am currently reading One of Us is Lying (Karen M. McManus), Finale (Stephanie Garber), and Chaos at the Lazy Bones Bookshop (Emmeline Duncan).

Progress: 70/75

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2024 (9/30/24)

It was a pretty good month for me, as far as this challenge goes. I read eight books, but I’ve gotta be honest: I’m not sure I retained much from any of them. Lol. I’ve just been so tired lately. I work a lot, then I have free time and try to maintain some semblance of a social life, along with carving out an hour here and there to do other things I enjoy (blogging, writing short stories, reading).

Being an adult is a total scam.

Anyway, this month’s update is going to be brief. I’m not going to bother with even a short “review.” I’m simply going to share what I read and my ratings. Enjoy!

The Dead Key (DM Pulley)

Rating: 4/5

The Nightmare Man (JH Markert)

Rating: 5/5

Sinister Summer (Colleen Gleason)

Rating: 3/5

Candy Coated Murder (Kate Bell, Kathleen Suzette)

Rating: 2/5

The Collector Series (Dot Hutchison)

I will encourage y’all to check out The Collector series – The Butterfly Garden, The Roses of May, The Summer Children, and The Vanishing Season. I devoured them. The characters were well-written, funny and sarcastic and so very human. The stories were dark but sprinkled with hope and a silver lining each time. I absolutely adored these books.

***

I am currently reading Rune (Christopher Fowler) and The Only One Left (Riley Sager).

Progress: 65/75

Goodreads Reading Challenge 2024 (8/31/24)

August was a bit of a slow month for me. I finished seven books. To be fair, I probably could have read more if I hadn’t spent so much time wading through Peter Straub’s Ghost Story. But I digress. I’ll talk more about that below.

Circus of the Dead: Book Two (Kimberly Loth)

Rating: 3/5

I rather enjoyed the way Loth used the first book in this series to develop her characters because I am actually quite partial to slow builds (if done right). However, Circus of the Dead: Book Two went into hyperdrive. Everything moved so quickly, and in my opinion, Loth didn’t dedicate enough time to the story. It was like…BAM!…Callie can do magic and is going to take on Samuel? And everyone sides with her? I don’t know. There is some plot construction missing here. I am going to try the third book, but if it’s as lacking as this one, I will not finish this series.

Murder Mystery Book Club (Danielle Collins)

Rating: 4/5

Y’all know I’m a sucker for cozy mysteries, so I decided to read a summery one, given that it is August. Murder Mystery Book Club was a cute story with likable characters. There were definitely some liberties taken in regard to how involved with the homicide case Eva was allowed to be, but still, this was a fun book.

They All Had a Reason: A rumor. A secret. A lie. A murder. (Michele Leathers)

Rating: 3/5

I don’t have much to say about this book. It was readable. With the characters being teens, They All Had a Reason had its fair share of angst and focused a lot of the social hierarchy, but I did like the main character, Charlotte, and the twist was pretty interesting.

They All Had a Secret: A betrayal. A deception. A tragedy. A murder. (Michele Leathers)

Rating: 2.5/5

Not as readable as the first one. I didn’t care for the characters, though Bellany is a very determined young woman, and you kinda have to admire her every-woman-for-herself attitude. I don’t believe, however, that I will be continuing this series.

Episode Thirteen (Craig DiLouie)

Rating: 4.5/5

I am a big fan of the found footage genre, but I’m not a lover of the paranormal – I prefer slashers – so I hesitated to even read Episode Thirteen. Now, though, I’m very glad I did. I enjoyed the way it was written as a collection of emails, texts, descriptions of raw footage, and journal entries. The character development was very well-done, and each individual had a redeeming quality or two, which made them all likable if not downright relatable. DiLouie did a great job creating atmosphere, and the whole vibe was just…eerie, from start to finish. I would highly recommend adding this to your TBR list.

The Graveyard Thief (Danielle Collins)

Rating: 3/5

I will repeat my praise of the characters, and the need for a willing suspension of disbelief on how far into these cases Eva is being permitted to go. However, I did find something I disliked and could not ignore. Collins repeatedly created situations where Eva would have a conversation with someone, but the content would not be included at the time and would be revealed later in order to not give away the main twist too soon. If you are writing from this character’s point-of-view, even in the third person, you follow everything they say/do. The way Eva figured stuff out was excluded so as not to give away the answers and the plot twist – because the twist wasn’t a strong one.

Ghost Story (Peter Straub)

Rating: 2/5

Okay. This is a difficult review for me. Overall, the story in Ghost Story was a good one. It was definitely creepy. It was also well-thought-out, and Straub had a solid plot with basically zero holes. But oh, my God, did it have to be so LONG?! My attention wandered quite a bit, to be honest, and by the time a point was reached, I didn’t really care anymore. This may be the only instance in which a movie is better than the book it’s based on.

***

I am currently reading The Nightmare Man (J.H. Markert), The Dead Key (D.M. Pulley), and Sinister Summer (Colleen Gleason).

Progress: 57/75