Reading Resolution Update: May

My 2022 reading resolution: Read or DNF every novel that has won a Hugo or a Nebula award, and acquire all the good ones.

When I first got the idea for this new year’s resolution six months ago, I was reading maybe 30-60 pages every other day, with no real goal or direction. My wife and I had already decided to change our routine so we could read in bed for an hour before going to sleep, but we weren’t very good at keeping to that routine.

I set this goal because I knew that I needed to read more books—specifically, books in my genre. So I decided: why not set my sights high and aim for the best of the best? Not that I still believe that the Hugos and Nebulas represent the best of SF&F, but at one point I did genuinely believe that, or acted as if I did, which amounts to the same thing. So why not aim to read them all?

I thought it would take a lot longer to get this far, but here it is, June already, and I’ve almost read them all. When I started, I’d read only 36 out of 110 books. I did find a few new-to-me books that were really fantastic, but most of them were books I didn’t like. However, in a weird sort of way that actually helped me to read more, because it helped me to better understand my own tastes. So when I hit a small reading slump in March-April, I was able to branch out and read some books that I did enjoy, which helped to keep the momentum strong.

Several things have helped me to read a lot more over the course of this challenge:

First, having a reading list really helped. It provided me with a long-term, measurable goal that I could use to keep track of my progress. For me, that was highly motivational.

Second, DNFing early and often, and skipping to the last chapter before marking it as DNF. Often, I would find confirmation in the last chapter that I had indeed made the right choice not to read the rest of it. This taught me to trust my own judgment and to better understand my own tastes, which reaped dividends later.

Third, learning how to read in a way that worked with my own ADHD, not against it. This helped me to turn a great weakness, which had foiled my previous resolutions to read more books, into an advantage. But it required developing a better accountability system, which brings us to…

Fourth, using a reading log to track my progress. I got this idea from my wife, who is very good with spreadsheets. I know it doesn’t work for everyone to track everything down to how many pages per day you need to read of each book you’re currently reading, but for me, it really worked. Finally…

Fifth, starting a reading journal to track my own progress and record my own thoughts and impressions about what I’m reading. This is a topic that deserves its own blog post, but I’ve been doing it for a couple of months now, and I find that it really helps me to get a lot more out of what I read, as well as motivating me to read more. Among other things, I keep track of which books I read and DNF each month, my impressions of each book after reading or DNFing it, and any quotes from what I’m reading that stand out as being particularly memorable.

At the rate that I’m going, I will probably achieve this resolution (or at least the reading part of it) before the end of June. It might take a little more time to finish the Uplift Trilogy if I don’t DNF it, but I’ll certainly have finished before the end of the year. Consequently, I’m already drawing up other reading lists for awards like the Dragons and Goodread’s Choice, but I’m still trying to figure out exactly how I want to proceed. Most likely, I will expand those lists to include nominees, but also pick and choose which ones to read.

In any case, here are all of the Hugo and Nebula award-winning books I read or DNFed in May:

Books that I read and plan to or have already aquired

  • The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon (2004 Nebula)
  • Powers by Ursula K. Le Guin (2009 Nebula)
  • All Clear by Connie Willis (2011 Hugo and Nebula)
  • Blackout by Connie Willis (2011 Hugo and Nebula) (Technically I read this one in April and listed it under “Books that I read and don’t plan to acquire,” but after giving the sequel a chance I’ve decided to move it up here. Really, they should all be one book.)

Books that I read and don’t plan to acquire

  • The Terminal Experiment by Robert J. Sawyer (1996 Nebula)

Books that I did not finish

  • Timescape by Gregory Benford (1981 Nebula)
  • No Enemy but Time by Michael Bishop (1983 Nebula)
  • The Falling Woman by Pat Murphy (1988 Nebula)
  • Slow River by Nicola Griffith (1997 Nebula)
  • The Quantum Rose by Catherine Asaro (2002 Nebula)
  • Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer (2003 Hugo)
  • Paladin of Souls by Lois McMaster Bujold (2004 Hugo and 2005 Nebula)
  • Seeker by Jack McDevitt (2007 Nebula)
  • The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman (2009 Hugo)
  • Among Others by Jo Walton (2012 Hugo and Nebula)
  • Uprooted by Naomi Novik (2016 Nebula)

Total books remaining: 11 out of 111 (currently reading 5 and listening to 1).

By Joe Vasicek

Joe Vasicek is the author of more than twenty science fiction books, including the Star Wanderers and Sons of the Starfarers series. As a young man, he studied Arabic and traveled across the Middle East and the Caucasus. He claims Utah as his home.

5 comments

  1. Of the books mentioned in this article, I’ve only read Timescape (which was a long time ago and I don’t really remember much), and Paladin of Souls (which I just couldn’t get into and DNF).

    As a Kindle reader, most of the books I find to read are the “people who bought this book also bought” recommendations at the end of a book. It usually works out pretty well. The number of books I have ever DNF couldn’t be more than 10, over my 55 year reading period. The most famous being “Lord Foul’s Bane,” which disgusted me. I keep track of the books I’ve read (mostly so I can pick up where I left off when a new book in a series is released), and the books I want to read. Unfortunately, the list of books to read is so long, I’ll probably never read all of them before I leave this mortal coil. Then again, that means I always have something to read 🙂

    The interesting thing for me has been my evolution in genres since high school. While I always have and always will read Sci-Fi and Fantasy, my taste has moved from Epic Fantasy and Hard Sci-Fi to Urban Fantasy, Military Sci-Fi and Space Opera, and LitRPG.

    1. I wonder how much of that is a case of your tastes changing, versus the genre itself changing. Kind of like how a lot of Democrats these days say that they didn’t leave the party, the party left them.

      As for my thoughts on DNFing stuff, see below.

      1. I don’t think it’s the genre changing. I think it’s the genre themselves and their basic premises, based on your article about Noble/Grim Dark/Light. Certain genres just cater to one of those. For example, I would classify most Epic Fantasy as Noblebright (at least in the 80’s when I read it), while Urban Fantasy is mostly Grimdark (cyberpunk) or Nobledark (Monster Hunter International). LitRPG is mostly Grimbright. Anyway, hopefully I got the classifications correct 🙂

  2. I did finish Uprooted, back when it was new and I was worse at DNF’ing books I wasn’t sure about.
    . . . You didn’t miss much.
    I remember liking The Graveyard Book, but also remember thinking that it wasn’t for everyone.
    I think Paladin of Souls is not nearly as good as The Curse of Chalion, which is, in my opinion, a masterpiece. One of those books I stayed up until an unreasonable hour to finish.

    1. I DNF a lot of books, and sometimes end up coming back and enjoying them later, so a DNF isn’t necessarily a mark from me that “this book is terrible.” I’ve found that if I don’t allow myself to DNF books easily, I just don’t read very much.

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