Monthly Wrap Up

Monthly Wrap-Up May 2023

May went by so quickly, and it turned out to be such a full month. There were a lot of things going on in my life, so I wasn’t able to devote as much time to reading as I’d have liked. Audiobooks were hugely helpful when I didn’t have the time or the focus to read printed or digital books. I’ve been DNFing more than usual, maybe because I have a lot of books I’m really looking forward to reading and it makes me reevaluate the books that I am devoting my time to, and whether I’m actually enjoying them or just reading them as if it’s a task to check off my list. My big accomplishment this month was being formally approved for disability benefits, so that’s a huge win at the end of a long journey. 🙌🏻 Happy Pride Month!

I’ve fallen even farther behind in my never-ending quest to get on top of my ARCs. Diversity is always a goal of mine, and while this wasn’t my best month, I did prioritize books authored by Asian, Pacific Islander, and Jewish people in honor of the Heritage Months being celebrated in the United States in May. I finished one of my reading challenges (🎉) but didn’t make any progress on the other one, so that’s just kind of how things are going over here. Here are some of my May highlights:

  • My blog has gotten another 10 followers, bringing me up to 769. That short-term goal of 800 is in sight!
  • I’m so far behind on physical ARCs that it isn’t even funny, and I’m struggling to focus. I read the most recent one in a shorter period of time and focused a bit better, so fingers crossed that it gets better. As for NetGalley, I reviewed exactly as many ARCs as I got approved for in May, so I ended the month basically in the same place that I started.
  • Of the 35 books I read in May, only 2 were nonfiction, a decrease from last month. One was a memoir, and the other was a family biography exploring what happened to members of their family during the Holocaust by visiting Poland and searching for records and any trace of a surviving family member. It was incredibly moving and a powerful book that challenges the “hero/victim” narrative that Poland desperately clings to.
  • I read another one of the books that I own this month, so making good progress there!
  • As far as diverse voices, I read 4 books by Black authors, 4 by Jewish authors, 6 books by LGBTQIA+ authors, and 7 by Asian/Pacific Islander authors. Pacific Islander authors are especially underrepresented in publishing.
  • I’m still working on challenging myself to reading genres outside of what I usually read, so in May I read 1 book classified as history/war, 1 as horror, and 1 as sci-fi. I’m finding out that I actually enjoy some of these genres more than I thought.
  • I didn’t read any more of my 12 in 12 challenge books, so I still have 5 more to read. I completed the 18 Jewish authors challenge, and I made some more progress on the PopSugar reading challenge, leaving me at 44 out of 50 prompts completed (88%). Now it’s getting tougher to complete the prompts.

Here’s my breakdown of monthly/cumulative totals for May:

May Totals:

  • Books read: 35
  • Books DNF’d: 3
  • Pages read: 4,575
  • Hours listened: 9 days, 16 hours, 4 minutes
  • Average pages: 381.3
  • Average hours listened: 10 hours, 5 minutes

Cumulative Averages:

  • Days per book: 3.33
  • Pages read per day: 168.25
  • Books read per month: 34.80
  • DNF’d books per month: 2.2

Genres Read in May:

  • Biography/Memoir: 1
  • Fantasy: 9
  • General Fiction: 5
  • Historical Fiction: 4
  • History/War: 1
  • Horror: 1
  • Mystery/Suspense: 7
  • Romance/Erotica: 6
  • Sci-Fi: 1

Backlist vs. New Releases:

  • Backlist books: 9
  • 2023 releases: 26

Fiction Vs. Nonfiction:

  • Fiction: 33
  • Nonfiction: 2

Format Read:

  • Print: 3
  • Digital: 9
  • Audio: 23

Age Range:

  • Adult: 29
  • YA: 5
  • Middle Grade: 1

My favorite book of the month was Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah.

Here’s what I read in May:

  • House of Salt and Sorrows by Erin A. Craig (Sisters of the Salt #1) — reread
  • Little Thieves by Margaret Owen (Little Thieves #1) — reread
  • The Henna Artist by Alka Joshi (The Jaipur Trilogy #1) — reread
  • The Secret Keeper of Jaipur by Alka Joshi (The Jaipur Trilogy #2) — reread
  • Murder at the Christmas Cookie Bakeoff by Darci Hannah (Beacon Bakeshop #2) — reread
  • Murder at the Blueberry Festival by Darci Hannah (Beacon Bakeshop #3) — reread

How was your May? Did you have a good reading month? What are you looking forward to in June?

10 replies »

  1. May- my finished books (Winter Orphans and Something Wonderful). One- historical fiction, and the other-nonfiction. May had a baseball game seen with my job, an incredible book event, and an enjoyable Picasso exhibit

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I had a good reading month in May, but it was nostalgic since I was rereading a lot of stories I loved as a child/teenager. In June, I’m looking forward to visiting my family 🙂 I downloaded a lot of books from the public domain onto my kindle for the trip.

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    • Oh awesome! I started rereading some books I loved as a teenager and some are still high up on my list, while others didn’t quite meet my expectations from back then. I hope you have a great trip!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Well:

    Winter Orphans- Historical Fiction
    Something Wonderful- Musical Theatre Nonfiction

    Yes, I only read and finished two books in May. True, I have been on a slow streak of reading, but at least still continuing reading books.

    At the moment:

    Currently- In the Lives of Puppet

    In the Future

    Well- what has to happen is mostly Libby and my current books I physically own (unless buy them cheaper). Next Summer- Scotland/Ireland (that means, having to save)

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