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My Favorite Mysteries of 2013
Next Monday – February 17 – we will announce the results of All About Romance’s Annual Reader Poll for the best romance novels published in 2013. Working on the poll has me thinking about the best books published in 2013 from my other favorite genre, mystery.
What are you reading?
It’s the first of August–where did this year go?!?! Goodreads tells me I’ve read 54 books this year–I don’t count re-reads which comprise about a third of my reading. I just finished Klara and the Sun which I found jejune, boring, and almost impossible to believe that it was written by Kazuo Ishiguro. Critics have…
Which generation reads the most… a handy infographic!
We all know that the 5 generations—Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X, Baby Boomers and the Silent Generations—have some pretty big differences. Although some of these may be rooted in unfair stereotypes, there’s no doubt they have different life experiences and expectations for everything from marriage to employment to entertainment.
Visiting Imaginary Places
I remember the first time I read Jane Eyre and entered Rochester’s house, Thornfield Hall. Coming from a middle-class family in Nebraska, the middle of the United States, I was enthralled with walking into the drawing room where Rochester lounged in his overstuffed chair with Pilot at his feet.
What are you reading?
I’ve really been on a mystery kick lately. After inhaling all the Will Trent books, I’ve moved on to the Rockton books. Both were recommendations from AAR readers. YOU GUYS ARE THE BEST!! I’ve also been reading The Widow Clicquot but, honestly, it’s slow going. How about you? What are you reading?
Funniest Romance & Biggest Tearjerker Romance of 2015 So Far Are…
Next up in our series of posts leading up to the Annual Poll are romances in two categories that touch readers’ emotions: romances that make you laugh – Funniest Romance – and romances that make you cry – Biggest Tearjerker. Last year’s winner in the Funniest Romance category was Julie James’ It Happened One Wedding,…

I look forward to seeing everyone’s responses. 🙂
I can’t open the quiz for some reason.
Here is a direct link to the survey.
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/RVPXT6K
Thank you!!
LOL at the ‘worst book’ question. Usually if I really am not enjoying something, I just DNF. Had to go back quite a few pages in the reading journal to find one that I had a lot of complaints about but still read the whole thing. 🙂
Genre was tough to answer! I have favorite authors who write historical and contemporary, but on balance I guess I have been reading more historical, so that got the nod.
Genre was tough for me too. I’ve read a lot of historical romances but also a lot of historical mysteries. I picked the latter category, but it didn’t seem quite right when I like both. Some of the historical mysteries have a central romance as well, but not all of them do, whereas all of the historical books I’ve read are primarily romances.
Well, it’s just for fun!
I agree about DNF-ing books that aren’t doing it for me (life’s too short), so I too had to go back through my notebook to find a book that I had finished but still disliked. I found one written by a new-to-me author (Shantel Tessier’s CODE OF SILENCE); I plowed on through to the bitter end, but I won’t be reading any more books by her. Perhaps if Dabney runs a similar questionnaire again, a question such as “What book surprised you by being DNF?” or “What book were you really anticipating that turned out to be a letdown or DNF?” might work for those of us in the habit of DNF-ing.
Good idea DiscoDollyDeb. Like you, I will abandon books that are not enjoyable, especially if they are written by authors who are new to me. However, if the book is written by an author whose past work I’ve liked, then I will sometimes force myself to finish reading a subpar book. So maybe a future survey could be about Books that you did not expect to be a DNF.
Genre was definitely a difficult question. I don’t really have one. But I’ve always found questions about my favorite anything difficult to answer. I guess I’m wishy-washy!
My pick for worst was a dnf, since I only dnf about 1 book in a thousand. Something has to be seriously wrong with a book for me to not finish it.
Genre was tough for me too, since I read most genres. But if I can find a good one (and a big “if” it is these days!) Historical Romance is my favorite. Give me a feisty Cinderella every time!
I don’t know is my answer to most of them. I’ve started and not finished so many books this year. I tried some of the new genres, like the “bully romance” and the “mafia romance” and found them so bad that I never want to be reminded of them ever again. College romance does nothing for me.
As for new authors? I’ve not discovered one this year. I kept going back to old favourites. This has been my year of the re-read.
I am right there with you!
I discovered NEW TO ME Essie Summers, Sophie Weston and (maybe last year) Mary Burchell.
Somehow, these old series romances fill a need right now – my guesses why:
I found it difficult to choose a category too. Ultimately I chose Historical Romance, because overall it’s been my favorite, but alas, long gone are the days when I could ace history quizzes because of all the facts I learned in romance novels. These days, though, I’m reading lots of Historical Mysteries, and I’m loving all the new authors I’m discovering!
I choose what is my favorite right now, and that is contemporary – although, since I currently read mostly series from 20-60 years ago, maybe that is historical??
I had to choose HR as my favourite genre as it’s been that for so many years and I keep hoping it’s going to get better again! But right at this moment, I’d include romantic suspense and some contemporaries, but m/m rather than m/f. I haven’t read any outstanding débuts this year (so far) but I’ve discovered Olivia Dade (I LOVED Spoiler Alert) and am going to try to pick up some more of her books. I usually have a pretty full reading schedule of ARCs and audiobooks to review, so I’d say well over 80% of my reading/listening is devoted to them.
My worst book was a D grade HR – in fact I had two of those according to my GR shelf.