Happy New Year, readers!
In January of 2013, I began blogging once a year about everything I’d read that previous year. This tradition began when my dad asked me how many books I’ve read in my entire lifetime.
I couldn’t begin to give him an answer to that question, but it did make me decide to start keeping track from that moment forward. The previous posts in this series are as follows: 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, and 2013.
2022 was a year of me glancing at old reading habits and thinking about if I’m ready for them again. In 2020 and 2021, my interest in topics like horror, medicine, and anything too dark or serious crashed. I craved light, fluffy stories where everyone lived happily ever after. While I still have a strong preference for those sorts of reads, my brain seems better equipped now to handle a little more scary stuff, too, even while I’m still doing a lot of rereads and hanging out in the young adult genre.
Here are the books I’ve read (or reread) over the past year.
Biographies, Autobiographies, and Memoirs
“The Child Who Never Grew” by Pearl S. Buck
“Vintage Christmas: Holiday Stories from Rural PEI” by Marlene Campbell
“To Walk About in Freedom: The Long Emancipation of Priscilla Joyner” by Carole Emberton
“This Boy We Made: A Memoir of Motherhood, Genetics, and Facing the Unknown” by Taylor Harris
“The Girls in the Wild Fig Tree” by Nice Leng’ete
“Little Women” by Louisa May AlcottHistory
“A Short History of the World According to Sheep” by Sally Coulthard
“The Girls Who Went Away: The Hidden History of Women Who Surrendered Children for Adoption in the Decades Before Roe vs. Wade” by Ann Fessler
Psychology and Sociology
“You Have More Influence Than You Think: How We Underestimate Our Power of Persuasion and Why It Matters” by Vanessa Bohns
Science Fiction and Fantasy
“World War Z” by Max Brooks
“Ghost Stories for Christmas” by Shane Brown (My Review)
“Semiosis” by Sue Burke
“A Prayer for the Crown-Shy (Monk & Robot Series Book 2)” by Becky Chambers (My Review)
“Brave New World” by Aldoux Huxley
“The Turn of the Screw” by Henry James
“Veiled Threats” by Melissa Erin Jackson
”The Cybernetic Tea Shop” by Meredith Katz (Review coming February 9)
“Nettle & Bone” by T. Kingfisher (My Review)
“In a Glass Darkly” by Sheridan Le Fanu (Review coming January 12)
“Animal Farm” by George Orwell
“On Sundays She Picked Flowers” by Yah Yah Scholfield (My Review)
“The Hobbit” by J.R.R. Tolkien
“Annihilation” by Jeff VanderMeer
“The World More Full of Weeping” by Robert J. Weirseam
“The Future Is Female” edited by Lisa Yaszek (Review coming January 19)
Science and Medicine
“The Last Days of the Dinosaurs: An Asteroid, Extinction, and the Beginning of Our World” by Riley Black
“Tiny Humans, Big Lessons: How the NICU Taught Me to Live With Energy, Intention, and Purpose” by Sue Ludwig
“Vaccinated: From Cowpox to mRNA, the Remarkable Story of Vaccines” by Paul A. Offit, M.D.
“The Heart of Caring: A Life in Pediatrics” by Mark Vonnegut
Young Adult
“Empty Smiles (Small Spaces #4)” by Katherine Arden
“Beezus and Ramona” by Beverly Cleary
“Ramona the Pest” by Beverly Cleary
“Ramona the Brave” by Beverly Cleary
“Ramona and Her Father” by Beverly Cleary
“Ramona and Her Mother” by Beverly Cleary
“Ramona Quimby, Age 8” by Beverly Cleary
“Ramona Forever” by Beverly Cleary
“Ramona’s World” by Beverly Cleary
“Secrets of the Under Market” by Kristen Harlow
“The Lost Girls” by Sonia Hartl
“The Giver” by Lois Lowry
“A Chair for My Mother” by Vera B. Williams
Have we read any of the same books? How was your reading year in 2022?












Title: Reading Breaks
Title: Christmas at Crownthorn Manor – A Yuletide Ghost Story
1. New Books From Authors Who Didn’t Publish Anything New in 2022
The telling or reading of ghost stories during the Christmas season was once a tradition in Victorian England. This series of books seeks to revive this tradition. This will be the last book in this series that I review unless my local library decides to buy more of them. Thank you for reading my reviews of them in 2020, 2021, and 2022. 
The original topic for this week was “your favourite crafty thing to do.”
This stock photo is making me giggle, so I must share it with you all. I don’t want to make assumptions about the climates you all live in, but nobody in Ontario walks around outside in the dead of winter without being bundled up warmly unless you want to risk developing frostbite or hypothermia. It can happen quickly, too, if the windchill and temperatures are both very low and you’re not dressed properly for the weather.



The telling or reading of ghost stories during the Christmas season was once a tradition in Victorian England. This series of books seeks to revive this tradition. As I did in 2020 and 2021, I will continue reviewing several of them each December until I’ve reached the end of this series.
It was while typing up this blog post that I realized how many of the books I’ve read recently were about only children. I wonder if more authors are writing about only children these days or if I’ve just happened to hit a streak of stories on that topic?