2025 Goals

January always bring a rush of things to do. Suddenly everything is happening and it’s a mixture of wrapping up the previous year and setting the wheels in motion for the one that’s just begun.

I have all the usual posts planned for January but I am starting off with my goals this time. I like to set my goals, not for any real reason, but I like to have some kind of plan for the year, even if it doesn’t quite come to fruition. Which is why the past few years with all the *gestures at everything* I have made them simpler targets, but also little things to make me feel like I’ve achieved some things and improved my reading, or even my blogging, in some way.

 

Bump up my #AussieYAChallenge involvement

First things first, I am still so proud of myself for starting the Aussie YA Challenge, but as creator I didn’t give the attention it deserved. I planted it, attended it for a while, then promptly neglected it. Unintentionally of course. This is why so many of my gardening ventures failed, I forget to keep watering the plants, even though I kept thinking about them or seeing them in the garden.

To rectify this, I am implementing the approach I had when the AWW was up and running. I made draft posts and scheduled them into when I wanted my check in points to be so I had them ready as a reminder, I wasn’t at the whim of memory and time to make something.

In the same vein I am going to try and be more prompt with my reviews on what I do read. Promoting the challenge is one thing, but having little updates and reminders as I post the reviews for what I’ve read will help too.

I am also going to make more deliberate and active choices to pick up physical books as the year goes on because honestly 95% of Aussie YA are physical/ebooks only so it’s going to have to happen. I have to stop myself being distracted by shiny audiobooks from overseas just because it’s easier. I need to read these books I have longed to read for ages, even if it’s hard. The want is there and I have to make myself read them if I ever want to catch up on the amazing books we have coming out of this country.

 

Read physical books/from my own shelf

It’s not only for Aussie YA I need to read physical books, any physical books would be great. I want to read at least 12 physical books this year, I will force this habit to return because I can’t rely on audio forever. I have three bookcases with books I need to read at home so in addition to physical books I am also going to try and read more from my own shelves too because to be honest that’s where a lot of those 95% Aussie YA books are as well.

 

Reading Challenges

I have three reading challenges to complete this year. My own #AussieYAChallenge, my Book Bingo, and the Read 25 YA books in 2025 over on StoryGraph. A lot of these should overlap so it shouldn’t be too overwhelming. While I was investigating challenges though I also found an ongoing #LoveOzYA Queer Reads Challenge which I might dip my toe into as well and find some of our great diverse reads.

 

Share Reviews more

Comparatively to earlier years, I have been a lot better and consistent in posting reviews on my blog, and I have a schedule that works for me. But when I post here I am not as diligent as putting up a written review on StoryGraph as I used to be on Goodreads. I need to dedicate some time and upload all the reviews I’ve done since moving to StoryGraph and putting them up for people to read. I’ll sit down on afternoon, pop on a book to keep me company and spend a couple hours filling up those empty review spots. Another habit I need to get back into.

 

So that’s my plan. Looking back over this it doesn’t look as simple as I initially thought but I am happy. A little active reading won’t hurt and a chance to share the great things I’m reading can’t be a bad thing either. I am hoping a little patience with myself is going to help, and as with most things I think starting will be the hardest part. But I am also going to try and make myself be consistent. My tendency to lose momentum mid-year and never start again has a strong track record so we can only go in with faith and good intentions right?

#AussieYAChallenge 2024 Wrap Up

Well.

I don’t know who lets me have these grand ideas but as we tick down the final hours or 2024 I managed to pull off some kind of miracle. The past few days I frantically tried to meet my (personally chosen and completely voluntary) goal of reading 12 #LoveOzYA books this year and I have snuck in before the final strike of midnight. Yay!

Like most of my grand plans, I started off well, dipped in the middle, got angry at myself for my inability to maintain my plans despite the want and desire still being there, and then managing to stress out and make sure I met these (again, arbitrary, completely voluntary, self-inflicted, no consequence) goals.

It feels like an ongoing cop out, but I putting some blame on the fact there are so few Aussie YA books made into audiobooks. Even with the brief consideration of signing up for audible I couldn’t find any on there worth my time that I couldn’t get through the free library apps. The second blame lays entirely on the fact at somehow, in an entire year, I couldn’t make time to sit and read a single book and do nothing else? I felt like time was being wasted if I only read, I couldn’t read and do laundry, read and drive, read and walk the dog. That I think is one thing I will seriously have to work on next year because that doesn’t sound healthy if we study that too closely.

But enough lamenting, we’re here to celebrate the first annual Lost in a Good Book award for outstanding achievement in the field of reading challenges! I know readers like thebookmuse and jess64au on StoryGraph met their achievements which is amazing, especially considering I thought this was going to be a solo venture. I know a couple other people dropped off but I am still eternally grateful they were keen enough to give it a shot in the first place. I was a bit slack on the promotional aspect and I know I didn’t keep up with my tagging and reviewing but for a first year I am quietly pleased I pulled it off. Onto greater success next year!

I read some great Aussie YA this year. Two of which were set at university, and two were at the lower end with a 14 year old character and a 13 year old character. It was refreshing to see a different side of young life that wasn’t the mid teens which is often so prevalent. Some of the books I read have even made it onto my Top Five of 2024 list.

I read a lot of authors I hadn’t heard of, some that had been on my TBR list ages, and some lesser known books that were quietly waiting my discovery. The full list of what I read is below but I love that doing this challenge made me track down these books. Of course there are lists every year about new and upcoming books, the fantastic #LoveOzYA team promote new releases, themed books, and old favourites all the time. But having to discover Aussie YA on various library apps and diving right in because I have a goal to meet and it was available in a format I could handle honestly hasn’t been the worst way to read.

I also managed to complete a small related side quest and finished the Read 24 YA stories in 2024 Challenge on StoryGraph. Depressingly a lot easier without the Australian restriction in terms of audiobooks and in the end I exceeded that too (reading a couple series definitely helped I think), and I am most certainly going to challenge myself to that one again as well.

I plan to review these books if I haven’t posted them already, so look for those through the next few months. I am also keen to dive right back in 1st January and get a head start on next year’s challenge. I cannot wait to see what amazing stories I discover. I will be putting up a whole new 2025 Aussie YA Challenge post so keep an eye out for that if you’re keen to join but for now these are the books that I read for my Aussie YA Challenge this year!

Aussie YA Challenge – Garth Nix level

Hamlet is Not Ok by R. A. Spratt

Points of Departure by Emily O’Beirne

Unnecessary Drama by Nina Kenwood

My Family and Other Suspects by Kate Emery

The Quiet and the Loud by Helena Fox

It Sounded Better in My Head by Nina Kenwood

The Pause by John Larkin

Untidy Towns by Kate O’Donnell

My Lovely Frankie by Judith Clarke

As Happy As Here by Jane Godwin

Josie Robs and Bank and Other Stories by Gabrielle Reid

Can’t Say it Went to Plan by Gabrielle Tozer

Book Bingo 2024

An image of a brown cartoon owl holding a bingo dabber. There are bingo cards to the left and a stack of books on its right. The words Book Bingo are in large print underneath.A few days ago as I went to write my book bingo wrap up I realised, despite announcing it to the world in January, I never actually ended up making it. Which is a shame because it is one of my favourite challenges, not only to do but to create. Who knows what happened to distract me. But now we are here, and I made one quickly a few days ago to keep my goals alive.

In an effort not to sway my results I pulled random ones from the past bingos I have made, as well as a few online ones. I picked things I knew I hadn’t selected before and some classics because there’s so much variety in a simple bingo prompt sometimes you always get something delightful.

Then the joy came from going through the 75 or so books I had read this year and seeing if any matched. I rarely keep up with bingo anymore through the year, I make it and see come December if I made a bingo. I like this approach because I do often hit my targets, but occasionally when I pick an out there prompt like poetry or something that isn’t usually in my reading wheelhouse I feel bad and try and get a last minute read it.

Looking back at my reading there are a lot I read back in January or March that feel like a lifetime ago, a good feeling since it felt the year flew by. I read a lot of young adult, and a few picture books, though not as many as usual. I balanced out my foreign reads with local, and attempted to diversify my shelf more in terms of genre, content, and character to mixed appreciation.

I finished series, started new series, and lots of Aussie reads though those #LoveOzYA ones are still hard ones to hit when you don’t have time to read a physical book. I did some power reads in the last few days, still sought out audios instead of the three books that are currently in front of me that are all on average 200 pages (why is that???). Maybe there will be a NYE miracle. The issue is reading takes time, even the shortest audiobook on 1.5x speed takes hours to read, but it won’t stop a mad attempt to finish books to tick off an arbitrary goal I set for myself.

So it’s been a weird bingo this year, technically made and completed in the span of a few days but an honest attempt was done. I am calling this a loose definition of a win. One because yes I did make a lot of full lines, but yes I did make this last minute and I feel making and completing a bingo in a week might not be in the spirit of the challenge. I have never been a fan of using one book for multiple prompts, and I read way more than 25 books a year so I have had choice on my side. Plus with some of my categories being broad or typical reads I am usually in with a good shot of a line or two being completed by years end.

Here’s to 2025 being a better organised bingo year. I may even make one up now while the guilt is still fresh. But for now here is the breakdown of my reading achievements. I will link those with reviews when they go up.

Graphic NovelThe Adventure Zone: The Stolen Century by Clint McElroy

Lesbian MCThe Quiet and the Loud by Helena Fox

RomanceLove, Just In by Natalie Murray

Chosen for a CoverPeep! by Meg McLaren

One word titleMort by Terry Pratchett

Heard about OnlineThis is How You Lose the Time War by Max Gladstone and Amal El-Mohtar

HistoricalMy Lovely Frankie by Judith Clarke

Fairytale RetellingOther Ever Afters by Melanie Gillman

Under 200 PagesI’m Stuck by Julia Mills

TV/Movie AdaptationDecember Boys by Michael Noonan

Picked up by ChanceUntidy Towns by Kate O’Donnell

Free ChoiceDeath at Morning House by Maureen Johnson

Won an AwardThe Pause by John Larkin

#LoveOzYAIt Sounded Better in My Head by Nina Kenwood

Own VoicesWhat are Your Words by Katherine Locke

Female authorI Don’t by Clementine Ford

Published this YearMy Family and Other Suspects by Kate Emery

Started but Never FinishedIf it Makes You Happy by Claire Kahn

Non FictionYou Don’t Have to Have a Dream by Tim Minchin

From TBR pileTurtles All the Way Down by John Green

Reread a SeriesPercy Jackson and the Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan

New AuthorTomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

On John Marsden

I am not an expert on John Marsden. I don’t even have any authority to speak about his career or his books beyond a reader and fly by observer, there are plenty of articles and commentary coming out that are more knowledgeable than I. But I knew he was a staple in Australian YA and had written some of the most memorable books on the landscape and the most important books in my reading career. When I saw he had died it was a real shock. He was 74 so it wasn’t out of the realm of possibility, but it still felt too soon.

I first picked up Tomorrow series when a friend recommended it in Year 7. The year was 2001 and I was thirteen years old. I loved them. I loved Ellie and how she was not perfect or powerful, but she was capable and smart. She was one in a group of teens who were caught up in a mythical war on Australian soil. From then on I was hooked.

After reading the Tomorrow series I picked up the next Marsden book our library had which was Checkers. It was incredible. Short, unassuming, but packs a punch and hits you in the face right at the end. I had never read anything like it. I didn’t know you could write a book like this. Reading Checkers made me want to do to others what Marsden had done to me. I wanted to write a book that lured the reader in then turned everything on their head at the end. I wanted to blow them away with an ending like that and a story so incredible.

I had always written stories and I’m fairly sure the idea of being a writer was in my brain for a few years at that point, but reading Marsden cemented the idea. I would spend every opportunity recommending Checkers to people and still do despite the fact it probably isn’t as amazing and life changing to others as it was to me.

Winter was another fantastic read, Letters from the Inside, and So Much to Tell You. Marsden loved stories with female voices where they had flaws and were difficult, stubborn, troubled, and in trouble. I don’t think I understood how important that was at the time but now I adored seeing these girls be imperfect. They were loving too, and emotional, and brave. They were human. That’s not to say he doesn’t write boys well either. His retelling of Hamlet was divine, and The Journey brought us the wonderful Argus.

Tomorrow is his powerhouse series of course. Robyn, Ellie, Lee – these characters were instrumental in my love of how regular people can make change. There’s scenes in Tomorrow that are so impactful that I will never forget them. These characters who are so human and so ordinary that are drawn to fight and make a stand. Like Katniss a decade later, these teens looked at the world around them and wanted to stay out of it but were dragged into it, trying to get through it and keeping their humanity intact.

Marsden’s school in Victoria was my dream school. I think I only wanted to go because it was his. I admired him as a writer and thought the brilliant mind I saw in his books would be just as incredible as a teacher. It didn’t matter I was a state away and rapidly aging out of the accepted age for admission.

The absolute highlight was finally getting to meet him in 2013. I did the long drive to Maitland where there was an event and got my sun bleached copies of my Tomorrow books signed. I was a nervous wreck and babbled incoherently and became tongue tied but got through it.

Prior to this meeting my mum got to be at an event with him where she spoke to him about my dreams of being a writer. On a scrap piece of paper he wrote a brief note to me that said To Amy, Take risks!. I framed it and had it sitting on my desk for years where I could stare at it.

Thankfully he published South of Darkness soon after because I got to meet him again in 2014 as I attended a literary lunch through Dymocks. It was super expensive but an amazing experience. I wrote a bit about it at the time and I still remember the wonderful chat around my table (and my first time trying spatchcock), while sitting in the amazingly swanky Shangri-La Hotel. I was feeling incredibly out of place and about fifteen years younger than everyone around me.

The final time I got to see him was when he came to the Sydney Writer’s Festival in 2015 and I got more of my books signed. His sessions about writing and students and education were amazing, and it was clear he had a passion for kids learning and discovering the world around them.

I am not here to say he was the perfect person, or writer. I was old enough to read about and understand the conversation about kids and schools, his views on a range of subjects and people’s views about his opinions. Again, I am not even remotely equipped to talk about that. I know he wasn’t the perfect person, no one is, but the impact he has had on the Aussie YA scene can’t be denied.

I’d like to think if nothing else preservers the Tomorrow series will. It could get readers to expand to his other books and start a chain reaction of then go onto reading authors like him and who like him. I started reading Alice Pung because John Marsden spoke highly of her work, and Alice wrote her own book about Marsden which I loved.

Authors make other authors, and they can change the lives of readers. And even if you were someone who only read his work, I hope his impact will stay with you long after. I know his books changed who I am and I will always be grateful of that.

Something’s Fishy by Jean Gourounas

Published: 16th October 2017Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Phaidon Press
Illustrator: Jean Gourounas
Pages: 40
Format: Picture Book
★   ★   ★   ★  – 4 Stars

Penguin is ice fishing, but the fish aren’t biting. What could possibly be the problem?

Join the cumulative cast of polar characters as they gather, chatter, wager guesses, and aggravate Penguin until…they hear something from below the ice!

I love this book; it is simple, clever, has a nice twist, and is delightful and funny.

Penguin is ice fishing and soon becomes the subject of curiosity by those around her. The expression on penguin’s face can be interpreted as annoyance, but even if she is bothered by the interruptions and noise, she doesn’t say much. It’s the onlookers and busybodies who query what’s going on.

It doesn’t take long for the act of fishing becomes a group activity as everyone starts discussing why the fish aren’t biting, with each newcomer adding to the discussion. Even the move from discussing that penguin is fishing to they all are fishing is fantastic. Onlookers are baffled, perplexed, and flummoxed and penguin continues to fish.

The gradual build of onlookers is so enjoyable. From one rabbit, to a walrus, to a whole host of characters, it is made better by penguin’s inaction. This staggered arrival works in companion with the illustrations as well, the layout complimenting the story. The characters move from left to right across the double page, as the new character arrives on the left, they then join the others on the right to observe.

The banter between everyone is great, it’s simple but effective. Short sharp humour that uses repetition but also a smidge absurd. The payoff it brilliant. What you think the penguin is shushing everyone for isn’t the reason you think and the reveal is delightful. Truly a highly enjoyable read.

You can purchase Something’s Fishy via the following

QBD | Blackwell’s

Dymocks | Wordery

 Fishpond | Amazon

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