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Home » You searched for annual reading plan

Search Results for: annual reading plan

My Best Reading Advice

By Bob Hostetleron October 16, 2024
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My wife and I, newly married and preparing to enter training for ministry, hosted a seasoned pastor in our home for one of our entrance interviews. He asked what sorts of books we’d been reading, and we answered. I expected him to be impressed with my answer. After all … well, never mind.

But he smiled kindly. “May I offer a piece of advice?”

What were we going to say? “No”? So we gave the expected answer.

“Don’t read books,” he said. And then, after an artful pause: “Read authors.”

Ding ding ding. I may not be smart (hold your comments, please), but I knew immediately that this was something to hold onto.

He explained briefly that there are so many books to read (and this was before Amazon existed!), that one could spend a lifetime consuming this and that, wheat and chaff, hit or miss. But when you find an author of worth, you’ll do yourself a favor if you make a note and pursue his or her oeuvre.

I remember nothing else of our appointment with that good man. But that was worth the price of the glass of our iced tea he drank. Since then, my life has been enriched by so many authors: William Shakespeare, William Faulkner, E. M. Bounds, Samuel Logan Brengle, Eugene Peterson, Dallas Willard, Robert Frost, Dashiell Hammett, E. Stanley Jones, A. W. Tozer, Louis L’Amour, C. S. Lewis, Josh McDowell, Francis Schaeffer, John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, James Michener, Charles Dickens, Wendell Berry, Jack London, Mary Oliver, Anne Lamott, G. K. Chesterton, and, more recently, Wallace Stegner, Kent Krueger, Leif Enger, and so many more—including my wonderful clients, of course, all of whom belong somewhere between Lamott and Chesterton in the above list.

This is not to say that there’s no room in my reading for new authors (or “one-hit wonders,” so to speak); I intentionally include such books in my annual reading plan (which I’ve written about here). But once I find an author who floats my literary boat, I’ll keep reading like a dog on a bone, even if that means mixing metaphors and similes.

So, how about you? Do you read “books”? Or “authors”? Do tell, please.

 

Category: Book Review, Career, Encouragement, Inspiration, Reading

Do You Plan Your Reading?

By Bob Hostetleron December 19, 2018
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It’s the most wonderful time of the year. Yes, of course, I mean the annual celebration of our Lord’s nativity, which is rich with meaning and blessing for me and my family. So, Merry Christmas! But there’s something else that makes this time of year wonderful to me: the joyful preparation of a reading plan for the coming year, which I do every year in late December and early January. That plan …

Read moreDo You Plan Your Reading?
Category: Reading

I Like Quotation Marks

By Bob Hostetleron July 18, 2024
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I recently read a book. Don’t look so surprised. In my annual reading plan (which I discussed here), I try to discover a few new authors every year. One of this year’s authors is the late Brian Doyle, essayist and novelist. His book has been a joy. However, he, like an increasing number of novelists (seemingly), eschews quotation marks in his fictional dialogue. Like this: What does it feel like? …

Read moreI Like Quotation Marks
Category: Grammar

Read Old, Read New

By Bob Hostetleron July 3, 2024
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I’ve posted before on this blog about my annual reading plan (here), which I’ve done for most of my life to keep my reading varied and voluminous, year after year. So it will come as no surprise to those who know me or know of my reading plan that I strongly advise reading both new books and old books, especially for writers. Thus, two of the categories in my annual reading plan are “classics” and …

Read moreRead Old, Read New
Category: Book Review

20 Books That Molded Me

By Bob Hostetleron June 1, 2023
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I’ve read thousands of books in my lifetime. I’ve written on this blog about why I read and about my annual reading plan. I’ve posted about how to read more. So, yeah, I read a lot. Wanna make something of it? Where was I? Oh yeah. Over the course of my decades of reading, I’ve even kept a record of the books I’ve read. So, not only can I tell you (if not by memory at least by a quick …

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Category: Personal, The Writing Life, Theology

10 Ways to Read More

By Bob Hostetleron January 16, 2019
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A few weeks ago, I posted on this site about my annual reading plan, which usually guides ¼ to 1/3 of the 100 (or so) books I read each year. As often happens when I talk about my reading plan, several people asked, “How do you read so much?” After all, I keep fairly busy as a husband, father, grandfather, writer, speaker, literary agent, and man-about-town. So how do I manage to read a book or …

Read more10 Ways to Read More
Category: Book Review, The Writing Life

Elevator Pitches

By Dan Balowon February 12, 2026
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It is safe to say that every person reading this post has ridden on an elevator built by the Otis Elevator Company. The company is based in the U.S. and employs over 70,000 people, with annual revenue exceeding $14 billion. The founder, Elisha Otis, who, by the way, was a Christian man, would give short demonstrations of his invention’s features as early as the mid-1850s, explaining how things …

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Category: Book Proposals, Pitching, Self-Publishing, The Writing Life

The 2023 Book Launch Blueprint

By Thomas Umstattd, Jr.on March 28, 2023
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Thirty days. That’s all you’ve got. Do it wrong, and you’re toast. Do it right, and it’s crème brûlée that will last for months, maybe even years.  What 30 days are we talking about? The first 30 days after you make your book available to the world.  During the first 30-60 days after your release, […]
You can listen to this episode The 2023 Book Launch Blueprint on Christian Publishing Show.

Read moreThe 2023 Book Launch Blueprint
Category: The Writing Life

The 2023 Book Launch Blueprint

By Thomas Umstattd, Jr.on March 28, 2023
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Thirty days. That’s all you’ve got. Do it wrong, and you’re toast. Do it right, and it’s crème brûlée that will last for months, maybe even years.  What 30 days are we talking about? The first 30 days after you make your book available to the world.  During the first 30-60 days after your release, […]
You can listen to this episode The 2023 Book Launch Blueprint on Christian Publishing Show.

Read moreThe 2023 Book Launch Blueprint
Category: The Writing Life

How to Choose a Genre for Your Novel with Karin Beery

By Thomas Umstattd, Jr.on September 13, 2022
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Learn how and why you need to choose a genre, and find out what to do if your book doesn't conform to one specific genre.
You can listen to this episode How to Choose a Genre for Your Novel with Karin Beery on Christian Publishing Show.

Read moreHow to Choose a Genre for Your Novel with Karin Beery
Category: The Writing Life
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