I’m participating in 13 reading challenges in 2024 to help me tackle my reading goals (outside of my Goodreads goal to read 400 books). Most of these goals are helping me tackle my backlist (books I purchased pre-2024), expand the diversity of my reading, broaden the genres I read, and read longer books.
I’ve separated these challenges into three categories: challenges that are tailored to my reading habits, simple and easily customizable, and challenges hosted by other people. I’ll be updating this page monthly throughout the year to hold myself accountable.
Icon Key (click here)
π§π»ββοΈ January
β€οΈβπ₯ February
π March
πͺ½ April
π― May
π« June
My Personal Reading Challenges
24 Books in 2024
My Progress
Whether you do 12 books to read in 2024 or 5 books to read in 2024, this list is my “priority TBR” for 2024. I decided to stick with 24 books because I read quite a few books each year, and there are a lot of books that have been sitting on my shelf for years! So, it’s about time I read them.
12 New Releases for 2024
My Progress
Last year, I had 23 New Releases for 2023, and while I bought almost all of them, I only ended up reading half. So, for 2024, I decided to focus on 12 new releases with the goal of buying/borrowing them and promptly reading them!
β€οΈβπ₯ Ashes of You by Catherine Cowles (Released on February 6th)
β€οΈβπ₯ Fangirl Down by Tessa Bailey (Released on February 13th)
π When He Dares by Suzanne Wright (Released on March 8th)
π Bride by Ali Hazelwood (Released on February 6th)
π The Wickedness of a Highlander by Elisa Braden (Released on February 13th)
πͺ½ The Women by Kristin Hannah (Released February 6th)
300 Books Over 300 pages
My Progress
Increasing the length of the books I read has been a goal of mine for the past three years! One challenge that really helped me was tracking all the books I read over 300 pages and aiming for a (reach) goal of 300 books. Last year, I read around 268 books over 300 pages, so I’m curious to see how close to 300 books I can get in 2024!
β€οΈβπ₯ February: 22 books were over 300 pages
π March: 22 books were over 300 pages
πͺ½ April: 13 books were over 300 pages
π― May: 28 books were over 300 pages
24 Books Over 500 pages
My Progress
This is another challenge that encourages me to read longer books! Also, I have so many hefty fantasy novels on my backlist, so this challenge is an extra push to get me to read them. While re-reads do count, this year, I’m hoping to achieve this goal excluding re-reads!
β€οΈβπ₯ When She’s Common by Ruby Dixon (re-read)
β€οΈβπ₯ Claim Me Forever by A.L. Jackson
β€οΈβπ₯ All Rhodes Lead Here by Mariana Zapata (re-read)
24 Nonfiction
My Progress
Reading more nonfiction has been a goal of mine for the past few years, but it always seems to be out of reach. I take so long to read nonfiction compared to fiction that I struggle to even pick up a nonfiction book. I’m hoping that this year is the year since I have so many nonfiction books on my backlist.
π― Valley of the Birdtail by Andrew Stobo Sniderman and Douglas Sanderson
Simple and Customizable Challenges
5-4-3-2-1 Reading Challenge
My Progress
I love the simplicity of this challenge! It’s another reading challenge that encourages readers to diversify the genres they read by helping them identify five genres they want to read more from. The idea is that you’ll read five books from one genre, four from another, and so on. This year, I’m looking to read five retellings, four books about historical figures, three classics, two books critiquing “It’s a Man’s World,” and one epistolary novel.
π§π»ββοΈ The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon
A to Z Reading Challenge
My Progress
Another simple challenge that’s a fun way to keep track of the book titles you read! I remember one year, I found it so hard to find a book starting with “J” that I wanted to read. One way that I make this a bit more of a challenge is not letting myself use books that start with articles (a/an or the) or are re-reads.
π§π»ββοΈ Bright Young Women by Jessica Knoll
β€οΈβπ₯ Confessions of a Dangerous Lord by Elisa Braden
πͺ½ Dead to the World by Annabel Chase
β€οΈβπ₯ Every Duke Has His Day by Suzanne Enoch
β€οΈβπ₯ Fangirl Down by Tessa Bailey
π§π»ββοΈ Head Over Heels by Karla Sorensen
π« If You Give a Single Dad a Nanny by Ann Einerson
πͺ½ Killer Instinct by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
π« Like Real People Do by E.L. Massey
π§π»ββοΈ None Shall Sleep by Ellie Marney
π― Ocean Echoes by Blake Black
β€οΈβπ₯ Paved in Hate by Sonja Grey
π― Ripe by Sarah Rose Etter
πͺ½ Sinfully Tempted by Kathleen Ayers
π― Tall, Royal and Grumpy by Nylah Monroe
π§π»ββοΈ Until May by Aurora Rose Reynolds
π― Valley of the Birdtail by Andrew Stobo Sniderman and Douglas Sanderson
β€οΈβπ₯ When She’s Common by Ruby Dixon
π― Yours Truly by Abby Jimenez
Hosted by Other People
Beat the Backlist
My Progress
Like many others in 2024, tackling my backlist is a priority this year! And, back to help me is Austine DeckerβsΒ Beat the Backlist challenge. While thereβs a condensed (24-prompt) version of the challenge, I decided to join theΒ 52-prompt challengeΒ in the hopes of reading at least one book from my backlist per week.
β€οΈβπ₯ Second Chances: The Second Chance Year by Melissa Wiesner
πͺ½ Good Vibes Only: Daughter of Sparta by Claire M. Andrews
πͺ½ Set in a Hotel, Mansion or Castle: The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow
π― Blurbed by a Fave Author: The Prison Healer by Lynette Noni
π― Share the Love: Yours Truly by Abby Jimenez
π― Coauthored or Illustrated: Hidden by Night by Jada Storm and Emma Stark
Buzzword Reading Challenge
My Progress
This is my third year participating in BookTuber Kaylaβs monthly reading challenge (see BooksAndLaLa on YouTube)! Kayla is interested in seeing the trends of words in book titles change every year; for instance, there arenβt that many recent books published with βsecretβ in the title (Marchβs prompt). The rule of the challenge is that each month, you have to read a book with the prompt word/theme in the title.
β€οΈβπ₯ Positive, happy words in the title: This Spells Love by Kate Robb
π Character names in the title: N/A
πͺ½ Nature words in the title: N/A
π― “every” in the title: N/A
π« Repeating words in the title: TBD
TBR Knockout
My Progress
This is also my third year participating in BookTuber Melanieβs monthly reading challenge (see Completely Melanie on YouTube). For each month, there are two prompts where you must read one book per prompt. The purpose of this challenge is to help you read the books you already own.
π§π»ββοΈ part of a series I already started: The Nightmare in Him by Suzanne Wright
β€οΈβπ₯ involves friendship: The First Ladies by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray
β€οΈβπ₯ something sweet on the cover: The Second Chance Year by Melissa Wiesner
π a debut novel: Alive and Wells by Bailey Hannah (read in April)
π about starting over: The Last Love Note by Emma Grey
πͺ½ nature on the cover: The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow
πͺ½ a dystopian novel: Ripe by Sarah Rose Etter (read in May)
π― a sci-fi: When She’s Common by Ruby Dixon (read in February)
π― has to do with the number four: The Justice of Kings by Richard Swan
π« an LGBTQIA+ book: Like Real People Do by E.L. Massey
π« an pansexual or asexual main character: TBD
The StoryGraph Reads the World
My Progress
I’m super excited to participate in this challenge hosted by The StoryGraph again this year! I’m always looking to broaden and diversify my reading, so the idea of visiting countries through books written by authors from those countries is the perfect challenge for me. This challenge is great if you also want to pick up more translated fiction!
Diversify Across Genres
My Progress
Speaking of diversifying your reading, this is a challenge I discovered in late 2023, and it encourages readers to read books by minority authors across a broad range of genres. The challenge, created by Rebecca (@BooksOnAdventures) and Sam (@reading.and.roaming), reveals how the publishing industry disproportionately publishes “serious fiction” (with hard-hitting themes) and shies away from publishing romances by BIPOC authors and featuring BIPOC characters.
Decades Reading Challenge
My Progress
This challenge is a new one for me! Since I’ve recently gotten into historical fiction, I thought it would be fun to track which decades I tend to gravitate toward. The challenge asks you to read books set between the 1880s and 2010s, typically with two decades allocated per month. However, I’m not really using this as a monthly challenge; I just want to see if I hit all the decades in 2024!
π§π»ββοΈ Set in the 1970s: Bright Young Women by Jessica Knoll
π A book that spans multiple decades: The First Ladies by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray
πͺ½ Set in the 1960s: The Women by Kristin Hannah
Set in the 1880s and 1890s: TBD
Set in the 1900s and 1910s: TBD
Set in the 1920s: TBD
Set in the 1940s: TBD
Set in the 1950s: TBD
Set in the 1980s: TBD
Set in the 1990s: TBD
Set in the 2000s and 2010s: TBD