- The Male Factor, by Shaunti Feldhahn
- 10 Dumb Things Smart Christians Believe
- Fodor's guide to the US & British Virgin Islands
- Great Answers to Difficult Questions About Sex: What children need to know
- 8 books of the Sookie Stackhouse series: Dead Until Dark
- Living Dead in Dallas
- Club Dead
- Dead to the World
- Dead as a Doornail
- Definitely Dead
- Altogether Dead
- From Dead to Worse
- Sir Dalton and the Shadow Heart, by Chuck Black
- The Spire, by Richard North Patterson
- Timescape, by Robert Liparulo
- The X and Y of Buy, by Elizabeth Pace
- Twilight, by Stephanie Meyer
- New Moon
- Eclipse
- Breaking Dawn
- Midnight Sun
- The Host, by Stephanie Meyer
- Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, by JK Rowling
- Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
- Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
- The Kidnapping of Kenzie Thorn, by Liz Johnson
- Evil at Heart, by Chelsea Cain
- Marked (House of Night, book 1), by PC Cast
- The Vanishing Sculptor, by Donita Paul
- Let Go, by Shiela Walsh
- When God Winks on New Beginnings, by SQuire Rushnell
- Deadlock, by Robert Liparulo
- Lessons in Heartbreak, by Cathy Kelly
- The Vision Board, by Joyce Shwarz
- The Twelth Card, by Jeffrey Deaver
- The Cold Moon, by Jeffrey Deaver
- Trust No One, by Greg Hurwitz
- Flipping Out, by Marshall Karp
- The Tourist, by Olen Steinhauer
- Healing Waters, by Nancy Rue and Steve Arterburn
- The Roar, by Emma Clayton
- My First Flip-Flap Book of Fruit
- Breakneck, by Erica Spindler
- The Waters Run Deep, by J. Wesley Gunther
- Como Sobrevivir El Embarazo de Su Adolescente
- A Guide to Survivorship for Women with Ovarian Cancer
- Facebook Cookbook
- ActionScript for Multiplayer Games and Virtual Worlds
- Rising (Stargate Atlantis book 1), by Sally Malcolm
- Reliquary (Stargate Atlantis book), by Martha Wells
- Only Nuns Change Their Habits Overnight
I started a few books but didn't finish them: 1-2-3 Magic discipline for children; 20 things adopted kids with their adoptive parents knew; The Whole life adoption book; Headfirst Java; and a few more that aren't coming to mind right now.
Last year's list had 44 books recorded, so I at least beat that. In the fall I did very little reading, what with mom's cancer and my health... any free time I had, I slept.
Goal for 2010: Read 52 books. Yeah, that sounds fun.
3 comments:
You can do 52 books easy. :)
yeah, ok. since i remembered a few more and my tally is up to 49 now, 52 doesnt seem like a stretch. So... 70 books?
Lynellen,
You keep reading them, I'll keep writing them. Happy New Year from #39.
Post a Comment