Monday, May 25, 2026

It's Monday 5/25! What Are You Reading?

Hosted by The Book Date

Life 

Whew, what a busy week! And Big Book Summer 2026 kicked off Friday (see below), so it's been extra hectic. We were in Long Island Tuesday through Thursday for our older son's fiancée's Master's graduation. It was a wonderful celebration with her family, and we were glad we could be there. But it took almost 6 hours to get there on Tuesday, with the usual NY-metro traffic, plus the LIRR workers on strike! Fortunately, the strike ended, and we got home in under 3 hours Thursday (NY traffic is crazy and unpredictable!).

The graduate!

My husband and I, our son and his fiancée & her parents

 

Memorial Day weekend, our younger son and his fiancée went up to Connecticut to help my mom and her husband get their sailboat ready for the season, so on Saturday, we puppy-sat adorable little Chester. Wow, he is a bundle of energy! It's like having a toddler around again--you have to watch him every single second. We enjoyed having him here for the day but were very relieved that we didn't have him overnight (have to take him out at 3 am and 6 am) or the whole weekend. We were both pretty exhausted by 6 pm, and I kept yawning at our friends' house for dinner that night!

Chester is so cute! Those ears!

Playing with ALL the toys!


What happens when I try to take a photo!

Luckily, he occasionally konks out! ha ha 

Our Memorial Day weekend (unofficial start of summer) here in Delaware did not feel at all summer-like, with temperatures in the 50's, constant rain, and dark, gloomy skies. The rain has finally stopped (for now), but the forecast says we won't see the sun until Friday! It was in the 90's here last week. Crazy weather lately. Despite the gray skies, the rain did stop this morning, so my husband and I took a little hike at nearby Auburn Valley State Park.

 

Wild phlox growing along the trail

Red Clay Creek running through the park

Family of geese

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 On the Blog 
  
 

Big Book Summer 2026 has begun!  - All the details are in this post, but it's super easy. Any book with 400+ pages is a Big Book, and you set your own goals for the summer, to read one or two or a whole stack, by September 7. Plus, there's fun merch and great communities on Goodreads and Storygraph where you can chat about books with others all summer. There's a links list at the bottom of the page, if you want to check out other blogger's and Booktuber's Big Book Summer plans. Everyone is welcome to join the fun!

 My 2026 Big Book Summer Plans - see my Pile of Possibilities (in print) for this summer, my first Big Book audio, and my husband's Pile of Possibilities. I'm hoping to make a dent in my overflowing TBR bookcase!

 

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 On Video 

 The Howzat?! Tag - This tag is based on cricket (which I know nothing about), but the questions are really fun and interesting and allowed me to talk about lots of great books and favorite authors that I don't often have a chance to mention on my channel. Plenty of book recommendations in this one!

 

 

 2026 Big Book Summer Reading Challenge - The official kick-off video, including everything you need to know to participate, how Big Book Summer started 14 years ago, and my own plans for Big Books I hope to read this summer.

 

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 What We're Reading

 

I finished reading Heartwood by Amity Gaige, which my husband gave me for Valentine's Day (he knows me so well!). Forty-two-year-old Valerie goes missing while solo hiking the Appalachian Trail in the last section, in the North Woods of Maine, a massive wilderness with dense tree growth. Beverly, lieutenant in the Maine Game Warden service, heads up the search efforts for Valerie, which include hundreds of law enforcement and volunteers and continues for over a week. In the novel, you get the perspectives of many different people: Valerie herself, as she writes letters to her mother in a notebook while lost; Beverly; interviews with Santo, who hiked with Valerie for much of the trail and bonded with her, and an older woman named Lena who watches the crisis unfold from afar while she chats with her electronic pen pal in Maine. It was excellent, filled with suspense and tension and great character development. I flew through the pages, wanting to know whether Valerie would survive and how they would finally find her. 

 

I am now reading my first pick for Big Book Summer, The Testaments by Margaret Atwood, the sequel to The Handmaid's Tale. It's SO good!! I have been fully immersed in this propulsive follow-up. It focuses on three side characters from The Handmaid's Tale that you didn't hear much about in that first book. Here, you get their detailed backstories, how they came to be who they are, and what they are doing in the years after that first book ended. I'm purposely not saying who those characters are because their identities are gradually revealed in the novel. So far, it is absolutely gripping, horrifying (as any story about Gilead is), and thoroughly engrossing.

 

I am still listening to A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving (my first Big Book on audio this summer). A group on Booktube is doing a group read of this in May. I enjoy John Irving but haven't read any of his novels in years, so I thought I'd join the fun! It's excellent so far, narrated by Owen's best friend, John, as an adult looking back at their eventful childhood together. It's warm, moving, funny, and completely engaging, as John recounts his adventures with Owen, a very unique boy, and the joys and tragedies that they shared together. Excellent on audio.

 

My husband, Ken, is still reading The List by Steve Berry, a book I put in his Easter basket. He is struggling a bit with the premise so far: an evil corporation that kills off its older retirees to save money! But he's still reading it.

 

Ken's daytime "slow read" is Moby Dick by Herman Melville, a classic we've both been meaning to read for years. He says he's enjoying it, and he's amazed by how witty and relevant the writing is, given how long ago it was written.

 

Our son, 31, is re-reading Rhythm of War by Brandon Sanderson, book 4 of his famed Stormlight Archive series, in preparation for reading book 5, which he got for Christmas. Sanderson is one of his favorite authors! But I doubt he'll be reading much of anything for the next 2+ weeks. The day after graduation, he and his fiancée left for another epic road trip. They're already in San Antonio, enjoying the beautiful city and visiting our nephews (our son's cousins). They stopped at Smoky Mountains National Park (and saw 3 bears!) and at our favorite Arkansas state park, Petit Jean, for our family's favorite hike, Bear Cave Trail.

Black bear in the Smokies!

Hiking in the Smokies

Classic Smokies view

 
Bear Cave Trail in Petit Jean SP, Arkansas

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What Are You Reading Monday is hosted by Kathryn at Book Date, so head over and check out her blog and join the Monday fun! You can also participate in a kid/teen/YA version hosted by Unleashing Readers.

You can follow me on:
 

 What are you and your family reading this week? 

Friday, May 22, 2026

My 2026 Big Book Summer Plans

I have just announced the 14th year of my annual reading challenge, Big Book Summer Challenge, so I guess I should be the first to sign up! Everyone is welcome to participate (details at the link).

I always enjoy tackling some big books in the summer, since I first came up with the idea in 2011, and I'm looking forward to finally reading some of these bricks that have been collecting dust on my shelf (for this challenge, a Big Book is any book with 400 pages or more).

NOTE: Don't let my stack below intimidate you! You only need to read ONE Big Book over the next three months to join in the fun and participate in the challenge. I like to make a "pile of possibilities," but you do you 😀

I definitely won't get through all of these, but I like to have some options to choose from. These are all currently on my shelves, waiting patiently to be read (along with many others!):

 

From the top of the stack:

·      The Shell Seekers by Rosamunde Pilcher (582 pages)

·      Burn by Nevada Barr (472 pages)

·      Empire Falls by Richard Russo (483 pages) 

·      The Testaments by Margaret Atwood (429 pages) 

·      Dead Man’s Walk by Larry McMurtry (461 pages)

·      The Fraud by Zadie Smith (454 pages) 

·      The God of the Woods by Liz Moore (558 pages) 

·      The Toll by Neal Schusterman (625 pages)

·      Never by Ken Follett (802 pages)

 I know that looks like a huge stack--and it is!--but as you can see, many of my choices are in the 400-500 page range and several are fast-paced reads. 

All of these also qualify for my Mount TBR Reading Challenge 2026. My shelves are overflowing, so this is good!

I also devote my summer to listening to Big Audio Books (audios and e-books count, too). I will choose those as I go, throughout the summer, though I just started my first: A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving.

And here's my husband's pile of possibilities for Big Book Summer 2026--he enjoys Big Book Summer every year, too!

 

Check out my 2026 Big Book Summer Challenge Video for more on what I plan to read this summer. You can also find great Big Book recommendations on my Big Books! list on Bookshop and my Big Book Recommendations video. I have read and enjoyed every single book on that list and in that video, and they both include a wide variety of book types and genres--something for everyone! And visit the Big Book Summer Goodreads group or Storygraph group to see what everyone else is reading this summer!

 How about you? Are you up for tackling a Big Book (or two or three) this summer? 
Join me in the fun of the 2026 Big Book Summer Challenge! The details and link-ups are on that page.


Join me for some bookish summer fun!

Big Book Summer Challenge 2026


Welcome to Big Book Summer 2026!

The idea behind this reading challenge is simple: Use the ease of summer to tackle a Big Book (400+ pages) or two or ... however many you want! You set your own goals. And if it is the start of winter where you live, then it's your Big Book Winter Challenge. Everyone is welcome to participate.

You can hear more about how it started and what I'll be reading in my video, Big Book Summer Challenge 2026.

Melinda at A Web of Stories is my co-host again this year. Besides having a YouTube channel (at the link), Melinda was a longtime book blogger (first as West Metro Mommy and later, A Web of Stories) ... and a longtime virtual friend of mine! I've been thrilled to have her help in recent years, as participation in Big Book Summer continues to grow. You can watch Melinda's Big Book Summer kick-off video.

The Details:
Hey, it's summer, so we'll keep this low-key and easy!

  • Anything 400 pages or more qualifies as a big book.
  • The challenge runs from the Friday of Memorial Day weekend (May 22 this year) through Labor Day (September 7 this year).
  • Choose one or two or however many big books you want as your goal. Wait, did you get that?  You only need to read 1 book with 400+ pages this summer to participate! (though you are welcome to read more, if you want).
  • If you are a blogger or YouTuber and want to share your Big Book Summer plans, book reviews, or wrap-ups, you can add your link(s) to the links list below so others can find you (it will remain open until September 30). If you post a YouTube video for Big Book Summer, please tag Melinda and I, so we can visit and share it with others.
  • Join the 2026 Big Book Summer Goodreads group to enjoy Big Book discussions all summer long! We always have a lively group with lots of fun book chat. Or if you prefer, join the Big Book Summer Storygraph group and/or the Big Book Summer Storygraph Challenge.
  • For chatting on other social media platforms, use #BigBookSummer

That's it!  Go check out your shelves and your TBR list for chunksters and get started!

What kind of books "count"? All kinds! Middle-grade, YA, graphic novels, classics, all genres, all types--as long as they are at least 400 pages. Yes, e-books and audio books count, too--just check online for the number of pages in the print edition.  

Looking for Big Book recs?  See my list of Big Books on BookShop for some great ideas from my own past reading or my Big Book Recommendations video from last summer.


Check out my own list of books to read for the challenge this summer and my Big Book Summer Kick-Off Video for more on what I plan to read this summer. 

And you can pick up some fun Big Book Summer swag! Check out my shop on Printify for all kinds of Big Book Summer merch: mugs, insulated cups, t-shirts, sweatshirts, tote bags, notebooks, magnets, stickers, phone cases, hats, drinking glasses, and more! If there's something you want that's not in my store, just let me know, and I'll add it. There are some fun new items this year, including new messages besides the Big Book Summer logo!

 

Help spread the word on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and other social media with #BigBookSummer. You can follow me at:

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/suzanljackson/

Threads: https://www.threads.com/@suzanljackson

Twitter: @suebookbybook 

Facebook: the Facebook page for this blog 

YouTube: SueJacksonDE

Challenge updates will be posted in all of those places.

 

Hope you'll join the Big Book Summer fun!

What Big Book(s) Are YOU Reading This Summer?

 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter