If you feel you’ve seen lists that slice and dice the books of 2013 in every way imaginable, then you haven’t visited the music and literature blog Largehearted Boy. David Gutowski, the man behind the site, aggregates year-end books coverage. With a full two weeks left in the year, his list of lists had 834 entries.

Here you will find the winners of the Top Idaho Author and Book Awards, gardening books recommended by Waco Today and the 50 best children’s books as selected by the New Zealand Listener; the year’s best Jewish, Irish and gluten-free cookbooks; the cream of the crop, with the crop being Australian short stories, Scottish sports books and, of course, books set on the High Plains.

“A handful of the lists are sent my way via email or social media,” Gutowski told me in an email interview, “but most are harvested through my exhaustive RSS feed reading and carefully tuned search strings. My goal is to be as inclusive as possible, and I have yet to not include a list.”

The website PolicyMic named its “20 Best Books for Every Kind of 20-Something,” though its idea of the demographic is stuck in 1992. It suggests Karen Russell’s “Vampires in the Lemon Grove” for your “wannabe hipster” friend, the one who’s “got the funky glasses and the punky half-shaved hairdo, the combat boots, and the tattered plaid shirt.” As for vampires outside the lemon grove, the Vampire Book Club’s 10 best include “Fifth Grave Past the Light,” by Darynda Jones, and “Biting Bad,” by Chloe Neill. The one universal element among all lists is dissent. “Kind of surprised J. R. Ward’s ‘Lover at Last’ didn’t make your top 10,” one commenter wrote of the vampire choices, “but I agree with about six of those you have picked.”