Reading plans and collections

I'd like to set up a daily reading plan to work my way through a collection - in this case, the 55 volumes of Luther's Works, and maybe later the 14 volumes of Barth's Church Dogmatics. Having a reading plan seems like the only disciplined way to get through these massive works, even if it takes several years to do.
Is there a way to set up a reading plan for a collection, rather than for an individual book? I'd rather not have to set up 69 sequential reading plans when one or two would do quite nicely.
Thanks for any ideas you have!
Comments
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I see now that another user asked essentially the same question seven hours before I thought to. Perhaps that explains the lack of a response to my query. For what it's worth, I actually did search the forum before posting, and didn't find any posts that appeared to address my question.
Anyhow, my apologies for missing the original thread and creating a new one. If you have any ideas to share, I'd appreciate it if you'd follow the link above and post them in response to the original thread, rather than this one.
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Bob Schaefer said:
I see now that another user asked essentially the same question seven hours before I thought to. Perhaps that explains the lack of a response to my query. For what it's worth, I actually did search the forum before posting, and didn't find any posts that appeared to address my question.
Anyhow, my apologies for missing the original thread and creating a new one.
No worries. The search functionality on this forum is rather lame. Usually you can do a better job of finding stuff and narrowing down the search results by using Google with all its boolean operator capabilities, and appending site:community.logos.com to the search criteria. But even so, there are usually several different ways of asking any given question and hitting upon the right search terms to find whether other people have asked it before is pretty random.
Most of us forum regulars don't mind answering the same question twice, or directing people to the answer on another thread if they duplicate a question.
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