There’s a bible reading plan that I haven’t mentioned, probably because it doesn’t interest me very much. But I still think it’s a pretty good plan. It organizes bible books in the order that the events actually occurred.
The traditional table-of-contents order of bible books is okay in a lot of ways, but there are places where books are obviously not in date-order. For example Ezra and Nehemiah are fifteenth and sixteenth in traditional bible order, but they talk about events that are a lot closer to the end of the OT – Nehemiah might even be book number 38 or 39 alongside Malachi.
There’s an online chronological plan at Bible Study Tools that might be worth looking at. But for me, even though the chronological plan will get me through every book I still plan to stick with a table-of-contents plan. As long as I know in my head that the events of, let’s say Daniel’s life happened quite a while after the story of Jonah (and not five books before it) then the order is not a big deal for me (the actual big deal is making sure I read all of the books – and I guess as far as that goes I could even try something crazy like reading the bible in reverse, and still get my actual big deal done. Which makes it not so crazy.)
Notes: see biblestudytools.com/bible-reading-plan/chronological.html