Happy New Year!
Each year on the last day of December, I reflect on my year in reading. Here is a link to my Goodreads 2017 Year in Books. I do wish Goodreads would figure out how to make that infographic embeddable, but I suppose from their point of view, it’s as shareable as it needs to be, considering they’d like people to linger on their site.
Some data from this year:
- I exceeded my reading goal of 46 books and read a total of 51 books.
- I read 18,305 pages, according to Goodreads. I think that’s an all-time high, but I’m not sure.
- I read 51 books, though I didn’t put one of the books I read on Goodreads. Since that book is not counted in this total, so my actual page count is about 200 pages more than the figure above.
- If I count just the Goodreads total, that’s an average of 366 pages per book, which is higher than last year’s average.
- It works out to about 50 pages per day. What that means is that I was reading a lot on some days because it’s not possible I read 50 pages per day.
- My shortest book was The Slanted Life of Emily Dickinson at 96 pages, and the longest was an audiobook re-read of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix at 870 pages.
- The most popular book I read this year was 1984. Gee, I wonder why so many folks are reading that one. Yes, I understand the popularity index means that 2,331,238 people total read it, not that 2,331,238 read it this year. Conversely, my least popular book was The Transformative Power of Teacher Teams, which only nine people have rated. Not surprising, as it’s a nonfiction professional book (education). It’s a good book. More teachers should be reading it.
I didn’t do well with reading challenges this year. You can see on my 2017 Reading Challenge Progress page that I only completed two challenges.The challenges I completed are the R.I.P Challenge and the British Books Challenge. Most of the books I read for the latter were re-reads. I wasn’t supposed to finish the Chronological Sherlock Holmes Challenge in only one year—it’s due in April 2018—but I did fall behind. It’s unusual for me not to complete the Historical Fiction Challenge. I hope I will finish it this coming year. I am also a bit surprised I couldn’t figure out a way to read at least five books set in different European countries for the European Reading Challenge. I probably shouldn’t have signed up for two different backlist challenges, but I was hoping I would read a bunch of books on my TBR pile if I did. It worked a little bit, but if I had just selected one of the two challenges, I might have finished. Reading a total of 40 backlist books was too daunting a challenge for me, and I found it limiting when so many new books caught my eye as well. I also didn’t complete the Wild Goose Chase Reading Challenge. I thought the premise was fun, but I guess I wasn’t able to find books I wanted to read that fit the criteria.
Of the 51 books I read, the stats further break down like so:
- 30 works of fiction
- 17 works of nonfiction/memoir
- no dramas
- 1 book in verse (poetry)
- 11 audiobooks
- 14 re-reads
- 3 graphic novel/memoir
- 8 YA/children’s books
My favorites from selected categories with some linked reviews (not counting re-reads):
Fiction
Nonfiction
Graphic Novels/Memoirs
My favorites in the other categories are either already linked above (The Hate U Give, Long Way Down) or are re-reads.
My least favorite reads:
- Reckless, Chrissie Hynde’s memoir
- 13 Rue Thérèse, Elena Mauli Shapiro
Here is my map, which includes locations for each book I read or author’s hometown (current or applicable to the book):
My reading was much more diverse this year than in previous years, and I can’t help but notice that people of color wrote all of my favorites this year, except for a biography of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson.