Showing posts with label One Year's Favorite Reads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label One Year's Favorite Reads. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

2021 Reading Year in Review


2021 followed on the heels of 2020 as one of my worst reading years (quantity-wise) in recent decades and I'm not entirely sure why but some years are just like that, I guess. There were many days that I simply didn't feel like reading. I was just off. But, I still managed to fulfill some of my annual goals and I'm very happy about that. 

2021 Reading Year in Review

Number of books read: 110

Total pages read: 27,899

Average book length: 253 pages

Longest book read in 2021: Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell - 1057 pages

Shortest book read (not including children's books): Fox 8 by George Saunders - 21 pages

Fiction reads: 101

Nonfiction reads: 9

Short story collections/anthologies: 14

Number of book titles that give me a negative feeling: 5

Classics or modern classics read: 13

Sci-fi: 14

Biggest surprise in the stats: That sci-fi number. I had no idea I'd read so much sci-fi in 2021. 

Please note that when deciding on favorites: 

  1. I'm terrible at narrowing down, so . . . 
  2. I went by kind of a spark joy method. Which book titles gave me the strongest warm, happy feeling?
  3. I have eliminated rereads, even though most rereads are read because they're favorites. 
  4. I realize there are way more than the Top 10 most people end with in fiction favorites but please remember that I'm quick to abandon books and like or love most everything I read. This is a great thing.
  5. My choices may not correlate to my 5-star ratings because I went with the titles that give me that warm, happy feeling right now.  

Favorite fiction (adult): 

  • Vintage 1954 by Antoine Laurain
  • Sweet Bean Paste by Durian Sukegawa
  • Before the Coffee Gets Cold by Toshikazu Yawaguchi
  • Milkman by Anna Burns
  • The Last Night in London by Karen White
  • Night Came with Many Stars by Simon Van Booy
  • Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
  • Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell
  • They Came Like Swallows by William Maxwell
  • Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
  • The Girl with the Louding Voice by Abi Daré
  • The Boatman by Billy O'Callahan
  • September Moon by John Moore
  • The Sundial by Shirley Jackson
  • The Christmas Bookshop by Jenny Colgan 

Favorite fiction (children's picture books to YA):

  • The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton
  • The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise by Dan Gemeinhart
  • Where is Our Library? by Josh Funk and Stevie Lewis
  • Ungifted by Gordon Korman
  • All of the "Spy School" series books I read by Stuart Gibbs
  • Two Girls, A Clock, and a Crooked House by Michael Poore

Favorite nonfiction:

  • The Gap by Benjamin Gilmour
  • Ten Lessons for a Post-Pandemic World by Fareed Zakaria

Books that I don't think got enough attention: 

  • When We Were Young by Richard Roper - The tale of a broken friendship and how two young men take a long walk on an English path together to try to repair their rift before it's too late. Both heartbreaking and often hilarious. I love Richard Roper's writing. He has a knack for mixing light and dark with levity but I always sob at the end of his books. 
  • Climate Change and How We'll Fix It by Alice Harman and Andrés Lozano (illustrator) - Goodreads says only 8 people shelved this book, which is a shame because it would make an exceptional school resource. It explains climate change with clarity, including through imaginary conversations. 

Book I'm most pleased to have read: Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell. I think this was my 4th attempt? I was enjoying it when we were on vacation, a few years ago, but the old mass market paperback copy I'd repeatedly tried to read for ages actually fell to pieces as I was reading it and it took me months to find a new copy at a decent price. Then another few years passed. I have wanted to read this book since I was a child (when I bought that paperback that fell apart, probably at a garage sale). I'm absolutely thrilled to have finally read it. 

The two books I cannot shut up about: 

  1. Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir - By far the most entertaining book I read in 2021. You don't have to love sci-fi to appreciate the storytelling. Since I couldn't shut up, several people read Project Hail Mary on my advice. They all loved it and most have continued to talk about it throughout the year, as I did. 
  2. Night Came with Many Stars by Simon Van Booy - As you know if you've been hanging around for any length of time, I love Simon Van Booy's writing and I adore the author, whom I got to know in my early blogging years. I personally think Night Came with Many Stars is his best novel, although I love them all. Again, I was a bit of an evangelist for this book and several people have told me they read it on my recommendation and loved it. 

So far in 2022: I've read 10 books. But, 3 of those are children's books that came in my First of Year Book Outlet order, 1 from a middle grade series I had on hand, and one is a manga. Not exactly heavy reading material. Regardless of genre/type/age range, this year is starting out like a normal January — the first normal January in 3 years (it's usually my best month) so I have high hopes that this will be a better reading year than the last two. 

If you duct taped me to a wall and said you wouldn't unstick me till I told you my single favorite book in 2021, I would say, "Let me go!!!" OK, and then I'd admit it was Project Hail Mary. But, wow, I read so many terrific books. Since I did read 5 that give me a bad spark when I read their titles, I've been thinking about why I pushed myself through those particular books. I think in two cases I expected them to improve and the rest I forged on because they were short, so why not get my money's worth? As many books as I own, I need to never finish anything that isn't absolutely grabbing me, so I'll be working on that. In fact, after giving those negative vibes some thought I DNF'd a book but it wasn't awful; I think it was just not the right timing for that one.

Other things that were odd about 2021 were the fact that I didn't read as many nonfiction or classics titles as I normally do. Usually, I have a nonfiction title going at all times. This past year, I not only didn't always have a bookmark in a nonfiction title but also abandoned a couple halfway through. And, weirdly, I was enjoying them! I just felt so bogged down by my disinterest in reading that I felt like I needed to let them go because they were slower reads. I hope someday to return to both. 

As to the classics, I did read more than one per month on average if you include the Christmas books that I reread, but I normally try to read a minimum of one classic per month and my classic reads were not as evenly distributed throughout the year as I prefer them to be. I'll try to work on that, this year, as well, although my main goal is to just read off my shelves and let books call to me. 


©2022 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

2010 Reading Year in Review

A wee bit late, yes . . .

Number of Books Read - 159
Total Pages Read - 39,795
Average Book Length - 250 pages

Longest Book Read in 2010 - The Passage by Justin Cronin - 766 pages

Shortest Book Read in 2010 - Little Critter's Where is My Frog? by Mercer Mayer (lift-the-flaps) OR Merry Sparkling Christmas by Spurr & Madden (board book) -- both too short to bother counting pages

Fiction Reads - 121

Favorite Fiction -
The Things They Carried - Tim O'Brien
The Winter Sea - Susanna Kearsley
The Ship of Brides - Jojo Moyes
Mr. Midshipman Hornblower - C. S. Forester
Bellwether - Connie Willis
Before I Fall - Lauren Oliver
The Passage - Justin Cronin
Postcards from a Dead Girl - Kirk Farber
The Founding - Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Veracity - Laura Bynum
The Doomsday Book - Connie Willis

Nonfiction Reads - 38

Favorite Nonfiction -
First Comes Love, Then Comes Malaria by Eve Brown-Waite
Flyaway - Suzie Gilbert
A Hundred Feet Over Hell - Jim Hooper
Field Notes from a Catastrophe - Elizabeth Kolbert
Why Our Decisions Don't Matter - ed. by Simon Van Booy
Under the Overpass - Mike Yankoski
Shakespeare Wrote for Money - Nick Hornby
They Were Just People - Tammeus and Cukierkorn
London's Strangest Tales - Tom Quinn
The Secret Holocaust Diaries - Nonna Bannister

Number of authors new to me - It would be easier counting the number of authors *not* new to me. Most were new. A few exceptions: C. S. Forester, Simon Van Booy, Michael Palmer, Marsha Altman, Jill Mansell, Jojo Moyes, Annemarie Selinko

Biggest smile-inducers:
Flyaway - Suzie Gilbert
That Cat Can't Stay - Krasnesky & Parkins
I'll Mature When I'm Dead - Dave Barry
Bellwether - Connie Willis
Moose Droppings & Other Crimes Against Nature - Tom Brennan
Ten on the Sled - Norman & Woodruff
London's Strangest Tales - Tom Quinn
Ship of Brides - Jojo Moyes
Let it Snow - Green, Johnson & Myracle

Tear-jerkers:
They Were Just People - Tammeus & Cukierkorn
The Things They Carried - Tim O'Brien
Making Rounds with Oscar - David Dosa, M.D.
A Dog's Purpose - Bruce Cameron
Take Good Care of the Garden and the Dogs - Heather Lende

Nightmare-inducing (literally):
The Passage by Justin Cronin was the only book that gave me nightmares in 2010 and they were doozies -- all-night, frequent-waking, they're going to eat me nightmares.

Most awesome writing:
The Things They Carried - Tim O'Brien
The Reapers are The Angels - Alden Bell
Mr. Midshipman Hornblower - C. S. Forester
Anything by Connie Willis or Simon Van Booy is awesome, period.

Most surprising books:
Before I Fall - Lauren Oliver (much better writing and more depth than anticipated)
The Things They Carried - Tim O'Brien (did not expect to be so thoroughly blown away)
A Dog's Purpose (surprisingly touching and meaningful)
The Reapers Are the Angels - Alden Bell (Zombies written in a literary manner? Shocker!)
Bellwether - Connie Willis (Funny, sharp, thought-provoking, astute writing)

Biggest wastes of time and/or books that totally pissed me off in some way (remember, these are only my personal opinion!!!!!):
F My Life - Valette, Pasaglia & Guedj
The Swan Thieves - Elizabeth Kostova
Stealing Heaven - Elizabeth Scott
The Last Surgeon - Michael Palmer (an author I usually like)
Winging It - Jenny Gardiner
The Amazing Book of Useless Info - Noel Botham
Rhymes with Witches - Lauren Myracle
Fireworks Over Toccoa - Jeffrey Stepakoff
Bird Girl and the Man Who Followed the Sun - Velma Wallis (another author I usually like)

Page-turning, gripping, can't-put-down books:
The Clouds Roll Away - Sibella Giorello
The Passage - Justin Cronin
A Hundred Feet Over Hell - Jim Hooper

Authors I read more than once:
Simon Van Booy (4)
Jill Mansell (2)
Ciji Ware (2)
Connie Willis (2)
Kelley Armstrong (3)
Lisa McMann (2)
Shana Galen (2)

Authors I wish would hurry up and write more:
Simon Van Booy - always, always
Patricia Wood - ditto
Alden Bell

Books read which were by authors I know personally:
All four books by Simon Van Booy, the only author from my 2010 reads that I have met in person.

Authors I wish I knew (or at least could spent a dinner or two interrogating):
Sibella Giorello
Alden Bell
John Green
Patricia Wood (someday we'll meet and talk over drinks with little umbrellas)
and I've been longing to hang out with Simon Van Booy a bit longer for years.

A few new categories for 2010 -

Favorite Children's Books:
That Cat Can't Stay - Krasnesky and Parkins
Little Chimp's Big Day - Schroeder and McCue
Ten Big Toes and a Prince's Nose - Gow and Costanza
Ten on the Sled - Norman and Woodruff
Calvin Can't Fly - Berne and Bendis

Favorite YA series:
The Summoning/The Awakening/The Reckoning - Kelley Armstrong

Favorite YA stand-alone titles:
A Mango-Shaped Space - Wendy Mass
Eyes Like Stars - Lisa Mantchev
Twenty Boy Summer - Sarah Ockler
Before I Fall - Lauren Oliver



©2011 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery and Babble, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.

Friday, January 08, 2010

2009 Reading Year in Review

*In case I make mistakes or leave things out, updates will be in red. Also, I have no idea where I got that image ----> so if you created it and it's important to you to be acknowledged, just let me know.*

2009 Reading Year in Review

Number of books read: 202

Total pages read: 49,794

Average book length: 247 pages

Longest book read in 2009: Holly's Inbox - by Holly Denham - 665 pages, followed closely by To Serve Them All My Days by R.F. Delderfield at 598 pages


Shortest book read in 2009 (not including children's books): Sometimes My Heart Pushes My Ribs by Ellen Kennedy - 64 pages

Fiction reads: 135

Non-fiction reads: 67 - In spite of the fact that I tried to go easy on the non-fic

Usually, I write new-vs.-previously-read authors, at this point. It looks like an exhausting job. I'm skipping it.

Favorite fiction (Adult):


Love Begins in Winter - Simon Van Booy
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day - Winifred Watson
Agent to the Stars - John Scalzi
The Lone Ranger & Tonto Fistfight in Heaven - Sherman Alexie
The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane - Katherine Howe
Sweetwater Run - Jan Watson
June Bug - Chris Fabry
To Serve Them All My Days - R. F. Delderfield
The Foundling - Georgette Heyer
A Circle of Souls - Preetham Grandhi
The Girl She Used to Be - David Cristofano

Favorite Fiction (Children's and Young Adult):

Cross My Heart and Hope to Spy - Ally Carter
Daylight Runner - Oisín McGann
SLOB - Ellen Potter
So Not Happening - Jenny B. Jones
Otto Grows Down - Michael Sussman
Chicken Dance - Tammi Sauer
The Maze Runner - James Dashner
Uglies - Scott Westerfeld
Christian the Lion - Bourke & Rendall
Found - Margaret Peterson Haddix
Schooled - Gordon Korman
Into the Wild - Sarah Beth Durst

Favorite Non-Fiction:

84 Charing Cross Road - Helene Hanff
A Lovely Little War - Angus Lorenzen
No Touch Monkey - Ayun Halliday
The Non-Runners' Marathon Guide for Women - Dawn Dais
In the Sanctuary of Outcasts - Neil White
Ex Libris - Anne Fadiman
Don't Shoot! We're Republicans! - Jack Owens
The Unlikely Disciple - Kevin Roose
Crossing Myself - Greg Garrett
A Climate for Change - Hayhoe & Farley
How to Lower your Cholesterol with French Gourmet Cooking - Chef Alain Braux
The Blood of Lambs - Kamal Saleem
The Church of Facebook - Jesse Rice

Commonality in a lot of my favorites: I seemed to favor books that made me smile, taught me something new or took me on an exciting adventure. Fantastic writing was a bit rare, this year.

Best (and longest) title: During My Nervous Breakdown I Want to Have a Biographer Present by Brandon S. Gorrell

Most Awesome Writing:


Love Begins in Winter by Simon Van Booy - After I loudly gushed about this book, some smartypants committee gave him an award for the book (the Franklin O'Conner Short Story Award), which just goes to show that you should listen to Bookfool when she says someone's writing is all kinds of awesome.
The Girl She Used to Be by David Cristofano - This one may surprise some people, but I thought the story was absolutely pitch-perfect.
The Foundling by Georgette Heyer - Awesome writing, adventurous plot, excellent characters, lots of laughs and some white-knuckle excitement. I think Heyer was amazing, but this is the most entertaining of her books that I've read, so far.
The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven by Sherman Alexie - His writing simply blows me away.
Also, kudos to Ruth Reichl. While I didn't care for Not Becoming My Mother, her writing is so breathtaking that I rushed off to add a bunch of her other books to my wish list.
Anne Fadiman's writing is awesome, too, even though she makes me feel like chopped-liver-for-brains. I'm saving Ex Libris to use as a study in vocabulary, someday.

Best edge-of-seat thriller: A Circle of Souls by Preetham Grandhi (Hope to post a review of this one, soon).


Authors I read more than once:

Simon Van Booy (2) - I read Love Begins in Winter twice and bought 3 copies. Who hasn't read it, yet? We need to talk.
Gene Luen Yang (2)
Shaunti Feldhahn (2)
Colleen Gleason (2) - The second book was written under a pseudonym (Joss Ware).
Ellen Potter (2)
Dr. Carl Verner (2)
Paul McCusker (3)
Greg Garrett (2)
Georgette Heyer (4)
Scott Westerfeld (3 - Uglies, Pretties, Specials)
Jeff Smith (5 - all from the Bone graphic novel series)
Margaret Peterson Haddix (3 from 2 diff. series)
Debbie Macomber (2)

Authors I wish would hurry up and write more:

Patricia Wood - I hear she has turned in her next book -- Wahoo!!!! Now, get back to work, Pat. Kidding, kidding.
Simon Van Booy - Always waiting for more. Always, always. And, that's in spite of the fact that he's Hot Stuff so there's plenty coming. Thank you, Harper Perennial, for signing Simon.
Hugh Laurie - Still waiting, Hugh - come on, hurry up. That House, M.D. gig is no excuse.
John Green - I didn't like Paper Towns as much as his first two, but we're talking itsy bitsy degrees. I love John Green's writing, his attitude, his respect for teens, his nerdiness . . . and his hair.

So far in 2010: I've read a whopping three books. This is partly because I'm reading 2 chunksters at once and partly because it's a hell of a job keeping up with a blind cat who wants to sleep in the room with the new carpet and can't find her way to the food bowls or litterbox from there.

Favorite moment in the past week: When we heard the rain. No ice storm!! Squeee! We are all happy to have dodged that bullet.


Reading goals for 2010 - not using the word "resolutions", this year:
1. Read from my shelves.
2. Purchase no more than 1 book per month (so far, so good)
3. Read what I love; love what I read. Stop reading if a book doesn't grab me. Seriously! I mean it!!!
4. Quit worrying about the fact that I'm just about the only blogger on the planet who doesn't participate in challenges and that I can never, ever keep up with that damned Google Reader.
5. Read at least 144 books.
6. Read no more than 1 or 2 advanced readers per month. It'll be really fun to see how this one works out. I've got a couple of seriously tempting offers in my in-box.
7. Seek out and read more classics, better writing, and a broader variety of international writers.
8. Get all caught up on the pile of ARCs I didn't get to in 2009.
I think this post is more than long enough. I shall cease and desist, now. Happy weekend to everyone!