Books in 2019!
Jan. 1st, 2020 11:43 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
How many books read in 2019?
101 books
How many fiction and nonfiction?
90 fiction, 11 nonfiction (with nonfiction including memoir, and also poetry since I’m not sure where else to put it!)
How many male authors, female authors or books written by both?
IF COUNTING BY TOTAL NUMBER OF BOOKS:
67 books by women, 31 books by men, 1 book by a nonbinary author, 2 books by both female and male authors/editors
IF COUNTING EACH AUTHOR ONLY ONCE, EVEN IF I READ MULTIPLE OF THEIR BOOKS:
53 female authors, 30 male authors, 1 nonbinary author, 2 books that had multiple editors
How many books by people of color?
38 books (which in this case also means 38% of the total – a percentage that’s increasing each year, which is exactly the aim!)
Favorite books of 2019?
The hardest question! Let’s say, very roughly and not necessarily in order:
The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo
Like a Love Story by Abdi Nazemian
The Raven Cycle (as a whole) by Maggie Stiefvater
I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
Followed by:
Far from the Tree by Robin Benway
We Are the Perfect Girl by Ariel Kaplan
The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter
Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio by Amara Lakhous
On the Come Up by Angie Thomas
With the Fire on High by Elizabeth Acevedo
Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts) by Lev Rosen
Driving by Starlight by Anat Deracine
Greensleeves by Eloise Jarvis McGraw
Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah
A Properly Unhaunted Place by William Alexander
Darius the Great Is Not Okay by Adib Khorram
Call Down the Hawk by Maggie Stiefvater
That’s, uh, a “top 20” list, if you count all four Raven Cycle books separately! I’m bad at narrowing down. It’s also about 3/4 YA…I guess I read a lot of YA this year.
Oldest book read?
Mansfield Park by Jane Austen (1814), followed by Behind a Mask by Louisa May Alcott (1866). After that: Sonnets to Orpheus by Rainer Maria Rilke (1923), Night Flight by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (1931), Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers (1935), and etc. into the 1940s and 1950s so on.
Longest and shortest book titles?
longest: Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio by Amara Lakhous (or, if you count titles that are heading, colon, subheading: Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life by Eric Klinenberg)
shortest: Pride by Ibi Zoboi
Longest books?
It looks like Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers and The View from the Cheap Seats by Neil Gaiman are tied at 544 pages. Though, actually, I “read” both of those as audiobooks. So perhaps it’s more accurate to say Gaudy Night is longest at 15:39, compared to The View from the Cheap Seats at 15:30! Speaking of which… The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón: even though it’s smaller in page numbers, the audiobook somehow is 18:05(!) And I did listen to that mostly as an audiobook. (That was a long 18 hours of my life.) So, in that case, that was the longest.
Any translated books?
Yes! For the first time, I made this a goal for the year. My aim was to read 12 books in translation, an average of one per month. I was perfectly on track the first half of the year, but then serious life stuff happened and I got derailed. So in the end, I only read 9 translated books. But, very pleasingly and mostly accidentally, they ended up being each from a different language: one each of Swedish, French, Turkish, Chinese, Norwegian, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish…and German. Yes, it seems absurd to have read something translated from German, when I speak German! But it was a bilingual edition of poetry, so I read it in both languages to make sure I was catching all the nuances.
…Next year’s goal is to have more of the languages be non-European ones.
Most read author of the year, and how many books by that author?
Ha ha ha ha ha, yeah, that was Maggie Stiefvater with NINE BOOKS. Because I read the Raven Cycle at the beginning of the year, then reread the Raven Cycle at the end of the year, and also read her new book Call Down the Hawk.
Other than that, the distant runners-up are various authors of whom I read two books each (Elizabeth Acevedo, S.K. Ali, Tana French, Dorothy L. Sayers, William Alexander, Seanan McGuire, Nancy Springer).
Any re-reads?
Yup, a few – often it’s because I’ll come across the audiobook of something I read years ago, and audiobook seems like a fun way to revisit it.
Which books wouldn’t you have read without someone’s specific recommendation?
Hm, most of them were recommendations in one way or another. I keep a big list of recommended books that I add to whenever something new is mentioned (so the list never gets any shorter…) Some books are mentioned by friends, or over at Captain Awkward; especially in the case of new YA, often it’s from librarian spaces I frequent (great teen librarians on Twitter!)
Darius the Great Is Not Okay was thanks to grrlpup! The Enola Holmes series came on my radar mainly from
sanguinity; the Watson and Holmes comic likewise came from Holmestice enthusiasm. Greensleeves was thanks to an RL friend. Georgia Peaches and Other Forbidden Fruit was also the rec of an RL friend. My Name Is Red was a recommendation from someone I knew in Germany literally 12 or 13 years ago, and I’d always meant to get to it.
Did you read any books you’ve always been meaning to read?
Angela Carter! She’s been recommended to me for ages. Also other authors I’d been meaning to finally read something by, like Pamuk and Saramago. Some classics like The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter and I Capture the Castle. And of course finally delving into the Raven Cycle. And I’m pleased I finally found a Le Guin book I really enjoyed! (It was a book of her nonfiction, No Time to Spare: Thinking About What Matters. I’ve read fantastic short stories of hers, but somehow still haven’t really gotten into her novels…and feel guilty about it. So I was really glad to read and be delighted by a book of her nonfiction.)
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