I love reading people’s Best Books lists, and I also love reading stats posts. Sometimes I forget that normal people don’t even keep a list of the books they read, let alone analyse them – but they are much the poorer for it. Here are some highlights and statistics from my reading year (and comparison’s with 2018’s stats)…
Number of books read
I read 133 books last year, which is significantly above my usual average of around 100 – but rather fewer than the 153 I read last year. I’m not sure why it dropped, since my commute has been cut by an hour in the second half of 2019 and I should have had more reading time. But I always read more in years when I do A Century of Books, so maybe that’s an impetus?
Male/female authors
I read 58 books by men and 74 books by women – i.e. about 55% by women, which is the same percentage I had in 2018. And I read one book that was co-written by a man and a woman.
Fiction/non-fiction
85 fiction books (54 by women, 30 by men, 1 by both) and 48 non-fiction (20 by women, 28 by men). So men win out in the non-fiction stakes, slightly surprisingly. 64% fiction, which is a very slightly lower percentage than 2018. I do read more and more non-fiction, but I seem to buy fiction at a speedier rate…
Books in translation
2019 is my all-time highest ever for reading in translation – the first time I’ve ever broken double figures! I read 11 books in translation – 9 novels and 2 biographies. They came from Portuguese (2), French (2), Italian (2), Japanese, Flemish, Finnish, Russian, and German. I’m not sure I’ve ever read a novel translated from an Asian language before.
Most-read author
Nobody came in with more than 2 books this year – quite a few tied on that number: Agatha Christie, R.C. Sherriff, Mollie Panter-Downes, May Sinclair, Paul Collins, Muriel Spark, and Adam Silvera. But clearly no author obsessed me in 2019.
Re-reads
I re-read seven books in 2019 – as usual, a few were for podcast or book group. And some were for a secret project that I’ll tell you about in the next couple of months…
New-to-me authors
In 2018 I broke my usual 50/50 approximation by only reading 39% new-to-me authors. And in 2019 it was 62 new-to-me authors, which 47% of the books I read and closer to where I expected.
Shortest book title
Appropriately enough, it was Less by Andrew Sean Greer – tied with Omar by Wilfird Blunt.
Books by friends
I’ve reached the stage of life where friends are getting books published, it seems. It’s not quite the first time – but it’s the first time it’s happened more than once. I was delighted to read the excellent non-fiction books This Golden Fleece by Esther Rutter and The Remarkable Life of the Skin by Monty Lyman, both of whom are friends. And I read another one that hasn’t been published – also excellent.
Persephones
I’m trying to read more from my Persephone bookcase, partly because there are some books that have been there for an age, but mostly because they’re reliably brilliant. In 2019 I read The Hopkins Manuscript by R.C. Sherriff, Mariana by Monica Dickens, and The Carlyles at Home by Thea Holme. Plenty more there, of course.
Most disappointing book
I don’t know if it counts, because I wasn’t super excited to read it, but The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho was pretty stupid. I also couldn’t stand Baltasar and Blimunda by Jose Saramago, so it’s not been a good year for books translated from Portuguese…
Animals in book titles
Will there by any this year?? There always seem to be… but it’s quite low this year. Mrs Fox by Sarah Hall, Molly Fox‘s Birthday by Deirdre Madden, and The Spectre of Alexander Wolf by Gaito Gazdanov are the only ones that get in this year. Unless you count Albert and the Dragonettes.
Strange things that happened in books this year
A woman turned into a fox, a hyrax started speaking, a meteor hit the earth, a man grew wings, a dead girl’s hand appeared, a murderer tried to get other people to accuse her, a woman went missing in Israel, a woman went missing in Russia, a church meeting lasted for eternity, a bridge collapsed and killed its engineer, a flood enveloped a house, dozens of people died from dancing, and phone calls told people the day they’d die.