I read 262 books this year, the seventh highest of fourteen years that I have been keeping count, so squarely in the middle. (Full numbers: 238 in
2017, 212 in
2016, 290 in
2015, 291 in
2014, 237 in
2013, 259 in 2012, 301 in
2011, 278 in
2010, 342 in
2009, 374 in
2008, 235 in
2007, 207 in
2006, 137 in
2005). There were some pretty slow months when travel didn't quite allow for full enjoyment, but I've been getting back in the habit of reading rather than supping from the information firehose. Next year I'm on the Hugos again, but I hope it will eat less into my reading time than last year.
Page count for the year: 71,600 - again in the middle of the range, fifth highest of the eight years where I have kept count (60,500 in 2017; 62,300 in 2016; 80,100 in 2015; 97,100 in 2014; 67,000 in 2013; 77,800 in 2012; 88,200 in 2011)
Books by non-male writers in 2017: 102/262, 39% - a record high; not really sure why, though of course a lot of women did get Hugo nominations. (64/238 [27%] in 2017, 65 [31%] in 2016, 86 [30%] in 2015, 81 [28%] in 2014, 71 [30%] in 2013, 65 [25%] in 2012, 22% in 2011, 23% in 2010, 20% in 2009, 12% in 2008)
Books by PoC in 2017: 26/262, 10% - another record high, and the more diverse Hugos played a part here too. (17/238 [7%] in 2017, 14 [7%] in 2016, 20 [7%] in 2015, 11 [5%] in 2014, 12 [5%] in 2013, 5% in 2011, 9% in 2010, 5% in 2009, 2% in 2008)
Most books by a single author:
Tove Jansson and
Marcel Proust, both with 6 (previous winners:
Colin Brake and
Leo in 2017,
Christopher Marlowe in 2016,
Justin Richards in 2015 and 2014,
Agatha Christie in 2013,
Jonathan Gash in 2012,
Arthur Conan Doyle in 2011,
Ian Rankin in 2010,
William Shakespeare in 2009 and 2008,
Terrance Dicks in 2007,
Ian Marter in 2006,
Charles Stross in 2005).
NB that (almost) all book covers below link to Amazon.co.uk pages if you want to buy the book from them.
Science Fiction and Fantasy (excluding Doctor Who)
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\2009/
108
68
80
130
124
65
62
78
73
78
41%
29%
38%
45%
43%
27%
24%
26%
26%
23%
A comparatively high total, thanks to two new Hugo categories and Retro Hugos as well.
Some very welcome re-reads (
Gulliver's Travels,
Snow Crash,
Jonathan Hoag,
the Moomin books).
My three top sff new reads:
3)
Provenance, by Anne Leckie - not directly connected to her previous books, but a convincing story of politics and truth. Finalist for both BSFA and Hugo Awards, and I voted for it both times, though it did not win either.
2)
In Other Lands, by Sarah Rees Brennan - one of the Hugo YA finalists, I thought this was a brilliant look at young wizardry with a bisexual protagonist.
1)
The Sudden Appearance of Hope, by Clare North - increasingly one of my favourite authors, here with another tale of someone whose interaction with our world is very different, combined with a sinister Facebook-meets-Social-Credit Big Tech conspiracy.
The one you might not have heard of:
Anne Charnock's novella The Enclave, another BSFA Award finalist, which I thought caught a lot of things about Brexit Britain very well.
The one to skip:
Second-Stage Lensmen, by E.E. "Doc" Smith - turgid prose from the depths of the pulp era.
Non-sfnal fiction
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\2015/
\2014/
\2013/
\2012/
\2011/
\2010/
\2009/
36
26
28
42
41
44
48
48
50
57
14%
11%
13%
14%
14%
19%
19%
16%
18%
18%
Lower than any year apart from the last two, as my various reading projects have prioritised other genres, particularly sff.
Again, some welcome rereads (
Proust,
Kavalier and Clay). My three top new books:
3)
And The Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini - a generational tale of Afghanistan and other places which really worked for me.
2)
Fingersmith, by Sarah Waters - Waters is my real discovery this year, and Iliked this most of the books by her which I read.
1)
Moon Tiger, by Penelope Lively - really blown away by this twentieth-century life story, set mainly in England but with other excursions; I should probably read more by this author.
The one you haven't heard of:
Something Like Normal, by Trish Doller - author is my twin (born the same day and year); this was her first novel, about a young American soldier returning fro the wars and finding it very difficult to fit in.
The one to skip:
Five Escape Brexit Island, by Bruno Vincent - not so much a one-joke book as a no-joke book.
Non-fiction
\2018/
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\2011/
\2010/
\2009/
50
57
37
47
48
46
53
69
66
88
19%
24%
17%
16%
16%
19%
20%
23%
24%
26%
Very slightly but I think not significantly below average.
Top three non-fiction books of 2018:
equal 2)
After Europe by Ivan Krastev, and
Europe Reset: New Directions for the EU, by Richard Youngs - two takes on the future of the continent, one more pessimistic, one more optimistic, both thorough and also digestible.
1) The last book I fnished this year, and the best book I read all year:
Factfulness, by Hans Rosling - a fantastic guide to what is really going on in the world, and how we can think about it more usefully, based just on facts.
The one you haven't heard of:
Huawei Stories: Pioneers, ed. Tian Tao and Yin Zhifeng - fascinating stories of Chinese engineers encountering strange cultures, like Iceland, Italy and Africa.
The one to skip:
Here’s My Card, by Bob Popyk, useless and outdated advice on networking.
Comics
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\2014/
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\2012/
\2011/
\2010/
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28
29
27
18
19
30
21
27
18
28
11%
12%
13%
6%
7%
13%
8%
9%
6%
8%
Much the same as the last couple of years.
Top three comics of my year:
3)
Saga vol 7, by Fiona Staples and Brian K. Vaughan - I've been following the series faithfully since the beginning, and I felt that this installment seemed to pick up a bit more dark energy.
2)
My Favorite Thing Is Monsters, by Emil Ferris - was a Hugo finalist; I didn't think it was actually sf, but I did think it was remarkably good - a story of a little girl in Chicago who discovers more than she really wanted to know about her upstairs neighbour.
1)
Weapons of Mass Diplomacy / Quai d'Orsay, by "Abel Lanzac" (Antonin Baudry) and Christophe Blain - brilliant insight into the top levels of diplomacy, which I am recommending to everyone at work.
The one you may not heard of:
Ergens Waar Je Niet Wil Zijn / The Wrong Place by Brecht Evens - vivid evocation of two Flemish chaps whose relationship is not exactly what either of them think it is, played out against a background of suburbia, disco and sex.
The one to skip:
Dark Satanic Mills, by Marcus Sedgwick - confused near-future English dystopia trying to riff off William Blake and not really succeeding.
Doctor Who (and spinoff) fiction
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\2015/
\2014/
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32
51
39
43
59
72
75
80
71
70
12%
21%
18%
15%
20%
30%
29%
27%
26%
19%
A historic low here, basically because I have now read almost all of the Doctor Who books that there are to read. Having said that, the above figure excludes 7 non-fiction books and 4 comics which could have been counted in this category, several of which which I am including in my top three etc below.
3)
Outside In: 160 New Perspectives on 160 Classic Doctor Who Stories, by 160 Writers, ed. Robert Smith? - much more insightful than the average survey of Doctor Who stories written by a single person or team, includes
my brother.
2)
A History of the Universe in 100 Objects, by Steve Tribe and James Goss - a gorgeous book looking at internal Who mythology but also drawing linkes bwteen stories in Old and New Who.
1)
The Day of the Doctor, by Steven Moffat - the climax of the Moffat era in novel form, telling the story of the anniversary special in an unusual way, incidentally canonicalising the Peter Cushing movies. I hope that future novelisations can aspire to be this good.
The one you may have forgotten about:
Time Lord: Create your own adventures in time and space, by Ian Marsh and Peter Darvill-Evans - the 1991 Doctor Who role-playing game.
The one you can skip:
The Doctor Who Quiz Book of Dinosaurs, by Michael Holt - an obscure Fifth Doctor era kids spinoff, which contains surprisingly little information about dinosaurs.
Plays
Only four this year.
Hamlet, by William Shakespeare, is the best of course, but was not new.
You Can't Take It with You, by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman, is very entertaining.
Everybody Comes to Rick’s, by Murray Burnett and Joan Alison, is not as bad as people say. Those three were all adapted to Oscar-winning films. I completely bounced off
Le Mariage de Figaro, by Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais.
Poetry
Great to rediscover
Virgil's Æneid, in two different translations, plus Heaney's Book VI. Unexpected discovery:
Glory of Me, an epic poem by MacKinlay Kantor, about demobbed US servicemen from the second world war. (Note also:
Now We Are Six Hundred, by James Goss with illustrations by Russell T. Davies.)
Finally, which of the 262 books I read this year have you read? You should be able to take this poll using your Facebook and/or Twitter account, even if you don't have a Livejournal account. Except for the last category, they are arranged in order of popularity on LibraryThing.
Poll 2018 books