2012 reading list, a year end summary

I’ve waited til the new year to write this list up. I’ve spent the first few days of the new year finishing up a few books that were lingering on the nightstand. Here’s the complete list, you’ll notice that I only finished some of the books in this photo which was my “to read” pile on 1/1/12.

Here are previous year end lists: 2011, 2010, 2009, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004. My booklist lives over on jessamyn.info/booklist and it has its own RSS feed.

number of books read in 2012: 53
2011: 56
2010: 48
2009: 39
2008: 31
2007: 53
2006: 60
2005: 86
2004: 103
2003: 75
2002: 91
2001: 78

average read per month: 4.42
average read per week: 1.02
number read in worst month: 1 (Feb/Dec)
number read in best month: 11 (July)
percentage by male authors: 75
percentage by female authors: 19
fiction as percentage of total: 51
non-fiction as percentage of total: 49
percentage of total liked: 94
percentage of total ambivalent: 4
percentage of total disliked: 2

My reading is really getting to be consistent. I read about a book a week, split between fiction and non-fiction. I like most of the books that I read. I read a lot in July and not so much in December or February. Still no ebook reader, though I’ve been using my iPad more to watch Downton Abbey while I am on the treadmill. One book took me the better part of a month to get through (Quammen’s book about the Dodo and other extinctions) but it was well worth it. I read all the Hunger Games books in a little over a week and while I think that having read them is good for me as a librarian, I felt pretty “meh” about all but the first one, which surprised me.

3 thoughts on “2012 reading list, a year end summary

  1. I’d ask about the six percent of authors who were neither female nor male, but I’d look like a smart-ass nit picker, and that’s no way to start a new year.

    You do beat my yearly total fourfold, and felt most of them worth your while. That’s admirable.

  2. @teagueamania there were a few compilations that had male and female authors, so I just listed them in the spreadsheet as X and skipped them.

  3. Jessamyn,

    Because of this post, I’ve decided to start a reading blog. Unfortunately, I’m starting a month later than I had originally envisioned, wanting to have as fantastic statistics as you have here. Alas, I completed no book in the month of January.

    Thanks for the inspiration!

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