Showing posts with label A Year in Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Year in Books. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 January 2019

A Year in Books 2018

I'm very late even starting to look back at 2018, which is quite apt really. I had a bad reading year, and a slow blogging year in 2018. Which is not to say that I didn't enjoy things, I just didn't get all that much done. I did delve (possibly too much) into the fabulous world of Booktube, which made me excited about lots of books and audiobooks but didn't leave me with much time to get them read or listened to. I need to temper that this year. 

Goodreads tells me that I read 55 books and 10,650 pages in 2018, although I suspect this doesn't include the 600ish pages I read of Les Mis as I failed to finish it. That is perhaps my biggest disappointment of 2018- that I didn't finish the Les Mis Chapter A Day Readalong. I will still finish Les Mis some day, I'm still just not sure when. I love it every time I pick it up again, I just don't pick it up all that often at the moment, and certainly not every day. I need to try to get back to that habit again, and get it finished. Then I'm tempted to listen to the audiobook...

Also, many of the books I read were audiobooks. I slipped easily into the arms of audiobooks as my actual reading dwindled. A lovely way to keep "reading". 

I also had a bad year of rating my reads, so this is year in review is made all the trickier. I like to wait until I do my review to rate, but then if I don't do the review, the rating doesn't happen and then it all falls away like grains of sand. So what were the books that I gave 5 stars to? Or those that I think I should have given 5 stars to if I had bothered to rate them at all?

The Pigeon. Patrick Suskind




Les Misérables. Victor Hugo




The Latecomer. Dimitri Verhulst




Claris: The Chicest Mouse in Paris. Megan Hess




Big Little Lies. Liane Moriarty. Audio




The (audio)book, the TV series, the soundtrack. I love it all. 

Migration. Mike Unwin. Jenni Desmond




Poo: A Natural History of the Unmentionable. Nicola Davies. Neal Layton (illustrator)




The Art of Frugal Hedonism. Annie Raser-Rowland. Adam Grubb




Life After Life. Kate Atkinson. Audio




5 stars for the audiobook performance. 4-4.5 stars for the book. 

The Art of Living Alone and Loving It. Jane Mathews




Any Ordinary Day. Leigh Sales. Audio (the tea slurping edition)



Born a Crime. Trevor Noah. Audio




Do I have a book of the year? I'm not so sure. I really liked all these books, but I'm not sure that any particular one shines more than the others. 

11 (12 including Les Mis) of my 54 reads were, or should have been, 5 stars! Not bad for a bad reading year. 

5 Aussie books

9 Adult reads

3 Picture books

0 Verse Novels

4 Audio Books

5 Nonfiction Books

8 Female Authors/Illustrators

7 Male Authors

11 New to Me Authors

I appear to have let another year slip by without reading any Jackie French. How can this be? What an egregious oversight. It must not happen again this year. 

Wednesday, 3 January 2018

A Year in Books 2017

It's time to look back at another year in books. Happily I did a bit better with my reading in 2017 than I did in 2016.

In 2017 I read 17, 894 pages in 100 books. Not a bad effort. Up from the 11, 075 in 2016, but not at the dizzying heights of 2015 (20,061).

That 100 books in 2017 is no small coincidence. I had set my Goodreads target to 100 for the year, and for most of the year I was keeping up and on track but things unwound a little in the last few months of the year, and I had to make a concerted effort in late December to get to that magical 100. I did it with 50 minutes to spare! A close call indeed.

I wasn't particularly great at rating or reviewing books in 2017. Some of these I did give 5 stars at the time, some have just really stuck with me.

Scrappy Little Nobody. Anna Kendrick. Audio.




Florette. Anna Walker




The Remarkable Secret of Aurelie Bonhoffen. Deborah Abela. Audio




Maggot Moon. Sally Gardner. Audio. My Book of the Year. 




Don't Call Me Bear. Aaron Blabey




The Weight of a Human Heart. Ryan O'Neill




The Hidden Life of Trees. Peter Wohlleben. Audio




Tuck Everlasting. Natalie Babbitt




The Hate U Give. Angie Thomas




Burial Rites. Hannah Kent. Audio




Moonrise. Sarah Crossan



Goodnight Stories for Rebel Girls. Elena Favilli and Francesca Cavallo



12 of my 100 reads were 5 stars.

5 Aussie books. 

4 Adult reads.

2 Picture Books. 

1 Verse Novel.

5 Audio Books. 

3 Nonfiction/memoir.

10 Female Authors.

3 Male Authors

9 New to Me Authors!

The Weight of a Human Heart had a big impact on my reading aspirations being the first short story collection that I've read in many a year. I have now amassed quite a number of short story collections (quite a number), I hope that more will be appearing in the best reads of 2018. 

Also interesting that 5 of my top 12 were audio books. I really have taken to them with gusto. I really loved all of those audio books. Maggot Moon was particularly stupendous of course, but the others are all fabulous. Burial Rites was magnificent and beautifully read, and it was wonderful to hear the Icelandic names and places pronounced rather than stumbling over them every time whilst reading. Noone could be more surprised than I was to actually listen to a celebrity memoir (it's not my thing) and then enjoying it so much. And The Hidden Life of Trees really changed how I view and think about trees. Did I even think about trees before? Not nearly as much. 

Rather incredibly I appear to have not read any Jackie French in 2017 so she can't make an appearance in this list. This is the first time that this has happened since lists began to be compiled. I shall have to rectify this terrible omission in 2018. 

Thursday, 23 February 2017

A Year in Books 2016

Yes, yes, I know that's it's nearly half way through 2017 already, but I haven't had a chance to look back at my 2016 reading just yet.

I had a bad reading year last year. I only read 79 books. 11, 075 pages. Almost half the 20, 061 pages I read in 2015.

And I was really bad at rating the books I actually did read on goodreads last year too. If I'd done more ratings I think there'd be more books here. Still I managed to give 7 books 5 stars.

Reckoning. An extraordinary memoir from Magda Szubanski.



The Minpins. A re-read of one of my very favourite Dahls.



Cyclone. Jackie French's retelling of Cyclone Tracy for a new generation.



The Anti-Cool Girl. Is actually a cool book.





And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda. A powerful anti-war ballad.



The Secret Diary of Hendrik Groen 83 1/4 Years Old. Oh so naughty grandparents in a Dutch nursing home.



Charlie and the War against the Grannies. A silly, funny debut from Alan Brough.




7 out of my 79 reads were five stars.

3 Aussie books

3 Adults reads

3 Picture books

2 Nonfiction/memoir

3 Female authors

4 Male authors

5 New to me authors

Rather predictable to have Roald Dahl and Jackie French make an appearance I suppose. Lets hope it's a better reading this year, although I'm already 8 books behind my goodreads target! And it's still February...

Thursday, 14 January 2016

A Year in Books 2015

It's time to look back in awe at the best reading I did in 2015. Well, it's actually getting a little late for it, I know most everyone else has done their list, but I do enjoy this retrospection, and will enjoy looking back on it years from now too.

As usual I'm relying on the books I gave 5 stars to on Goodreads this year. I read 118 books in 2015. A fair effort but well short of the somewhat random 200 I set myself as a goal.


Withering-by-Sea. An exciting Victorian tale of mystery and adventure.



I am Juliet. Always good to have a Jackie French on my end of year list. 



See Ya, Simon. Powerful Kiwi storytelling. 



Redwall. It really surprised me that I liked this book so much. It still does. 



The Man Who Loved Boxes. A beautiful picture book about the father son bond. 



Brock. An extraordinarily powerful book about badgers and many other things. 




Pardon My French. A fabulous little book that taught me so much


Sister Madge's Book of Nuns. Doug MacLeod is hilarious. 


Protected. Claire Zorn is going from strength to strength. 



Mister Monday. I finally got to read, well listen to, Garth Nix, and he's brilliant. 



The Impossible Knife of Memory. More Laurie Halse Anderson brilliance. 



Fattypuffs and Thinifers. Perfect French Quirkiness. 



The Running Man. My book of the year. 



Risk. A great page turning YA cautionary tale. 



Thelma the Unicorn. Picture book perfection from Aaron Blabey. 



Ash Road. An Australian classic, still fresh today. 



The Witches. Roald Dahl, the master.



The Girl on the Train. It's so nice to get caught up in a thriller from time to time.



The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Totally lives up to the hype. 



The Lucy Family Alphabet. Is it possible that I love Judith just that little bit more now?



Coco Chanel. A fabulous illustrated biography of fashion's most famous designer. 



The Wolves of Willoughby Chase. A fabulous near Dickensian story with added wolves. 



22 out of the 118 books earnt themselves 5 stars. That's a pretty good hit rate.

12 Aussie Books

3 Picture Books

3 Nonfiction/Memoir

2 Paris Books

3 Audio Books

6 1001 Books

9 Female Authors

13 Male Authors

14 New to Me Authors

I hope 2016 is another great reading year. No reason to think it won't be...