The numbers:
Number of books read in 2008: 99
New reads: 95
Number of books read in 2007: 85
Number of books read in 2006: 64
Number of books read in 2005: 56
Average read per month: 8.25
Average read per week: 1.9
Number read in worst month: 1 (July; travelling in Europe)
Number read in best month: 14 (June)
Male authors: 37
Female authors: 31
Fiction: 87
non-fiction: 12 (marked *; 2007: 10, 2006: 4, 2005: 2)
Scifi/fantasy: 33
Mystery/crime: 35
Literature/fiction: 17
Graphic novels: 0
Horror: 1 (this was also my only book I read in Malay.)
YA: 8
Poetry: 2 — thanks to Dorothy Porter (R.I.P.)
Languages: Read very little in languages other than English in 2008. This can probably be remedied in 2009 by using the library more.
Malay: 1
Chinese: 0
January
The weavers of Saramyr by Chris Wooding
The skein of lament by Chris Wooding
Ascendancy veil by Chris Wooding
T is for Trespass by Sue Grafton
The savage altar by Åsa Larsson
Disordered minds by Minette Walters
The clan of the cave bear by Jean M Auel
February
Plainsong by Kent Haruf
Spirit walker by Michelle Paver
The kite runner by Khaled Hosseini
Soul eater by Michelle Paver
Seeker by Jack McDevitt
Chindi by Jack McDevitt
The many-coloured land by Julian May
The golden torc by Julian May
March
The nonborn king by Julian May
The adversary by Julian May
Dead Europe by Christos Tsiolkas
Harry Potter and the deathly hallows by J.K. Rowling
Shaman’s crossing by Robin Hobb
Forest mage by Robin Hobb
Renegade’s magic by Robin Hobb
Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks
Brick Lane by Monica Ali
Voices by Arnaldur Indridason
April
Stiff by Shane Maloney
Grotesque by Natsuo Kirino
A question of blood by Ian Rankin
Maigret in Holland by Georges Simenon
The keys to the street by Ruth Rendell
Surrender by Sonja Hartnett
Where late the sweet birds sang by Kate Wilhelm
Once in a house on fire by Andrea Ashworth*
May
The brush-off by Shane Maloney
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
Nice try by Shane Maloney
A thousand splendid suns by Khaled Hosseini
The Flanders panel by Arturo Perez-Reverte
Twisted by Jonathan Kellerman
Blind Lake by Robert Charles Wilson
The Seville communion by Arturo Perez-Reverte
Obsession by Jonathan Kellerman
Death qualified by Kate Wilhelm
The white earth by Andrew McGahan
The spare room by Helen Garner
Bones to ashes by Kathy Reich
June
Written in bone by Simon Beckett
A dog’s ransom by Patricia Highsmith
Mindstar rising by Peter F Hamilton
A quantum murder by Peter F Hamilton
The nano flower by Peter F Hamilton
Paris on a plate by Stephen Downes*
The painter of signs by R K Narayan
The magician’s nephew by C S Lewis
Have mercy on us all by Fred Vargas
The rape of Nanking by Iris Chang*
Huysman’s pets by Kate Wilhelm
River town by Peter Hessler*
The three evangelists by Fred Vargas
The stone diaries by Carol Shields
July
Seeking whom he may devour by Fred Vargas
August
Wash this blood clean from my hands by Fred Vargas
From doon with death by Ruth Rendell
The Margarets by Sherri Tepper
Nekropolis by Maureen McHugh
For the defense by Kate Wilhelm
September
This night’s foul work by Fred Vargas
The guardians by John Christopher
Ancient shores by Jack McDevitt
Socialism is great by Lijia Zhang*
Family matters by Rohinton Mistry
Where the Indus is young: Walking to Baltistan by Dervla Murphy*
A fine balance by Rohinton Mistry
Mother tongue by Bill Bryson*
October
Maigret and the lazy burglar by Georges Simenon
The mermaids singing by Val McDermid
The wire in the blood by Val McDermid
Slowly down the Ganges by Eric Newby*
The haunted monastery by Robert Van Gulik
An alien light by Nancy Kress
Someday the Rabbi will leave by Harry Kemelman
November
At winter’s end by Robert Silverberg
The queen of springtime by Robert Silverberg
Clutch of Constables by Ngaio Marsh
Percutian berdarah by Rajawali
1984 by George Orwell
December
The man who went up in smoke by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö
The slap by Christos Tsiolkas
El Dorado by Dorothy Porter
The ghost map: A street, a city, an epidemic and the hidden power of urban networks by Steven Johnson*
Little brother by Cory Doctorow
The man on the balcony by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö
Ugly by Constance Briscoe*
Dune by Frank Herbert
Mao’s last dancer by Li Cunxin*
The monkey’s mask by Dorothy Porter
The tipping point by Malcolm Gladwell*
Deadstock by Jeffrey Thomas
The amulet of Samarkand by Jonathan Stroud
Most surprising:
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
I wasn’t expecting to enjoy this one as much as I did, given its slow pace and many religious/spiritual musings.
The monkey’s mask by Dorothy Porter
Loved this amazingly effective murder mystery written in verse.
Lots of enjoyable reads this year, among them Peter Hamilton’s Greg Mandel trilogy, the Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö books, the Fred Vargas books, River Town by Peter Hessler (reminded me of my year in China), The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson.
Least enjoyed:
Written in bone by Simon Beckett
My note in my diary about this book: Everyone dies in the end. Not sure I found it believable.
For 2009 I hope to:
- Read more non-fiction. I’m pleased that I increased the number of non-fiction titles I read in 2008. I don’t really know why I haven’t been reading more non-fiction, given that I have learned so much from the books I have read.
- Read more poetry.
- Read more in other languages – Malay, Indonesian, Chinese. Must keep working on my Dutch, too.
M asked if I record all the books I haven’t finished – I don’t. If I did this list would be far, far longer.
It’s amused me how much I looked forward to compiling this list and creating a clean page to record my reading for 2009. I also enjoy looking at other people’s lists. So far, lists from ricklibrarian, John Dupuis. Yours?
5 Comments
We have both covered Dorothy, then – you the MM and me EL D. I will have to swap you!
i.e. read the other one – I didn’t mean we had to post them across the country 🙂 happy new year, CW, that’s a great list.
Happy New Year, genevieve! By the way I read El Dorado too, but enjoyed the Monkey’s Mask more.
excellent list! must tot up mine too…
Heelo,
Found your blog via His Nibs when I was looking at his page for Uranus ‘2018’ Multifunction pen. It was sold out there now, so I checked to see where elsewhere it could be found. Found your page and this list so far 🙂
I haven’t seen your other lists (from previous years), but since you read some SciFi I wanted to share NEW author I found recently: Iain M Banks. I am not THAT young any more and have read tons of book in my life, but I can’t recall anything NEW as exciting as Banks “Culture Series”. I think they are among the very best books – even if I have only read 5 of the books yet. Familiar?
Please, drop in on my VERY NEW blog Kanji Hanzi if you have time. At top level it’s rather boring now: An ugly “controversy” I ran into in a public forum I had considered friendly. But here are a couple of pages below, and before you read this, I will probably have put up some more stuff.
Thanks for a very nice blog (which I have bookmarked)!