The figures are in. Actually they’ve been in since January 1 but I’ve only just got round to processing them. Of the books read in 2009, with 2008’s figures in brackets:
- Total: 54 (53)
- Science fiction /fantasy: 19 (30)
- Translated from Swedish: 1 (4)
- (Auto)biography/fact: 9 (5)
- Crime: 3 (3)
- Gave up: 1 (2)
A mere 19 science fiction or fantasy! That’s even counting ones like Boom! by Mark Haddon which is technically of that genre but not entirely serious – but not, though, counting No Highway by Nevil Shute, which for the most part is an enjoyable and prescient progenitor of the techno-thriller genre punctured at the end by a séance providing the denouement. I got the feeling Shute ran out of ideas: “The vital clue is lying in the middle of the Canadian wilderness and our hero needs to find it – how I can get it to him?”
But anyway. 19 out of 53. 36%! That must be the lowest quite literally for decades. A marked increase in factual reading, though. Other people’s lives can be interesting. I also note that I managed an entire year without reading a single thing by Terry Pratchett, which has been unheard of since I first discovered the man. That would have changed if anyone had got the hint and given me Unseen Academicals for Christmas. (Gosh, I have a birthday in February, what could people possibly give me? [Bonusbarn muses: “You probably don’t want anything pirated, do you?”]).
And because I know you’re dying to ask, the 54 are:
- The Years of Rice and Salt, Kim Stanley Robinson
- Resurrection Men, Ian Rankin
- Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, Jonathan Safran Foer
- Strange Itineraries, Tim Powers
- Cloud Atlas, David Mitchell
- Blind Faith, Colin Harvey
- The Business, Iain Banks
- Nice Work, David Lodge
- Varjak Paw, S.F. Said
- The Bookseller of Kabul, Åsne Seierstad
- Stealing Water – A Secret Life in an African City, Tim Ecott
- The Sacred Diary of Adrian Plass, on Tour: Aged Far Too Much to Be Put on the Front Cover of a Book, Adrian Plass
- Changeling, Mike Oldfield
- The Oz Suite, Gerard Houarner
- The Stress of her Regard, Tim Powers
- The Second Rumpole Omnibus, John Mortimer
- The Odessa File, Frederick Forsyth
- The Day of the Jackal, Frederick Forsyth
- The Jennifer Morgue, Charles Stross
- Principles of Angels, Jaine Fenn
- The Prefect, Alastair Reynolds
- Where Eagles Dare, Alistair Maclean
- Moab is my Washpot, Stephen Fry
- Life of Pi, Yann Martel
- Dead and Alive, Hammond Innes
- The Inferior, Peadar Ó Guilín
- The Uncommon Reader, Alan Bennett
- Future Bristol, Colin Harvey
- Icehenge, Kim Stanley Robinson
- Endymion Spring, Matthew Skelton
- Microserfs, Douglas Coupland
- The Ghost, Robert Harris
- Boom!, Mark Haddon
- The Owl Service, Alan Garner
- Jason, J. M. Marks
- Elidor, Alan Garner
- Sirius, Olaf Stapledon
- Odd John, Olaf Stapledon
- The Last Templar, Michael Jecks
- Miracles of Life, J.G. Ballard
- No Highway, Nevil Shute
- deadkidsongs, Toby Litt
- One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
- A Parliamentary Affair, Edwina Currie
- Fighter Boys, Patrick Bishop
- The Storm Prophet, Hector Macdonald
- Pompeii, Robert Harris
- John Newton: From Disgrace to Amazing Grace, Jonathan Aitken
- Christianity Explored, Rico Tice & Barry Cooper
- The Sorcerer’s Tale: Faith and Fraud in Tudor England, Alec Ryrie
- The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, John Boyne
- A Spot of Bother, Mark Haddon
- William Wilberforce, William Hague
- Out Stealing Horses, Per Petterson
And life was too short to read Master of Hawks by Linda E. Bushyager.