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Happy New Year! I hope it has been treating you well so far. As you can see, I’m back from my holiday. I had a lovely time with family and friends. My only complaint is that I didn’t get enough reading time (but when is that ever the case?).

With 2014 officially over, it’s time for me to take a good look at my reading stats for the year.

I read 56 books in 2014, which is a little on the slow side for me but within the trend of recent years. The overwhelming majority were fantasy and romance, with non-fiction trailing a distant third.

2014 was the first year I started tracking the gender of authors. I expected to discover I was reading a high percentage of male authors, since conventional wisdom says this is what most people default to. Instead, it turned out the other way around, with 69% of the books I read in 2014 written by women.

I also started tracking the number of books written by Australian authors. The figures came in at a disappointing 23%.

I read 24 new-to-me authors and 18 e-books.

I’m looking forward to seeing how 2015 stacks up against these stats.

 

Mt TBR status

Mt TBR @ 1 January: 191
Mt TBR @ 31 December: 216

Mt TBR finished much higher than I would have liked. Perhaps 2015 will be the year I finish with less books than I started.

I instituted a cull of Mt TBR on New Year’s Eve (which I may make a tradition), so there is some discrepancy between numbers from 31 December 2014 and 1 January 2015.

Mt TBR @ 1 January 2015: 202

 

Books read

54. Running Deer and Hidden Badger by K.D. Sarge. Reviewed here.

55. Blood of Elves by Andrzej Sapkowski. Review forthcoming.

56. Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller. Brilliant writing on themes still relevant today. However, not an easy read emotionally or all that likeable.

 

 Books acquired

Earthrise by M.C.A. Hogarth
The Art of Mindful Walking by Adam Ford

 

Online Reading

Quindrebel by Helen Stubbs. A short story in which the eponymous character seeks to escape her coal-furnace prison. Based on Cinderella, the mixture of fairytale and technology gave it a curious steampunk feel.

Her Words Like Hunting Vixens Spring by Brooke Bolander. After Rosa is left at the altar, she hunts down her fiancé. I can’t tell you how much I loved this story. It’s a classic Wild West vengeance story with some gorgeous turns of phrase and lots of heart. Quite possibly my favourite short story of 2014.

Spoils of the Spoiled Ch 1, 2 by Pia Foxhall. Foxhall takes the characters from her Court of Five Thrones and places them in a Hogwarts-style academy in this alternate-universe story. I’ve enjoyed seeing how the characters translate to the new setting.

Why Wouldn’t She Be My Friend? I’m Fantastic by axolotlsGambit. From the summary: In which a bored hacker and an AI with a terrible job strike up a conversation, and determine that they are flirting. (Algorithmically.) Told via tweets and chat logs. Very amusing.

 

So that’s it from me on 2014. How did you fare with your reading for the year? I’m also curious to hear what sort of statistics you track in relation to your reading, so please stop in and let me know.

Mirrored from Earl Grey Editing.

Date: 2015-01-13 03:53 pm (UTC)
winterbird: (calm - grim waterspouts)
From: [personal profile] winterbird
I love reading what you're reading (and tend to make screeching sounds that you're still reading some of my stuff. *blush* Sorry I go on so much!!!) - But it's so interesting seeing what you're looking at, how you feel about it. Thank you for sharing these.

As for me, I don't tend to track stats, but I probably consumed over 100 books, which is surprising, given I didn't think of it as a high reading consumption year. (And I easily consumed several million words of fanfiction, but I don't track that at all). Most of my book reading was research for publishers like Dreamspinner and Riptide, so it felt more like work in some ways - and I wasn't always reading the things I'd naturally be drawn to, I was scoping out their bestsellers and so on to see what worked for them.

I want to do more personal reading this year, and consume more non-fiction.

Date: 2015-01-14 02:29 am (UTC)
winterbird: (calm - into the emerald woods)
From: [personal profile] winterbird
Yeah personal reading and non-fiction often coincide for me. You know, subjects on clouds or weather, or biology and evolution, and things on science and physics. I also have a ton of pagan books to get through, since I have a terrible habit of acquiring them and never reading them.

But the convenience of the Kindle has also made me less likely to pick up a physical book as well. The exception was largely Rainbow Rowell - who is wonderful.

I might do a recommendation post one day. Especially as my review system on GR isn't accurate (I'm not comfortable giving anything from publishers I'm looking to publish with, a star rating of under 3 stars - so my review system for Riptide / Dreamspinner / Loose Id etc. is definitely not accurate, lol). Reviewing is hard! And I am a coward.

Date: 2015-01-14 07:56 am (UTC)
winterbird: (Default)
From: [personal profile] winterbird
I have to say, re: Rainbow Rowell, pick up Eleanor and Park and I swear to you, you'll get through it in less than two hours, even if you're not normally a fast reader. That book is designed to be read quickly, and it goes by *fast.* I'm not sure if that's an incentive, since I put off reading Fangirl for ages (and then devoured it in an afternoon, lol - but I swear, she writes like you just want to suck the words up off the page. :D

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