The end of the year snuck up on me after a very slow two weeks of COVID at the beginning of December. I haven't even finished my December post and yet, I am here, starting work on the number crunching for the entire year.
Totals
Total number of books read each month (a few months have a parenthetical number because they were rereads of "Searching for and Maintaining Peace"):
January - 8
February - 7
March - 4
April - 5
May - 6
June - 6
July - 6
August - 3
September - 1 (2)
October - 2
November - 3
December - 6 (7)
Compare with the totals for (2020)
8 - January - (7)
7 - February - (6)
4 - March - (14)
5 - April - (8)
6 - May - (10)
6 - June - (14)
6 - July - (8)
3 - August - (7)
1 - September - (5)
2 - October - (5)
3 - November - (5)
7 - December - (8)
Number of books read over the entire year of 2021: 57 (40 fewer books than 2020)
Total number of books attempted, but put down: 5
Percentage of books started and completed: 91% (same as last year)
Books being read, but not completed, at the end of 2021: 4
Percentage of completed books read on my Kindle: 21% (12 books total)
Percentage of completed books read via audiobook: 2% (1 book total)
Percentage of books that were rereads: 12% (7 books total)
My Reflections
I knew that I wasn't going to read as many books this year as I had last year, but I didn't realize I would be FORTY books short of last year's number. That kind of hurts. However, my social life picked up this year and I ended up starting a relationship with a fella, which seems to take some time that was previously given to reading - well worth it. I am please I made it past the 50 book mark.
There was a slight increase of 4% in books read by Kindle; I "read" one book via audiobook this year (2%) and I would not be surprised at that percentage either increasing or staying the same in the coming year.
"It looks like for every 10 books I started, I put down about one for various reasons. Some were discarded because of lack of interest; others because I didn't like the way they affected my thoughts." This sentence is copied from the post last year, and is still true. However, I noticed that I may not have made note of every single book I put down and/or I put books on hold temporarily that may be on hold for a while yet, meaning that they are in a kind of limbo - they are not permanently put down, but I honestly don't know when I'll finish reading them.
Slightly over one out of every five books was an ebook; this percentage increased from the last year. The availability of public domain works in free ebook form has had an effect on the medium through which I access some books. I still prefer the physical copy, but I can't deny that ebook options from the library or the public domain are quite attractive.
Genre Data
I broke up the books I read into the following genres: Spiritual Works, Fiction, [Auto]Biography, Philosophy/Literary Criticism, and Non-Fiction. I removed the "Other" category I had from last year and gave non-fiction its own count this time around. Some subdivisions exist within the larger genres of Spiritual Works and Fiction. Some of the works didn't fit neatly into one group, including several in the "Non-Fiction" section; however, this first graph has NO overlap: each book goes into one genre, no more.
And to compare with last year, I actually read a lower percentage of fiction this year (53% this year, 60% last year), which surprised me - I thought from looking at the lists in my Excel spreadsheet that the percentage would have been higher. The spiritual works percentage dropped two points, which I'm not crazy about, but it's really right about where I was last year. It does make me want to be conscientious about making sure I'm getting spiritual works read throughout the year, though. [Auto]Biography was about the same, as was Philosophy/Literary Criticism, but wow - Non-Fiction jumped from being part of the Philosophy/Lit Crit group to having its own designation. Perhaps it just helped fill the gap left by "Other". Overall, it doesn't seem like my reading habits changed too much last year. It looks like I need heaping doses of fiction, though!
It looks like last year, I broke down the two genres from which I read the most books - Spiritual Works and Fiction. I figured it wouldn't hurt to do something similar this year.
For Spiritual Works, I actually included some books that ended up in different genres in the first graph (Non-Fiction, [Auto]Biography) because they were hard to categorize. I changed two of the three categories as well (last year's were Theology, Apologetics, and Lives of the Saints; I only kept Apologetics). There were 15 books considered for this graph.
It looks like my comparative percentage of apologetical works increased, so I met an informal goal set last year (read: "I think that it would probably be good for me to increase my intake of apologetical works since I'm pretty timid about sharing my faith." - me, Book Stats for 2020). I hope I read at least as many spiritual works next year (there's another informal goal).
I did not overlap my books this year (i.e., each book was placed in only one category), so the stats for fiction look quite a bit different than last year's. The splits looked fairly equal to each other. I think my classics consumption increased thanks to the class I audited during the spring semester. Even though I did not distinguish between adult and children's fiction, I still read an exorbitant number of books targeted to child or young adult audiences - 18 of the 30 books, so over half of the fiction books read.
My Reflections
I was disappointed by the lower number of books read, but a little perspective change helps - after all, I still read nearly 60 books! I think that, overall, the books last year were more memorable or better quality than this year. Even with the classics, I think more 2021 fiction books were fluff reads than the fiction works read in 2020. However, that is not to say that I didn't read some fantastic books. I read about the same number of rereads, read more ebooks (comparatively), and decided that audiobooks can be pretty nice (as long as you don't forget you have granola cooking in the oven and can't hear the timer go off because you have your headphones on...hypothetical situation, of course...).
Best in Genre
Like last year, I wanted to pick the "Best in Genre".
Spiritual Work: Searching for and Maintaining Peace, by Fr. Jacques Philippe
Fiction (Classics): The Song at the Scaffold, by Gertrud von le Fort
Fiction (Historical): The Lost Baron, by Allen FrenchFiction (Fantasy): The Ordinary Princess, by M. M. Kaye
Fiction (Other): Till We Have Faces, by C. S. Lewis
[Auto]Biography: The Life of Christ, by Archbishop Fulton Sheen
Philosophy/Literary Criticism: Seeds of the Word, by Bishop Robert Barron
Non-Fiction: Apologetics and the Christian Imagination
Reread (besides "Searching for and Maintaining Peace): The Ordinary Princess, by M. M. Kaye
Fiction (Other) was a tough one to call - also under consideration was the reread "The Awakening of Miss Prim", but I thought that Lewis' work had more food for thought.
Monthly Winners
January: Searching for and Maintaining Peace
February: The Ordinary Princess (it was a tie in the month bracket and I gave the victory, months later, to the book I found more memorable and dear to my heart)
March: Till We Have Faces
April: The Song at the Scaffold
May: Return: How to Draw Your Child Back to the Church
June: Jesus the Bridegroom
July: Apologetics and the Christian Imagination
August/September: The Lantern Bearers
October/November: The Five Love Languages
December: The Life of Christ
There are 10 winners here because I had two brackets combining two months of light reading each. Four of the winning books were fiction; four were spiritual works; the last two were nonfiction.
2021 Winner Book Bracket
Alright, time for the 10 winners of each month to play for the championship title for the year!
The big winner of this year was "The Life of Christ", a new read, and not a reread like last year's "Story of a Soul". It was still a spiritual work, though. I loved Fulton's imagery and the lines that struck me to the heart. I loved it so much that I recorded lines that struck me into a little notebook so I could look back at them later, and I'm so glad I did. This is definitely a book I'd recommend to someone who wants to reflect on Jesus' life and takes their Catholic faith seriously. It's a big time investment because it's long, but it is so worth it. Thank you for joining me for end-of-year reflections on reading, and there will be more to come next month.