2023 - 103 books! |
Time for a quick overview of the books that I read in 2023. This year, I read 103 books, for a total of 27,892 pages. If you follow me on Goodreads you'll only see 75, as that platform doesn't make it easy to add small press books like roleplaying books. I've moved all my day-to-day tracking to The Storygraph, which seems to be a better fit for me. Day-to-day tracking is right, as one of the things I've tried to do is read a little everyday, usually before bed, whatever is going on. As I type this, I've been doing that for 358-days, a habit which seems to have paid off with more books read. I've not broken 100 books since I started recording again on Goodreads in 2016.
The months I read the most both involved travel; July and August saw me away in Africa with work so several long-haul flights, and August saw me away for the family holiday in Cyprus.
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I also enjoyed Charlie Stross' latest New Management book, and the third of Charles Cumming' Box 88 series. Gareth L Powell's Continuance books were great, giving me the kind of buzz I got when I first discovered Banks, MacLeod and Reynolds. I loved Nick Harkaway's Titanium Noir (which reminded me of Richard Morgan's work), and also should give a shout out for Ink Blood Sister Scribe by Emma Törz, which had me musing how to using the magic described in it in the Liminal roleplaying game, a blog post that kind of got lost in the middle of the #RPGaDay2023 frenzy.
I read 30-odd roleplaying books (and need to keep that up to make a dent in the gaming reading pile), but always find that the rules books take me much longer to read. Graphic novels were significantly down; although I did finish the year with finally reading The Umbrella Academy.
I've also built a habit of listening to more factual and political books when travelling to the various offices and sites that I work up. As most of these journeys involve more than 4 hours in the car return, that's a great opportunity to dig into a selection from Audible. I find it easier to listen to some of these books than read them. Katie Mack's The End of Everything (Astrophysically Speaking) was my favourite of these.
Overall, a good year for reading. I did let myself down at the back end of the year on my monthly blog entries on what I enjoyed, so I'll try to get into that rhythm going forward.
1 January 2024
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