2021: A Year of Books

In 2020, I struggled with reading but managed to bang out 70k words to finish a draft of a novel and win NaNoWriMo. In 2021, I struggled with writing, got sick of the novel I drafted in 2020, and lost NaNo with a novel I’ve decided is probably not meant to be, but I read a lot. Some of the books and stories I loved, some not so much. A few favorites were The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal (a reread), Piranesi by Susanna Clark, John Wiswell’s “Open House on Haunted Hill”, and the full-cast audiobook of Good Omens.

As a data nerd, I thought it would be fun to dig into some of the numbers of what I read. Over the course of the year, I finished 29 novels, 4 anthologies and fiction magazines, 29 short stories (not including the ones where I read the entire magazine or anthology), 9 non-fiction books, and 12 “other” (novella, graphic novel, etc).

Formats of Works Read

Unsurprisingly, my genre break-down has over 50% in SFF categories. Some of these are for fun or book club, some for the Grubstreet course I took, and quite a few for Hugo voting. As in years past, I was a Hugo voter, and managed to read more of the voter’s packet than usual because of the extra months we were given, though I still didn’t finish.

Genres of Works Read

I had two reading challenges for the year – for Goodreads I had a goal of 36 “things I can track on Goodreads” and ended up doubling that number, and I attempted the Book Riot Read Harder Challenge, and lost but I’m not too broken up about that.

I’ve attempted the Read Harder Challenge a few times in the past, and completed it once. One of the most eye-opening aspects of the challenge has been in showing me how picky I am as a reader. I often have several failed attempts at a task before I find something I like, and the only time I have finished I allowed myself to “double dip” for tasks as much as possible.

Across four or five attempts at the challenge, I’ve never looked at the specific books I attempted for each task, just the ones I finished. I decided to track the DNFs as well this year, and it was eye-opening. A DNF is not a comment on the book, it may have been simply not for me, or not for me right now though I may pick it up again in the future.

TaskReadDid Not Finish
#1: Read a book you’ve been intimidated to readBlack Sun by Rebecca RoanhorseOutlander by Diana Gabaldon
#2: Read a nonfiction book about anti-racism (still in progress) White Fragility by Robin Diangelo
#3: Read a non-European novel in translationThe Disaster Tourist by Yun Ko-eun
#4: Read an LGBTQ+ history book The Stonewall Reader edited by The New York Public LibraryQueer: A Graphic History by Meg-John Barker and Julia Scheele
#5: Read a genre novel by an Indigenous, First Nations, or Native American authorMapping the Interior by Stephen Graham Jones
#6: Read a fanficHow Crowley Saved Christmas by such_heights (AO3)
#7: Read a fat-positive romanceRomancing Mister Bridgerton by Julia QuinnGet a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert
#8: Read a romance by a trans or nonbinary authorIf I Was Your Girl by Meredith RussoRed, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston
Marriage of Unconvenience by Chelsea M. Cameron
Bring Her On by Chelsea M. Cameron
Felix Ever After by Kacen Callender
#9: Read a middle grade mysterySmall Spaces by Katherine ArdenThe Case of the Missing Marquess by Nancy Springer
#10: Read an SFF anthology edited by a person of colorVampires Never Get Old edited by Zoraida Córdova and Natalie C. Parker
#11: Read a food memoir by an author of colorNotes from a Young Black Chef by Kwame Onwuachi
#12: Read a work of investigative nonfiction by an author of colorThe Devil’s Highway: A True Story by Luis Alberto Urrea
#13: Read a book with a cover you don’t likeEverything You Wanted to Know About Indians But Were Afraid to Ask by Anton TreuerDead Astronauts by Jeff VanderMeer
#14: Read a realistic YA book not set in the U.S., UK, or Canada
#15: Read a memoir by a Latinx authorOnce Upon a Quinceañera by Julia Alvarez
My Beloved World by Sonia Sotomayor
#16: Read an own voices book about disabilityQueens of Geek by Jen Wilde
#17: Read an own voices YA book with a Black main character that isn’t about Black painPride by Ibi Zoboi
You Should See Me in a Crown by Leah Johnson
#18: Read a book by/about a non-Western world leaderPhoolan Devi, Rebel Queen by Claire Fauvel
#19: Read a historical fiction with a POC or LGBTQ+ protagonistThe Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid
#20: Read a book of nature poems(still in progress) New and Selected Poems by Mary Oliver
#21: Read a children’s book that centers a disabled character but not their disabilityOdd and the Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman
#22: Read a book set in the MidwestBingo Barge Murder by Jessie Chandler
#23: Read a book that demystifies a common mental illnessWishful Drinking by Carrie Fisher
#24: Read a book featuring a beloved pet where the pet doesn’t dieMeow or Never by Jazz Taylor

The tasks that I struggled with or failed to complete entirely are not all that surprising. I’m particularly picky about romances and contemporary YA, and memoirs are always hit or miss for me (I’ve never finished one and thought “meh”, I either love it or don’t finish). After my experiences with so many DNFs of works I never would have bothered reading if not for the challenge, I had thought about not doing it again this year, but then the list was published and almost all of the tasks I can use as TBR burners. I think I will make the rule though that a DNF counts for completion of the task because I don’t want to waste time chasing down books for something that is supposed to be just for fun.

But more importantly, I want this to be the year I get back to writing. I’ve got a draft that’s itching for revision.

Moira Rose: “One must champion oneself and say I am ready for this”

On Reading

In the shit show that was 2020 I was very lucky in that I did not get covid nor did I lose anyone I love to the virus. But it was an awful year for me in a lot of other ways, and generally a very stressful time for frankly anyone, and I had a nightmarish reaction to that stress:

I lost the ability to read.

Sure, I could read a sentence, a paragraph, as long as the sentence structure wasn’t too complex. But my attention span was about 2-3 short paragraphs of uncomplicated prose. There were embarrassing situations at work where I somehow didn’t process entire paragraphs of important emails and thus missed tasks assigned to me and key questions I needed to answer. I couldn’t read academic articles (a critical part of my job), or even the Medium blog posts that explain those articles to a non-academic audience. And at the end of my workday of failing to read, I then … couldn’t read for pleasure.

There was the occasional Saturday where I woke up feeling rested and not hopeless about the state of the world and was able to spend an hour or two reading. I read The Calculating Stars over the course of 9 months this way, in 50-odd page chunks, and, because I wasn’t reading much in between, when I finished it in December I perfectly remembered everything I’d read back in March.

I turned to audiobooks, and did okay with non-fiction, but for whatever reason I often struggle with listening to fiction in that format. My mind wanders for a second and then I’ve completely lost track of the story. I did manage to listen to Mexican Gothic for the BSpec book club by playing it at 0.75x speed, but listening to it at that slower speed completely destroyed all sense of tension. Some day I will revisit that book and process it at the speed intended and relish the delightful dread of gothic horror.

This drove me to finally start listening to podcasts, particularly Writing Excuses. I walked around the neighborhood to relieve the back pain I got from sitting all day every day while going season by season through years of the show and absorbing writing tips and adding their recommended books to my TBR list for that distant future when this period of executive dysfunction would be an anecdote rather than my on-going reality.

Bizarrely, I was able to write. The inability to read didn’t affect my ability to create prose and I drafted most of the first draft of a novel, winning NaNoWriMo for the first time and completing a draft in 13 months, a personal record for me. (Notably, it was 13 months from conception to finish – I came up with the idea several days into NaNo 2019 when I was bored with my intended project and my mind wandered.)

That draft is a mess, largely because most of it was completely pantsed, but it exists. It is in the world.

And by the time I finished that draft, I had regained the ability to read. My attention block was gone. I’ve been reading voraciously ever since, as though I’ve been making up for lost time. I may even reach a personal best for books read in a year this year.

Some days it’s still a struggle and I have to accept defeat after a page or two, but they are few and far between.

I tell myself that was normal before this all began. Sometimes I would have a long day and be too tired to do anything more complicated than veg on the couch with one of the cats and watch episodes of a TV show I’ve seen a half dozen times before. Right now it’s GBBO.

Most of the time, however, I can read, and it brings me such joy to have that back.

Great British Bake Off James Acaster Meme: "Started making it. Had a breakdown. Bon appetit."Great British Bake Off James Acaster Meme "Started making it. Had a breakdown. Bon appetit."