Here’s a list of the books I finished in 2009; I count 65 total. These are books I read in their entirety; there are more I read large chunks of (like The Well-Trained Mind) that I’m not counting for this list. (Lots of health books, homeschooling books and history books skimmed.)
NON-FICTION
Are Women Human? – Sayers, Dorothy
3 Fat Chicks on a Diet – Barnett, Suzanne, Jennifer and Amy
Writing the Breakout Novel – Maass, Donald
The Big Skinny – Lay, Carol (skimmed recipes at end)
Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement – Joyce, Kathryn
Never Silent: How Third World Missionaries Are Now Bringing the Gospel to the US – Barnum, Thaddeus
The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite – Kessler, David A.
The Midwife – Worth, Jennifer *not entirely sure if this was fiction or memoir, or a combination of the two*
Save the Cat!: The Last Book on Screenwriting You’ll Ever Need – Snyder, Blake
Introduction to the Devotional Life – de Sales, St. Francis
The No S Diet – Engels, Reinhard and Kallen, Ben
Under the Table: Saucy Tales from Culinary School – Darling, Katherine
Too Many Cooks: Kitchen Adventures with 1 Mom, 4 Kids, and 102 Recipes – Franklin, Emily
In Defense of Food – Pollan, Michael
FICTION:
Engaging Father Christmas – Gunn, Robin Jones
Marrying the Captain – Kelly, Carla
Agent of Change – Lee, Sharon and Miller, Steve
Carpe Diem – Lee, Sharon and Miller, Steve
Conflict of Honors – Lee, Sharon and Miller, Steve
Plan B – Lee, Sharon and Miller, Steve
The Uncommon Reader – Bennett, Alan
The Sharing Knife: Horizon – Bujold, Lois McMaster
The Children of Men – James, P. D.
Betsy, Tacy – Lovelace, Maud Hart
I Dare – Lee, Sharon and Miller, Steve
Quo Vadis – Sienkiewicz, Henryk
The Partner – Grisham, John
The Riddle of the Reluctant Rake – Veryan, Patricia
Local Custom, Lee, Sharon and Miller, Steve
Quiver – Spinner, Stephanie
The Moon’s Shadow – Asaro, Catherine
The Last Queen – Gortner, C. W.
The Lady of the Lake – Scott, Sir Walter
Lord Valentine’s Castle – Silverberg, Robert
The Surgeon’s Lady – Kelly, Carla
The Other Queen – Gregory, Philippa
Handle With Care – Picoult, Jodi
Hood – Lawhead, Stephen
On a Whim – Gunn, Robin Jones
The Grand Hotel – Kelly, Carla et al
A Thousand Words For Stranger – Czerneda, Julie E.
Survival – Czerneda, Julie E.
Little House in the Big Woods – Wilder, Laura Ingalls
The Hunger Games – Collins, Suzanne
Ties of Power – Czerneda, Julie E.
To Trade the Stars – Czerneda, Julie E.
Migration – Czerneda, Julie E.
The Actor and the Housewife – Hale, Shannon
Regeneration – Czerneda, Julie E.
Only Uni –Tang, Camy
Twilight – Meyer, Stephanie
Catching Fire – Collins, Suzanne
Betsy-Tacy and Tib – Lovelace, Maud Hart
Harmony – Bentley, C. F.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire – Rowling, J.K.
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince – Rowling, J. K.
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix – Rowling, J. K.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Rowling, J. K.
Eclipse – Meyer, Stephanie
New Moon – Meyer, Stephanie
Stand-In Groom – Dacus, Kaye
Breaking Dawn – Meyer, Stephanie
Austenland – Hale, Shannon
What Angels Fear – Harris, C. S.
The Diamond Age: or, A Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer – Stephenson, Neal
This is the first year I've ever kept track of every book I've read, and it's interesting to see what my reading habits really are. I knew I liked fiction better than non-fiction, but I didn't know the gap was so extreme. On the other hand, I read a lot online and in magazines, and most of that is non-fiction.
Also, I read too many books about food.
Anyone else ever been surprised when they've kept track of something like this?
peace of Christ to you,
Jessica Snell
3 comments:
I've been keeping track of every book I've read since I graduated from college - I have the last few years in LibraryThing (http://www.librarything.com/catalog/sapsygo&tag=2009) and the rest on my computer. I read 69 books last year, although I wasn't as good at keeping track last year as I usually am so I suspect it was more. What surprises me most is when I come across a book I read but have no memory of reading. That didn't happen this year, but I did have two books I read that I knew I had read before, but I thought it was only once. It turned out I had read them twice before, much to my amazement. I will cut myself a little slack because I read them both at a very difficult time in my life... but aren't our memories such amazing things?? They can be so much less reliable than I'd like to think they are!
Amber, I'm impressed with not just the sheer number of books there, but the number of classics. Wow!
Part of that is due to the ebook reader I inherited from a friend. I love reading books on that device, and I'm also not in the position where I can buy books for it... so I tend to go to Project Gutenberg and get good stuff. It has gotten to the point where I find it difficult to read most modern books though. I find they often have too much fluff, angst and overly described sins.
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