
I read 24 books a year. On good years, maybe more, but I always try to read at least two books a month. Reading is vastly important to me. It’s one of my favorite parts about being alive. It’s my lifeblood as a writer. Read, read, read and read more.
One year I was horrified to realize I’d only read eight books. Of course, that was the same year I became a new mother, but still. It’s too easy for mothers, parents and busy folks to lose a sense of priorities. After that, I started keeping track. Two books a month, minimum. Since it’s mid-December that means I’ve finished book #23. Life’s simply too short to fit in all the books I want to read.
And I want to read GOOD books. If I only read 24 books a year, and I won’t live forever, I want to make every book count. I used to finish every book in my twenties, but now I stop and put a book aside if it’s not engaging me. Life’s too short to struggle through a bad book.
I read a startling statistic recently that 70% of American adults had read at least one book this year. One book?! That means that 30% hadn’t read any. And that many more had only finished one. I’ll stick to my 24, thank you.
So here at year-end I’ll share my favorite books of the year with you. They’re not all recent books –one of my absolute favorites was A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1943) which I finally got around to reading–but they’re good ones. Maybe you’ll add them to your reading list for 2013?
In no particular order, here are the books I most enjoyed in 2012:
- Half Broke Horses – Jeannette Walls (creative nonfiction)
- The Glass Castle – Jeannette Walls (memoir)
- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn – Betty Smith (fiction)
- Nothing to Envy – Barbara Demick (nonfiction – stunning book about North Korea)
- Annie John – Jamaica Kincaid (fiction)
- The Hunger Games trilogy – Suzanne Collins (fiction)
- The Art of Racing in the Rain – Garth Stein (dog’s point-of-view fiction)
- Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand – Helen Simonson (fiction)
Happy reading!
What were your favorite reads this year? How do you manage to make reading a priority?




