My reading this year was pretty sporadic. I had some trouble concentrating off and on throughout the year, so I spent long stretches of time vegging out watching YouTube instead of sitting with a book. I’ve noticed, though, that I sleep better and I’m overall more content when I prioritize reading over watching TV. I need and benefit from both, but the balance was off this year. This seems to be a recurring theme for the past few years, honestly.
I still managed to get through a goodly number of titles, methinks: 46 total, 29 nonfiction (63%) and 17 fiction (37%). This continues my nonfiction-heavy habit of the past few years. I read 20 titles for Booklist this year, accounting for 43.5% of my total. Most of what I read this year was very good, so quality makes up for quantity.
Despite going long stretches without reading anything, I continued to impulsively check out books from the library as they caught my fancy. This resulted in very tall stacks of books sitting on my end table for months, as I renewed them over and over, or had to turn them back in and put them back on hold, because I just wasn’t reading them. By mid-November, I got sick of them sitting there, so I plowed through 12 titles all in the last month and half of the year (9 in less than two weeks, which I think is a personal record for me!)
I became shockingly lax about turning in my book reviews on time, trying the patience of my Booklist editor far more than she deserves. I should make a resolution for next year to be more on top of these.
I read several books about the development of artificial intelligence, which have made me both more and less concerned about this technology and how it’s evolving (see my list of Tech Books for People Who Don’t Trust Tech). I continued to seek out a diversity of perspectives and experiences of the world. I also read a handful of titles about professional leadership, and reassessing our culture’s deeply unhealthy and inhumane relationship to work.
I think next year I want to go back to mostly fiction. I’ll still get a decent amount of nonfic from Booklist, but I think it’s easier for me to want to read more if I’m reading fiction.
For a list of my favorite books I read this year, go here >
Books I Read in 2024
Asterisks (*) indicate titles I reviewed for Booklist.
| Title | Author | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Heart and the Chip: Our Bright Future with Robots * | Daniela Rus and Gregory Mone |
| 2 | He/She/They: How We Talk about Gender and Why It Matters | Schuyler Bailar |
| 3 | Girly Drinks: A World History of Women and Alcohol | Mallory O’Meara |
| 4 | Calypso * | Oliver K. Langmead |
| 5 | Information Services to Diverse Populations: Developing Culturally Competent Library Professionals | Nicole A. Cooke |
| 6 | Mal Goes to War * | Edward Ashton |
| 7 | UFOs: A Scientist Explains What We Know (And Don’t Know) * | Robert Powell |
| 8 | Math-ish: Finding Creativity, Diversity, and Meaning in Mathematics * | Jo Boaler |
| 9 | Rogue Sequence * | Zac Topping |
| 10 | All Systems Red | Martha Wells |
| 11 | Artificial Condition | Martha Wells |
| 12 | Rogue Protocol | Martha Wells |
| 13 | The Book of Elsewhere * | Keanu Reeves and China Mieville |
| 14 | Ka-Boom! The Science of Extremes * | David Darling |
| 15 | The Mercy of Gods * | James S. A. Corey |
| 16 | Black AF History: The Un-Whitewashed Story of America | Michael Harriot |
| 17 | Shameless: A Sexual Reformation | Nadia Bolz-Webber |
| 18 | Seek: How Curiosity Can Transform Your Life and Change the World | Scott Shigeoka |
| 19 | The Art of Relevance | Nina Simon |
| 20 | A City on Mars: Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Really Thought This Through? | Kelly and Zach Weinersmith |
| 21 | Devil in the Stack: Searching for the Soul of the New Machine * | Andrew Smith |
| 22 | Rest Is Resistance: A Manifesto | Tricia Hersey |
| 23 | Network Effect | Martha Wells |
| 24 | Nether Station * | Kevin J. Anderson |
| 25 | Supremacy: AI, ChatGPT, and the Race that Will Change the World * | Parmy Olson |
| 26 | Nothing but the Rain | Naomi Salman |
| 27 | How to Kill an Asteroid: The Real Science of Planetary Defense * | Robin George Andrews |
| 28 | The Playbook: A Story of Theater, Democracy, and the Making of a Culture War | James Shapiro |
| 29 | The Last Dangerous Visions * | Harlan Ellison (ed.) |
| 30 | Chain Reactions: The Hopeful History of Uranium * | Lucy Jane Santos |
| 31 | And the Mighty Will Fall * | K. B. Wagers |
| 32 | The Book of Forgiving: The Fourfold Path for Healing Ourselves and Our World | Desmond M. Tutu and Mpho A. Tutu, Douglas C. Abrams (ed.) |
| 33 | Dengue Boy * | Michel Nieva |
| 34 | Emotional Intelligence 2.0 | Dr. Travis Bradberry & Dr. Jean Greaves |
| 35 | The Fourth Consort * | Edward Ashton |
| 36 | Dimming the Sun: The Urgent Case for Geoengineering * | Thomas Ramge |
| 37 | Sing Like Fish: How Sound Rules Life Underwater | Amorina Kingdon |
| 38 | Before We Were Trans: A New History of Gender | Kit Heyam |
| 39 | Why War? | Richard Overy |
| 40 | I Take My Coffee Black: Reflections on Tupac, Musical Theater, Faith, and Being Black in America | Tyler Merritt with David Tieche |
| 41 | Love Works: Seven Timeless Principles for Effective Leaders | Joel Manby |
| 42 | Do Nothing: How to Break Away from Overworking, Overdoing, and Underliving | Celeste Headlee |
| 43 | Nobody Needs to Know | Pidgeon Pagonis |
| 44 | A Season of Monstrous Conceptions | Lina Rather |
| 45 | Superbloom: How Technologies of Connection Tear Us Apart * | Nicholas Carr |
| 46 | WE3 | Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely |
Amazing list..thank you john
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