2021: The Year In Books

As we wrap up 2021, my first full year remote working, I managed to read a whopping 54 books, an increase of 31 books over last year and my first year completing the 52 books in 52 weeks challenge.  I surpassed last year’s total in mid-June, passed my best years, 2015 and 2016, in late August, and completed book 52 with two weeks left in the year.  I read (or listened) to 18,670 pages, by far my highest total of all time and only the second time I’ve passed 10,000.

Of those books, 16 were non-fiction and, of the 36 novels, 10 were tied to a TV show, either as the source material or as a tie-in.  None of the books came out of my dwindling “to-read” drawer, with 43 e-books and 4 audiobooks.  For the first time since I was a kid, I got myself a library card, which helped me procure 14 of the books.

Just less than half of the books I read this year were by authors I have read before. The 31 authors that I read for the first this year were:

  • Tegan Quin
  • Sara Quin
  • Lucy Foley
  • Jenna Fischer
  • Matt Haig
  • Eric Nusbaum
  • Jon Taffer
  • Charlotte Douglas
  • Susan Kearney
  • Fredrik Backman
  • Jeff Pearlman
  • Minka Kent
  • Alan Cumming
  • Megan Goldin
  • Molly Bloom
  • Barack Obama
  • Ali Wong
  • Timothy Ferriss
  • Issa Rae
  • Walter Tevis
  • Tess Gerritson
  • Gary Braver
  • Andy Weir
  • Matthew Walker
  • James Clear
  • Grady Hendrix
  • Simon Sinek
  • Jason Fung
  • Julia Spiro
  • Jon Pessah
  • Ruth Ware

Erle Stanley Gardner, Mary Kubica, Jeffery Deaver, Andy Weir and Karin Slaughter were the only authors that I read multiple titles from during 2021.

6 of the books I read were released this year, while 5 of them were released last century, with the oldest first published in 1933.

Finally, the breakdown by month, which was fairly consistent across the entire year.

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Book 33 (of 52) – Choose Me

Choose Me – Tess Gerritsen and Gary Braver

When a pretty, young co-ed falls to her death from her fifth floor balcony, the police are ready to chalk it up to suicide, but a missing cell phone causes them to dig deeper, investigating her former boyfriend and a professor who crossed a line with her.  As all the evidence mounts in one place, a surprising suspect reveals himself.

While I am familiar with Tess Gerritsen as the creator of Rizzoli & Isles, Choose Me is my first actual exposure to her literary work.  If I had to assume the breakdown here, I’d guess Gerritsen wrote the After chapters, about the police investigation, while Gary Braver wrote the Before chapters, about Taryn’s decent into madness and her affair with the professor.  Which, if I do say so myself, is just slightly creepy, given his day job as a college professor.  All told, this was a quick and mostly enjoyable read, but I don’t know if I’d go back for seconds.  Maybe I’d still be open to Gerritsen on her own, but we will have to see.