Each of us who obsesses about reading and books has an idea of The Reader we are, the books we choose and the writers whose stories we most value and prefer to share.
Note: obsesses, I’m aware that this is weird. But tracking our selections is one way to see if our idea of ourself as a reader fits with reality; and, when data doesn’t bear out our concept, it’s easier to spot a pathway to change (either habits or ideas—or both).
When I have been focussed on shifting a particular reading habit, I have checked my stat’s either mid-year or quarterly for motivation; this past year, I resolved to not check, to see where that might lead. (This is still obsessing–only it’s harder to spot in the wild.)
Almost everything about my 2024 reading (which included resuming a lot of projects that had either faltered or failed in previous years) pleased me, and I wanted to plan less and to make more reading decisions in-the-moment. So I was prepared to be disappointed, but comforted because the satisfaction of previous years could balance out potential dissatisfaction.
So, what happened? In some respects, reading in 2025 was similar to reading in 2024: 240 books (compared to 231), 60895 pages (compared to 60463), with the shortest being Cora Ruskin’s new poetry collection Mostly Soldiers (50 pages) and the longest being a reread of George Eliot’s Middlemarch (1008 pages) and both of those being longer than the previous years’ extremes.
The number of short story collections (25) and genre novels (20) were similar, the percentage of CanLit was the same (38%), as was the percentage of women writers (57%, last year was much higher, but this is typical and matched 2023 perfectly).


My quietest and busiest reading months are historically different, year over year, and 2025 was no different (last year they were January and a tie between February and September, respectively).
Two significant changes are evident in the stat’s, however.
First, my non-fiction reading increased to 33% (which was intentional, as I’d sought to increase the amount of non-fiction by Indigenous writers in particular), and that saw a corresponding drop in literary fiction by the same amount (9%). Most non-fiction I read is related to writing and reading, and there were lots of essays and memoirs swelling my stacks this year; only in one other year have I read like this, but I’ve enjoyed it.
Next, I was surprised to see my selections of writers of colour shift from 60% in 2024 to 46% in 2025. I’ve been trying to read more diversely since the early ‘90s and that figure has steadily risen (with some notable plateaus) as access to a wider variety of books improved. If anything, I thought my “Shelf of Mexico” project in 2025 would have increased this percentage, so I was surprised. The works in translation doubled (from 8% to 16%), however, so perhaps it’s more about adding a different kind of diversity.
That’s a pattern I hadn’t sought to change, but this one I did: in recent years, I’d noticed that it was increasingly hard to step back from new publications. In 2024, I’d wanted to focus more on backlisted reading, but somehow 52% of my reading was new (from that year, or the previous two years). So I was pleased to find that shifted to 35% in 2025.
My experiment worked: keeping a classic in the stack at all times, so that the language and style wasn’t ever off-putting. But I also allowed a couple of review publications—some of the biggest temptations for new books—to accumulate unread (it drove me half-mad, so I’m not going to try that again, but hopefully all the fun I had with backlisted reading will be enough to keep the habit afloat alongside new releases).
Because I really loved some of those backlisted reads, including Christina Stead’s chunky 1945 novel For Love Alone (which added to my enjoyment of The Man Who Loved Children, later) which I didn’t post about, but I left post-length comments on Bill’s post. (We’re going to reread Stead’s Letty Fox: Her Luck from 1946 this spring, and Bill’s got some other Steads close at hand—later in 2026 we’ll probably get to A Little Tea, A Little Chat from 1948. Join, if you wish.)


Reading than one book by a single author in succession is another habit lost in recent years, and more generally I sought to respond more immediately to what I’d been reading and enjoying (or lacking and craving). Little bursts into particular authors’ backlists or certain subjects of interest: I was craving all of that.
As a younger reader, it was standard to read everything I could find by an author whose book appealed. Love one of an author’s books: read them ALL, and read them all RIGHT NOW. (Reading through backlists to write reviews for work is still standard, but I forgot it used to be fun.) I especially loved reading a few books by Agustina Bazterrica and Silvia Moreno-Garcia, noticing a similar feel to all their books but enjoying radically different premises.
Those were both new-to-me writers but, whereas in 2024 59% of the books I read were by writers new-to-me, in 2025 only 47% were by new-to-me writers. And, actually, most of my favourite reads from this year were by writers whose writing I’ve enjoyed previously: like Percival Everett’s James, Madeleine Thien’s The Book of Records, and Maria Reva’s Endling. I also really loved rereading this year, returning to 19 favourites (compared to just 5 in 2024).
The Toronto Public Library 2025 Reading Challenge kept me focussed on Indigenous writers (the challenge didn’t specify that, I just thought it would be fun), and the 24 books I read for it represented nearly as many different nations. (In total, I read 34 books by Indigenous writers this year: a few more than usual, inspired by the challenge.) This year I’m going to aim for half of my Indigenous reading to be non-fiction again. (But I want to explore James Welch’s fiction, and I also hope to watch more films.)
But I don’t need a Capital-C Challenge to spice up my reading year; after the current American administration officially renamed the Gulf of Mexico last year, I renamed part of my bookcase the Shelf of Mexico. I planned to read 21 books by Mexican or Latin-American—or ancestrally-Iberian or Spanish-language—writers, and read 26 (only one of my choices stumped me, and I’ll try again this year). Maybe, I thought at the time, it will be a four-year-long project. I can’t tell you how exciting it’s been! (As exciting on-the-page as American news has been distressing off-the-page.)

And it’s not only the oligarchs who have backhandedly influenced my reading: many of you who are reading this right now have influenced my book selections throughout 2025. Part of reading more responsively, in my mind, is following-up with various recommendations and suggestions, and I managed to do that every month last year, although sometimes very belatedly. When I wrote about those books here, I expressed my thanks, but I didn’t write about all of them, so here is a more general thank you, to each of you who inspires me to borrow a book or add it to my shelves, to contemplate or undertake a new project or to reconsider or resume a neglected one. And a reassurance that I am always grateful for this, even though I do not always remember where recommendations originate. Thank you very much!
I hope you all look back fondly on your reading and friendships (bookish and otherwise) in 2025, and are eagerly anticipating another good bookish year. Next time, talk of read-o-lutions and possibilities for 2026 on-the-page.
I’ll be catching up online over the next few days (and sharing some of my “holiday” reading) but feel free to leave a highlight from your 2025 reading below!
Slowly catching up! What a good year you had in 2025! Do you have any Rain Taxi reviews planned in 2026 that I should be on the lookout for? And it sounds like your plan for 2026 is to continue along in the same manner as 2024 and 25?
I think you saw the most recent; the next will be in World Literature Today (a Québécoisze author’s novel, an author I think you would appreciate for her political principles…I hope DN has her on his podcast)! mostly, but even more backlisted stuff.
I always love reading about your stats/intentions/observations and what surprised you and what didn’t, what changed and what stayed the same. I can barely get around to making my list. And this year especially, I didn’t even do my usual very few stats. Luckily, it’s just as fun to read others than it is to figure out my own. Congratulations on another great reading year! I’m very happy to have gotten to James this year… What a good book it is!
I don’t believe you didn’t do your stat’s, because it looks like your summary post included nearly every book you read (outside kids’ books)! lol
It’s been really interesting, playing with the balance of what’s planned and what’s spontaneous, between reading projects/buddy reads and plucking from the shelf because the timing just feels right.
I hope there are lots of great books in your reading ahead for 2026!
What a great year in reading Marcie! I like to keep track of my reading too … but am only aware of it at the end of the year when I count it all up. This year I’d like to read a bit more nonfiction (only 10 in 2025) and more translated books. I applaud your Shelf of Mexico reading … and I could work on reading more diversely too. Enjoy your 2026 books!
So my 2025-wait-and-see experiment was your real reading life! This year I’m going to resume my quarterly check-ins again, but next year I think I’ll wait-and-see again. It has been such an expectedly exciting project; I could not have guessed how many writers and publishing houses would be sparking my interest, and it’s super inspiring to realise that it was as simple as choosing to pay attention. I hope you have a fab 2026 on every front!
I love that you reread 19 books last year. That’s amazing! I’ve committed to rereading at least four books (specific titles or authors), but your example may nudge me to up that amount.
Like you, I intend to do it more often, but usually don’t: this time I started in January, and it just snowballed!
What a great year of reading you’ve had, Marcie! It’s particularly interesting to hear that many of your favourite 2025 reads were by writers who you’d enjoyed in previous years. The same is broadly true for me as familiar names tend to reappear year in, year out. That will probably change at some point once I’ve run out of unread books by my favorite writers, but I think I’m good for the moment!
Heheh yes, I’d say that you’re “good for the moment”: for sure! But you do, even so, still read new-to-you writers, only not very MANY contemporary ones (but I’m thinking of Jon Kalman Steffanson, for instance)maybe?
In hindsight, it’s unfair of me to even compare the two groups, the new-to-me and the familiar/standouts in my 2025. If I were, for instance, to compare the first book I read by Percival Everett, Madeleine Thien, and Maria Reva, only Thien’s first book would have made my list (although I definitely went on to read more by Everett and Reva, all the same).
I’m in the group that only looks at stats retrospectively. I have reading rules of thumb, but I don’t actively read to them because most of what I read is driven externally – by my reading group schedule, by review copies sent to me, by my Jane Austen group reading, by my research for the AWW blog, and by what’s on my TBR. So, I look at my stats at the end of the year and am interested to see how well I’ve matched my rules of thumb. And usually there are gaps in my reading of translated fiction, and my TBR.
How do you define “new” books or releases? For example, last year did it mean just 2025, or 2024 and 2025, or? If we are talking just 2025, I read 19%, but if we are talking 2024 and 2025 the figure jumps significantly to 42%.
I would be happy if I read 100 books, let alone over 200. BUT I do go out – a lot! So there is that, I suppose!
Heheh Even when I did go out a lot, my reading volume was still strangely high because I took public transit everywhere, which averaged a couple of hours each weekday (at least). When I lived elsewhere and was driving, and even while in the city when the kids were young, I read much less. As you’ve said in other convo’s habits/ patterns/ priorities change in a lifetime.
I think I started checking in with my stat’s quarterly about 15 years ago, when I had been trying for several years to diversify my reading but couldn’t seem to progress (I was stuck at about 20% for years but consistently guessed that it would have increased), so I wanted to look more closely. It helped me think more granularly about decisions I was making about what to read and-even more importantly-what wasn’t getting read, helped me shift the trend. Now that feels very natural, organic, but it’s not how I was raised or how I was taught.
This year (and last) I counted new as the current year, and also the previous two years. Like you, the bulk of my new reading now is actually from the year-prior (and later in the year that was prior to that). Which for me is often due to library availability (I like being able to renew) but for you I’m guessing it’s an accumulation of good recommendations from trusted reading friends.
I only track my reading stats retrospectively using whatever WP/Jetpack offer us, so I am super-impress with how well you do to read diversely. I have good intentions but can’t get past the fact that I am mostly a mood reader.
As for 240 books in one year! WOW! is all I can say.
So you use tagging or categories or something as a way to gather your stat’s? I can’t imagine that!
I am the moodiest reader I know, which is why there are always so many books in my stack at any given time, so I can pull whichever suits that exact moood in any given moment.
But, eventually, I have to corrall some focus if a book or two consistently falls to the bottom…maybe that’s where you see will power factoring in. (That can fail as well, I have been known to waste precious reading time by rereading some very stubborn residents.)
I loved reading these observations! And I’m so grateful to follow along with your reading, I find your analysis extremely thoughtful and inspiring. And holy heck 240 books!!! I know I say this every year, but I don’t know a single other person who reads as many books as you. My future goals!!!
Thanks, Anne: that’s kind of you to say. I know I’ve said this before, but when there were kids needing attention, I didn’t read anywhere near so much; your reading time will increase with each exchool year that passes (unless you have other competing interests for time). We both have the same exercise habits, and neither of us has figured out how to read while that happens…heheh…so that will remain an obstacle I suppose; but I think the AI-reading-voices are improving immensely, so perhaps there will be combo audiobook-voice/exercise-cues options in our futures!
Unlike it seems most lit.bloggers it seems, I have never kept a journal of my reading, so I found going back each year to create stats a real pain and in 2025 I decided not to bother. I do keep certain objectives in mind like reading Indigenous or reading African but I don’t set numerical targets.
It seems like a thing you would do, though, given that you keep logs of other things (but, maybe only for work reasons). It would be very annoying to have to compiled stat’s based on a year’s worth of posts:
I agree. I don’t set numerical targets either, with one exception, but I did ponder the possibility this year (partly because I enjoyed knowing that simply finishing the library challenge would ensure at least 24 books by Indigenous authors). I find it hard, though, because I also hate the idea of books-as-homework, and choosing a numerical goal feels a little too prescriptive (for me, for now, anyway)?
Happy New year! You read so much this year and a lot of variety too. I’m hoping to read more nonfiction in 2026. I had so much fun with our reading project this year, so I’d be happy to do another project this year.
Happy New Year, Rachel! I think I’m hitting my stride with a different reading routine I started in 2023, so this might be the new normal…we’ll see. I loved our project: let’s put our books together and see what we can come up with. Maybe a chunkster that’s been lingering on both our TBRs? Or soemthing else city-related? Our shelves are the limits!
It’s interesting to see how your reading has shifted, and there are some great-sounding books in there. Thanks for the continued reading inspiration – I always get ideas from your posts and your comments. I keep a rudimentary reading log but without the depth of stats that you have. A few of my favourites from 2025 were Clear by Carys Davies, Greek Lessons by Han Kang, and Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico.
I debated choosing Han Kang as one of “my” six women writers for the coming year; I haven’t read anything since The Vegetarian (which I read twice, and still am not sure I fully understood, but I admire it). The others are on my TBR.
The log is the essential bit: you’re ready to go. The stat’s started about fitfteen years ago, when I realised that I’d moved twoards reading books from the mainstream presses and gradually sidelined the indies, whereas once they had been core. It troubled me that it felt like it simply… happened (but of course I was choosing, the whole time).
I enjoy seeing people’s reading stats at the end of the year. But 240 books read is really impressive! I’m blown away.
I don’t go out much. heheh
Compulsively creating lists and statistics is half the fun, isn’t it? (Well, less than half, but a not insignificant fraction.)
I didn’t really check it out, but I’m pretty sure I read more recent releases this year than I generally do, and several of them were highlights. (Maybe I’m now off to go run some stats…)
Not insignificant: that’s fair. heheh Do you have not insignificant fun tracking other activities in your leisure time too, or only book-related ones?
Publication-date-related stat’s are particularly easy to determine; I look forward to hearing if your hunch proves correct!
Wasn’t actually all that true. 2025 was only slightly higher than average, it was mostly that in 2024 I read hardly any new releases.
Ahhh, I have found that kind of things impacts my predictions as well. GTK we’re not alone in bookishly misjudging!
A great year, and it’s comforting that you read (almost!) as many books as I did! I use my stats to make sure I’m on track with some non-negotiables – I do refresh my pivot tables with every few books and I will notice if my global majority community authors or my diversity ratio is dropping and change what I read next. I wonder if leaving that till the end of the year this year will alter things; maybe worth an experiment!
Awww, thanks for mentioning your pivot tables: you’re among friends! hee hee I’d considered NOT tracking a few times previously, and now I wish that I had done so sooner, because it’s brought other possibilities into the conversation I have with myself about reading selection. If you decide to try it, I’ll be very curious to see how it goes for you. I think I will track this year, but not next year (again).
A great year, by the sounds of it.
As for me – well finishing Proust was a huge highlight!
That’s awesome: I hope I’m saying the same thing next January!
What a splendid year you have had in reading, Marcie. Well done!
Incidentally, I personally think that all the obsessive stuff in which we indulge is a major part of the enjoyment. Something to be celebrated (with wild abandon if the urge strikes). So, please keep up the excellent work!
Thanks, Paula! I think it’s great fun, too, but I worry that someone who’s not obsessive about reading might feel like they should be. heheh Because it can be tiring and I bet it’s still fun to be a normal reader.
How interesting! I don’t track or record my reading at all, but so many bloggers do it makes me think I should start. It would be useful to take an overview and see if what I feel I’m reading tallies with reality.
Oh, it would be so interesting: I think you’d love it! (And it proves very useful, while browsing second-hand, when one is unsure which of an author’s backlist one has actually read.)