2012 was another
busy year here at Neth Space. The real world has kept me from reading as much
as I’d like – but that’s nothing new, just a bit extreme as life at home and
work keeps me crazy busy. I only managed to read 22 books in 2012, a
disappointment, but I still count it as a victory. A few interesting stats are
summed up below.
Stats:
- 22 books read
- 13 Published in 2012
- 3 Published in 2011
- 2 Will be published in 2013
- 2 are what I consider YA (up from 0 in 2011)
- 16 are part of a series
- 15 were provided by the publisher
- 4 are debuts
- I read more books published by Random House (7) and its various imprints than any other – 4 from Del Rey, 1 from Doubleday, and 2 from Transworld (which is UK, so I’m not sure if it counts). I also read 5 from Tor and 3 from Night Shade.
- 4 books were published by ‘small press’ (same as last year)
- None were anthologies or collections (down from 1 last year)
- 7 were written by female authors (up from 4 last year and counting K.J. Parker as female) and 2 were written by a person of color or other distinct ethnicity from my own (up from 1 last year) (possibly more since this is a difficult thing to keep track of)
- 3 are what I consider science fiction (same as last year)
- 9 are what I consider epic fantasy (up from 8 last year)
- Only 1 is what I consider steampunk (same)
- 8 are what I consider urban fantasy (up from 6)
- 1 is what I consider sword and sorcery (down from 2)
- Only is what I consider alternative history/historical fantasy (same)
- I conducted only 1 interview and helped out with a couple of others
- There have been approximately 53,000 site visits this year (not counting RSS) from 144 countries. About the same as last year, and the year before that, and the year before that … – I’m quietly happy as a mid-list blogger.
- The Westeros Forums, Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist and Twitter are the top referring sites (other than Google).
- My post about the release date for the next book by Scott Lynch was the most popular post (when’s it going to be published, Scott?), followed by my review of The Malazan Book of the Fallen by Steven Erikson. Third place goes to my review of The First Law Trilogy by Joe Abercrombie – a series that has been out for a while now and a review that is several years old (this was 3rd place last year as well). This tells me that Joe has a strong staying power (or that my Google-fu for that post is particularly good).
- And I posted a bunch of reviews of the scotch/whisky that I enjoy drinking while I read.
So, the best
books I read this year are listed below. With only 22 total books read this
year, I’ve limited it to the few that managed to stand out.
For all its
flaws, I’d been waiting for this one for almost 20 years and I thought it paid
off. Laughter and Tears. (review)
Just wow. In any other year this would have been tops. A spectacular debut and I can’t wait for more. (review)
I had to see
what all the buzz was about. It turned out that I really enjoyed it. (review)
Honorable Mentions
Of
course there are quite a few very good books that didn’t quite crack the
uppermost tie – the 2 below just missed the cut. But really, I only read 2 or 3
books that I wouldn’t recommend for one reason or another.
And for kicks – the worst book I read
in 2012
Please
read the review – it was so awful that everyone should have a taste.
And the most disappointing book I read
in 2012
After the big
improvement that I thought Esslemont had with Stoneweilder (review) I was very disappointed by the step back.
This one was a mess that I can only recommend to the hardiest of Malazan fans.