I love keeping lists and records, and indeed hearing about lists and records. I've pondered this predilection in my blog post Chronomania.
For many years, I've had a spreadsheet of all the films I've seen, including marks awarded out of five, and sundry other details. This began when I sat down with a movie compendium and listed out all the films I could remember seeing. I've been keeping it current ever since.
A list of books read is a much more challenging project. What counts as a book, and what counts as reading it? Does, for instance, the film compendium mentioned above count as a book? And can I said I've "read it", since I certainly didn't read every single entry? Should I include comic-books, newspaper supplements in book form, pamphlets, etc?
It's also harder to reconstruct one's reading than one's movie-viewing, since most books don't have the sort of impact on popular consciousness that movies enjoy. It generally costs millions to make a film, they only really started to be made at the beginning of last century, and there are far fewer of them than there are books. You'll rarely find a movie that isn't mentioned somewhere on the internet or in some reference work. It's quite the opposite with books, which can remain at a level of obscurity which is more or less impossible for films.
Many years ago, however, I made an attempt to compile a list, in a school exercise book. I discovered it again, recently, and started to post it on Facebook in instalments.
It's still a long way from a list of the books I've read, but maybe it could form the basis for such a list. I record the books I'm reading in the diary that I've been keeping for about eight years, so that would go further towards such a list.
More and more, reading seems to me to be one of the greatest and most abiding pleasures in life. It doesn't have to be great literature; the act of reading is hugely enjoyable, almost without reference to the reading material itself. Looking back along the vista of years, I've also come to realize how a chronicle of one's reading is close to being a chronicle of one's life, since every book is associated with memories of what I was doing at the time that I read it.
But why should my blog readers be interested in such a list? Well, all I can say is that I'm always intensely interested in what people are reading, and what they've read. When I'm visiting somebody's home, I always gravitate to the bookshelves. Probably why I don't get invited back.
Here's the list. I've included comments here and there. It's not in any kind of order; indeed, it's in even less order than the original list, since I've copied and pasted it from various Facebook posts, so that some lists of books that naturally belong together are in different places.
1) The Silent People by Walter Macken (Walter Macken was one of my favourite authors during my teens. This book is part of his Irish history trilogy, which aren't nearly as good as his novels set in modern times.)
2) The Scorching Wind by Walter Macken
3) Foundation and Empire by Isaac Asimov (I loved Asimov's Foundation series. Along with other stories about space travel, they pushed me in a nationalist direction, since the various different planets all have their own culture and character. This would probably appall Asimov, who was a humanist.)
4) Foundation's Edge by Isaac Asimov
5) Foundation and Earth by Isaac Asimov (has one of the best concluding lines I've ever read: "And he did not look down to meet the brooding eyes of Fallom - hermaphroditic, transductive, different - as they rested unfathomably, on him.")
6) Nemesis by Isaac Asimov
7) Nightfall by Isaac Asimov and Robert Silverberg (appropriately enough, I read this in one night, lying in bed. I sometimes did this in my teens-- read all through the night)
8) Forward the Foundation by Isaac Asimov
9) The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson (I've read this book several times through my life, and saw a stage production-- it has a sort of archetypal importance to me. I know that sounds pretentious but don't know how to phrase it otherwise.)
10) Heidi by Johana Spyri (I watched the 2005 film just the other night. I had quite a taste for girl's stories when I was a boy.)
11) Carry on Abroad by Norman Giller (a bizarre, loose novelisation of a Carry On film, just like the following entry)
12) Carry On Henry by Norman Giller
13) The Ginger Man by J.P. Donleavy (a marvellous book, and Donleavy's first and most famous, but not my own favourite among his works)
14) Devil Worship in Britain by A.V. Sellwood and Peter Haining
15) The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins (a rather hysterical tome)
16) Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress (an excellent science fiction novel, a political parable)
17) Beggars and Choosers by Nancy Kress (a poor sequel to the above)
18) Hawksmoor by Peter Ackroyd (awful)
19) The House of Dr Dee by Peter Ackroyd (awful)
20) Brown Lord of the Mountain by Walter Macken (an excellent novel which features, among other things, the electrification of rural Ireland and a romance between a mentally challenged woman and an "ordinary" man. One of the first books I borrowed from a public library.)
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