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What percentage of the books that you read in a year are sf or fantasy
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Last year I read 40 books and 31 of them were SF or Fantasy, so about 75%. So far this year I have read 17 books and 11 were SF/F, about 65%. Otherwise I read mystery/thrillers or historical fiction.
I used to make an effort to read more than just SF&F, adding the occasional literary (non-genre) fiction novel and some non-fiction, but since I started reviewing for FanLit it's been almost exclusively fantasy and occasionally some SF.
2008: 65 books - 27 SF, 24 fantasy, 8 non-fiction and 6 literary fiction
2009: 70 books - 40 fantasy, 28 SF, 1 non-fiction and 1 horror.
2010 so far: 45 books - 36 fantasy, 9 SF
So on the plus side it looks like I'm reading more and more every year, but on the other side, it's becoming more and more one genre. Maybe I need to diversify a bit more :)
2008: 65 books - 27 SF, 24 fantasy, 8 non-fiction and 6 literary fiction
2009: 70 books - 40 fantasy, 28 SF, 1 non-fiction and 1 horror.
2010 so far: 45 books - 36 fantasy, 9 SF
So on the plus side it looks like I'm reading more and more every year, but on the other side, it's becoming more and more one genre. Maybe I need to diversify a bit more :)


These include "The City and The City," "The Bone Doll's Twin," "Bridge of Birds," and "The Last Stormlord," all of which have been Fantasy BOTM's for Beyond Reality, but other than that I don't read Fantasy so much, or if I do, I don't think of it as different from sci-fi. It was only last year that I started reading sci fi again with any regularity. Most of what I've read has been on the recommendation from Beyond Reality members...for which I am very grateful to this group.
In other areas of interest, I'd say I also read 20% gothics, 20% mystery-thrillers, 20% non-fiction, and 20% classics and mainstream.



Yes, I'm perfectly happy in my genre ghetto, thank you.
28/52 this year have been SF/F. It used to be a much larger percentage but I've recently gotten into historical fiction so that's cut into some of my speculative fiction reading...fantasy is still my favorite though.

My reading ingredients are sci/fi and a little fantasy, political thrillers, memoir, other non fiction, other novels, classics.

My reading ingredients are sci/fi and a little fantasy, political thrillers, memoir, other non fiction, other novels, classics."
Oops! I'm not so omnivorous as you think. I joined in Nov. of 2007, not 2008. My bad. But I do try for diversity.

Kerry wrote: "Yes, I'm perfectly happy in my genre ghetto, thank you."
Oh, me too, although I occasionally venture out. Great way to put it!
Oh, me too, although I occasionally venture out. Great way to put it!



I'd say normally at least 75% of what I read would be SF/F with a slight emphasis on the SF. However, this year (with a small baby) I've read exactly 3 1/2 novels. The first 3 were the Millenium Trilogy by Stieg Larsson, so mystery/crime. I'm now nearly half way through To Ride Hell's Chasm, by Janny Wurts, which I abandoned 40 pages in when the baby was born 9 months ago and am enjoying immensely since I picked it up and started over.



10% falls under general fiction (mostly humor).
The remaining ~15% falls under non fiction, the majority of which are technical books. I don't track technical books here on Goodreads since I don't read them like I do the others.
I prefer the Spec. Fiction genre because I tend to find it much more imaginative and creative than your average fiction.

About 30% more are mainstream fiction, and the rest are non-fiction (history, math, science, game theory, poker (which is one of my favorite hobbies) etc.)
Of the SF/F, it's weighted heavily toward SF, with less than a third of them which could be classified as fantasy.



If you don't mind my asking....what made you decide to join/start reading science fiction and fantasy?

If you don't mind my asking....what made you decide to join/start reading science fiction and fantasy?"
Well, I took a class in library school, the only one I took for "fun," about Genre Fiction for Adults. Something like that. I ended up doing a presentation on feminist science fiction and realized how little I knew, besides really enjoying the books I read for it.
Then I got into Second Life, and everyone started talking about Neuromancer and Snow Crash. I think Snow Crash was my gateway drug into science fiction, really. Then I ended up helping with a dystopia class, and I was a goner!

Jenny, where in world was everyone discussing SnowCrash? I'd love to check out that site.

http://bit.ly/a6aViO
Jon wrote: "I'm often on the lookout for data metrics with respect to fiction genres, so I was happy to see Publishers Weekly post this via Twitter:
http://bit.ly/a6aViO"
Thanks for sharing. More readers out there than I thought!
http://bit.ly/a6aViO"
Thanks for sharing. More readers out there than I thought!
Sandra aka Sleo wrote: "I didn't even see fantasy listed. Did I miss something?"
I assumed it was lumped with SF, as often happens.
I assumed it was lumped with SF, as often happens.


Oh, this is so true. I have so many books I want to read that I'll never manage them all. So I tend to stick with the ones I think I'm more likely to enjoy because I know my own tastes.
There are other books, more outside my usual reading, that tempt me, but when it comes down to the choice, I'm more likely to go with what I find easier to read.
I look at it as a cost/benefit ratio and those "branch out" books tend to have a lower one, so I don't get to them so often.
That said, I'm really enjoying the current crop of science history books that seem to be turning up. I enjoyed both The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York and The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (I especially recommend that latter) and I have The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements out from the library at the moment.
Kerry wrote: "Mike said: If I could read more books faster, I'd be more willing to branch out more.
Oh, this is so true. I have so many books I want to read that I'll never manage them all. So I tend to stick..."
Ooh, I've been wanting to read
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks ever since I heard about it (I was a biology major and read LOTS of studies involving her cells).
I'm having similar dilemmas lately, though. My reading time is so limited this year that I've been sticking mostly to speculative fiction, even though I've got lots of other things waiting for me on my bookshelf.
Oh, this is so true. I have so many books I want to read that I'll never manage them all. So I tend to stick..."
Ooh, I've been wanting to read
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks ever since I heard about it (I was a biology major and read LOTS of studies involving her cells).
I'm having similar dilemmas lately, though. My reading time is so limited this year that I've been sticking mostly to speculative fiction, even though I've got lots of other things waiting for me on my bookshelf.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (other topics)The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (other topics)
The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements (other topics)
The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York (other topics)
Do you find that almost all of the books that you read presently are sf or fantasy?
Has the rise of subgenres like urban fantasy, steampunk, sf mysteries or cyberpunk made it easier to just read in this genre or do you bounce around and just read whatever you see that is good but firstly check out the books in sf and fantasy.