Oh, how much virtual ink have I spilled over the years waxing lyrical about my spreadsheet! So no reading round-up would be complete without a summary of last year’s key figures. That said I don’t have the enthusiasm for it that I once did. I still like recording it, and seeing my progress over the year, but I’m not sure if anyone else really cares – we’ll see I guess.
So I do have a 2014 spreadsheet but it’s incomplete. So here’s a comparison with 2013:
2015 | 2013 | |
Total reading time | 227:59:00 | 224:29:00 |
Mins per/day | 38 | 37 |
Pages/hour | 47 | 44 |
Pages read | 10656 | 9918 |
Pages that count | 10003 | 8961 |
Pages/day | 29.36 | 27.32 |
Books | 31 | 28 |
Av. length | 315.84 | 313.07 |
One book every … days | 11.71 | 12.96 |
Reading days | 153 | 150 |
Time per/reading day | 01:29:24 | 01:29:48 |
Pages/reading day | 70 | 66 |
Longest gap | 33 | 20 |
Av score (/10) | 7.2 | 7.0 |
“25 Books” score | 64 | 55 |
The thing that jumps out at me there is that there’s virtually no difference. I managed to read 3 more books but did it mostly by reading a little bit faster.
The “25 Books” score goes back to my original reading target blog project of 2009 and the rules I established there. According to the current version of the formula, I get 1 pt per 100pages over 5000 that I read, 1 pt per days read over 85 (to a maximum of 15), and either 1, 2, 5 or 10 pts based on average length (the thresholds are 300,325,350, 375 and 500). I don’t pay much attention to it any more but the spreadsheet calculates it so it’s easy to report.
Despite my best efforts my “everything is a 7” theory of scoring seems to hold true. I did have a 9 this year, but also a few 6s. The rest were 7s and 8s. This is always going to be skewed by the fact that a 5 or below would need an extra special reason to finish it. Especially now with my more relaxed attitude.
Anyway, that’s the numbers if you care, next is the books themselves!