How My Reading Habits Have Changed Over Time – with charts (TTT)

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It’s time for another Top Ten Tuesday, hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl.

This time, we’re talking about the different ways my reading habits have changed over time. Well, we’re in luck because I’ve been keeping track of my books read for quite a few years now and have all the data plotted on Tableau—so we also have some charts!

1. I’m Reading More

In the past two years, I started reading way more books than before, jumping from 10 books in 2022 to 45 books in 2023. The reason? I started working with Data Visualization and found several ways to plot my book stats. Every time I finished a book I wanted to see the change reflected on my charts! =)

2. More Books in English

Ever since I moved from Brazil to Canada at the end of 2016 my rate of books read in Portuguese drastically fell, in comparison with books in English. That made sense since it’s now way harder for me to get books that were published outside of North America. In the past few years though I was able to discover how to buy Brazilian books online, and have recovered some of those numbers.

3. More North (American) Books

Another consequence of my moving to Canada was that I started consuming way more North American Literature. That’s natural if it wasn’t for one problem: I was reading almost only American literature, and almost no Canadian books. That trend started to change in the last 2 years as well.

4. Reading More Diversely

In 2023, other than start plotting my book data and reading more, I also started my Read Around the World Challenge. That prompted me to seek authors from countries and continents I haven’t read before, and the number of African, Middle Eastern, Asian and Oceanic books increased. In the past, I was mostly focused on Europe, Brazil and the US. In 2024 I decided to focus on Asia, and that shows in the chart as well.

5. Goodbye Fantasy and Sci-Fi

Another interesting thing I noticed looking at those charts is how the genres I read changed over the years. When I was younger I used to read way more Fantasy (lots of Harry Potter) and Sci-Fi (lots of Asimov), but over the years I almost entirely abandoned those genres. Lately, this is because I’ve decided that Sci-Fi and Fantasy are better consumed in the cinema or on TV (hello The Expanse and Star Wars marathons).

6. The Self-Improvement Wave

I also noticed that there was a period of my life in which I consumed a lot of Self-Improvement and Productivity books. Interestingly enough, this coincided with the years I was trying to find a new career path, right after moving to Canada in 2017, until figuring out my data career in 2022. To be honest, a lot of those years I was feeling like a failure professionally, so I think I was trying to get better at being myself. We can say it worked?

7. Goodbye Old Favourite Authors

Another big change was that I left some old favourite authors behind. While writers like Isaac Asimov, J. K. Rowling, Italo Calvino and José Saramago used to figure a lot on my shelves in the 2000 – 2010s, they don’t appeal to me as much in the 2020s. Last year I tried Saramago again and it just didn’t resonate with me the way it used to. This also explains the drop in Fantasy and Sci-Fi books.

8. Hello New Favourites

While the old favourites went away, new ones came to join the scene. I’ve been discovering the works of Elena Ferrante, Isabel Allende, Itamar Vieira Jr. and Margaret Atwood lately, and I’ve not been disappointed.

9. Agatha Christie Resurgence

But of all the old authors on my shelves, there’s one that made a reappearance. I used to love reading Agatha Christie’s books as a teenager and had access to a nice collection in my uncle’s house. I forgot about it for a long time, but last year when I discovered that Sophie Hannah was continuing Christie’s legacy, I had to go back to it.

10. Reading More Women

This is something that I didn’t plan, but the share of female authors has been increasing over the past years. I think it has a lot to do with my change of favourite authors, names like José Saramago, Isaac Asimov and Italo Calvino who are now not so present on my shelves. It’s interesting how my reading used to be male-author-heavy during my 20s, and how it started to shift after I came to Canada – does it have to do with the editorial market in North America? Or is it me who changed my preferences?

What about you? How did your reading habits change over the years? Or do they remain the same?


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23 responses to “How My Reading Habits Have Changed Over Time – with charts (TTT)”

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  4.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    I think this is the nerdiest post for this topic I’ve seen so far, and I love it. It would never have occurred to me to have graphs for my reading (pre-StoryGraph at least, and even then I’m just using what they give me). It’s just so cool how you’ve got this visual data to show exactly how your reading has changed.

    I’ve noticed on my own shelves, my physical shelves are very male-dominated while my digital bookshelves are very female-dominated. But most of my physical books are either free through Goodreads wins or purchased at the thrift store, whereas I buy a lot of books on sale on Amazon, so really, I’m supporting the women more than the men, even if looking at my shelves it doesn’t seem that way.

    I hope you have a great weekend.

    Here’s my TTT if you wish to visit – https://justanothergirlandherbooks.blogspot.com/2024/10/top-ten-tuesday-books-on-my-tbr-longest.html

    1. Larissa Veloso Avatar

      Thanks, that’s a great compliment! =)I love data and I’ll be sharing some more of my stats

  5. oliviabeck1 Avatar
    oliviabeck1

    I am so envious that you are bilingual! Like you, I’m also reading authors from other countries (I’m in the U.S). Right now, I’m reading a Japanese author; last month an author from South Africa. I love it. Fun that you graph your reading.

    1. Larissa Veloso Avatar

      Thanks! Being bilingual has its perks. =) What authors form Japan and South Africa are you reading?

      1. oliviabeck1 Avatar
        oliviabeck1

        The Japanese author is Keigo Higashino. And the South African author is Sally Andrew.

      2. Larissa Veloso Avatar

        I haven’t heard of them yet. I’ll do some research =)

  6. Laurie Avatar

    Interesting post! I think reading more English books than Portuguese is only natural since you’ve moved to Canada. Personally I read more in English too, but I didn’t move out of the Netherlands. Dutch books don’t appeal to me these days.

    My TTT: https://laurieisreading.com/2024/10/22/top-ten-tuesday-how-my-reading-habits-have-changed-over-time/

    1. Larissa Veloso Avatar

      Yeah, in the end there’s also more books translated to English, I think it would be hard to read world literature in other languages.

  7. Carla Bruns Avatar

    This post was fantastic! I truly enjoyed every bit of it. I’m going to have to check out Tableau now.

    I also read a lot of self-improvement and productivity books in the past and now they just feel like the same info stated a new way.

    1. Larissa Veloso Avatar

      Thanks a lot! Be careful with Tableau, you might get addicted =)
      I think I have the same feeling about productivity books, it’s hard to see something new, especially when you get down to a specific niche, such as personal finance.

  8. Susan Avatar

    I’m also motivated by stats and reading challenges. Even though I don’t take them ALL that seriously, I still want high stats and completed challenges. It just feels good, you know?

    Happy TTT!

    Susan

    http://www.blogginboutbooks.com

  9.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    It’s amazing that you’ve added charts to your TTT. I have also been reading a lot more this year compared to previous years. I mostly read fantasy though, and I doubt that’s going to change any time soon 🙂

    If you’d like to visit, here’s my TTT: https://thebooklorefairy.blogspot.com/2024/10/top-ten-tuesday-new-reading-habits.html

    1. Larissa Veloso Avatar

      Thanks! There are some genres that are for life =) I’m glad you’re reading more

  10.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    I love how organized this post is!

    I, too, read a lot of Canadian books when I first moved to Canada. 🙂

    Here is my <a href=“https://lydiaschoch.com/top-ten-tuesday-how-my-reading-habits-have-changed-over-time/“>Top Ten Tuesday.</a>

    Lydia

    1. Larissa Veloso Avatar

      Thanks! Do you still live in Canada? Where did you move from?

  11. WordsAndPeace Avatar

    This is awesome. I love charts and graphics, what tool are you using?
    Oh wow, giving up on Calvino? So, how many by him have you read? Which one is your favorite.
    Can you find Calvino in my post today?:

    https://wordsandpeace.com/2024/10/22/my-top-10-reading-habit-shifts/

    1. Larissa Veloso Avatar

      Hi there! I’ve used Tableau for these charts, I ended up adapting them from an old dashboard I created – https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/larissa.veloso/viz/BooksReadinthe2020s/2023inBooks

      I’ve read 5 of Calvino’s books, including the Invisible Cities (my favourite) and the Baron in the Trees. I might still go back to him though =)

      1. WordsAndPeace Avatar

        The Baron int he Trees was cool too!
        Thanks for the Tableau charts. Signing up!


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