Last year, I participated in Nonfiction November, and it was fun, even though I don’t read a lot of nonfiction. It takes a different approach than a lot of the challenges, which just have you reading books from the topic or time. Instead, each week it asks a series of questions about your nonfiction reading throughout the year.
The hosts this year are Liz of Adventures in reading, running and working from home, Frances of Volatile Rune, Heather of Based on a True Story, Rebekah of She Seeks Nonfiction, and Deb of Readerbuzz. Each week one of the hosts lists a different set of prompts for people to answer.
Here’s the prompt for this week.
Week 1 (10/28-11/1) Your Year in Nonfiction: Celebrate your year of nonfiction. What books have you read? What were your favorites? Have you had a favorite topic? Is there a topic you want to read about more? What are you hoping to get out of participating in Nonfiction November? (Heather)
What books have I read?
I only read 12 nonfiction books this year, which I suppose by any standard is a poor showing. I don’t want to list them all, but let me categorize them by overall topic.
- Histories: 3
- Memoirs: 5
- Biographies: 3
- Graphic nonfiction (graphic as in graphic novel): 2
- Essays: 1
You can see that these numbers add up to more than 11. That’s because the categories overlap a bit.
What were my favorites?
I read two literary biographies by Lucy Worsley and found her writing style so smooth, funny, and lively that I liked them a lot. These were Jane Austen at Home and Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman. I also very much liked the charming graphic biography by Raymond Briggs, Ethel & Ernest.
Another book that stands out for writing style is the ironic but informative style of Thomas King in his book The Inconvenient Indian, about the history of broken treaties, evil government policies and so on toward the native peoples of Canada and the United States. I put this book in the essays category because it jumps from topic to topic, but it could also be in the history category and in current events, if I had a category like that. My review of that book hasn’t come out yet, but I compared him to Bill Bryson in writing style but with more sarcasm.
An interesting memoir for me was The Islandman by Tomás O’Crohan, translated from the Irish by Robin Flower. It is the recollections of a man born on the Blasket Islands off the coast of Southern Ireland in 1865, a very primitive existence.. Part of what I refer to as my “forced march through Ireland” 30 years ago included hiking up a hill on the Dingle Peninsula to look at the Blasket Islands, which have been unoccupied since the 1950s, when the Irish government removed the few remaining inhabitants.
It’s actually a little hard to answer this question, because I liked all of the nonfiction books I read this year. I always like David Grann, for example, and his history of The Wager in its last voyage was as compelling as usual.
Have I had a favorite topic?
I think it’s clear from my list of books that I like books about people, so I have read a preponderance of memoirs and biographies, but also histories about people more than events. For example, I put under the histories and biographies categories Hunting the Falcon by John Grey and Julia Fox, about the early lives of and relationship between Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. I haven’t reviewed this one yet, either.
I only read one book on this topic this year, but I also like true crime and books about topics like spiritualism (not in the philosophical sense but histories about it), so what could be better than a book that combined both? It’s The Haunting of Alma Fielding by Kate Summerscale. The crime in this one isn’t a murder or anything, just ripping people off.
Is there a topic I want to read more about?
Not specifically, although perhaps I would like to read more about the Halifax explosion, and I have so far only read fiction about that. I will probably just continue to read the types of nonfiction that I usually read. I don’t usually go out looking for nonfiction, but if I hear about a new book by a favorite author or read someone’s review of one that sounds interesting, I’ll look for it. I believe I heard of Hunting the Falcon in a review by Helen of SheReadsNovels.
I could also swear that I read another book on the Blasket Islands, but looking at the available ones online does not ring a bell for me, although there are several similar memoirs to the one I read this year. It’s just that I vividly remember the part about having to leave the island. Anyway, when I tried to figure out what book I read, I saw Island by Alastair MacLeod. I’m not altogether sure it is set on the Blaskets (in fact, I think they are not), but remote Irish and Scottish island life has always appealed to me, so I have put it on my reading list.
What am I hoping to get out of Nonfiction November?
Last year I made a list of other people’s nonfiction reads with the idea of reading some of them. I didn’t think I read any of them, but I did, The Salt Path by Raynor Wynn, Ducks by Kate Beaton, and I have The Dancing Bear by Frances Faviell on my desk! And today, I am going to check that the others are on my To-Read list on The StoryGraph, so I don’t forget them. (They are!)
Otherwise, it’s kind of nice to reflect back on what I have read. In addition, the entries from last year by other people made me think about nonfiction more and add 8 nonfiction books to my To-Read list.






I think 11 is pretty impressive! I usually find non-fiction takes me much longer to read than fiction. This year I hardly read any because I’ve been reading some of the monster-size novels I’ve acquired over the years. I liked Hunting the Falcon too, though I too still have to review it. John Guy is always interesting.
It takes me longer to read nonfiction, too, and this year I’ve also read some big honker fiction books! I haven’t read anything by John Guy before. Must look!
I particularly enjoyed his biography of Thomas Beckett, and his Mary Queen of Scots bio was good too – My Heart is My Own.
I will look for them.
A good choice of genres for your nonfiction this year. I agree with the rest here, that nonfiction books tend to be rather thick and take longer time to read. But, if they are interesting it is ok. I have two nonfiction books for this month which are rather thick, and I am not sure I will be able to finish them both. At least I will be on my way.
It’s not so much that that they’re thick as that I read them slower than I do fiction. It usually takes me at least a week to read any nonfiction unless it’s very short and readable, and it usually only takes me one or two days to read fiction unless it’s very fat or it’s The Possessed by Dostoevsky, which took me longer than a week (also very fat).
I like true crime too and am hoping to read Kate Summerscale’s new book, The Peepshow, this month. I didn’t like The Haunting of Alma Fielding as much as some of her others. I also have a copy of The Dancing Bear which I haven’t read yet.
Is this maybe the same crime as that other novel with Peepshow in the title (A Pin to See the Peepshow or something like that)?
I assumed it would be when I first saw the title, but it seems to be a different crime.
I only read 9 this year, so your 12 sounds good to me! This is an interesting mix of books. I’d like to read The Wager. I loved The Salt Path and really want to read Wynn’s other books.
I understand Wynn’s other books are not quite as good, which is disappointing, because I wanted to read the one about Iceland.
I’ve just discovered that Wolsely’s publishers are producing a lovely hardback commemorative editon of the JA book for Christmas – I now know what to put on my Santa wishlist 🙂
The only reference I remember reading to the Blaskets was in The Way Home: Tales from a life without technology by Mark Boyle. However, Whale Fall by Elizabeth O’Connor was partly inspired by her Irish grandfather’s family history on the Blaskets.
As to stories of having to leave a previously inhabited island, I mostly think of St Kilda (Scotland).
Yeah, I couldn’t find the book when I looked for it. But I’m sure I read one.
This was a biography by a person who lived there, but it could have been 20 years ago or so that I read it. I know it’s not the one I just read, because it covered the removal of all the leftover villagers in the 1950s. ???
I shall look for The Inconvenient Indian. I like to take a look each year at what others like in nonfiction.
I think you have covered everything I love about NFN – my first year it was small and each year my participation has gotten bigger and more detailed. Happy reading!
Thanks!
I’m enjoying Nonfiction November but have had to come back round to the week 1 posts as there are just so many posts flying around! A hazard of co-hosting and having to find time to look at all the posts. I always add to my TBR, I keep a list ready for the Week 5 prompt so I know where I heard of them from!
Oh, yes, I haven’t even looked at the other host’s page to see if she has different ones. I have been posting on Fridays, which makes me one of the last posters.