I ’ve just turned the page on my 52nd book of the year and completed my New Year’s Resolution for 2019 – to read one book every week.

OK, so some books actually took a little longer than a week, and others I finished in days, but if you cut me some slack I’ll let you in on how I managed to do this and still have time to work, eat and hold together something resembling a social life.

Build up to it

This whole 52 books in a year thing sounds pretty unachievable, and it felt a bit like that when I started in January, but I did work my way up to this target.

I love to read – I always have – and despite doing an English degree, I’ve always felt like quite a slow reader. When I got a job at The Independent, which required a fair old commute, I started reading more frequently, and found that like some sort of biblio-athlete, I was slowly learning to read faster, and take in trickier texts and subjects. I read 21 books in 2017, which I realised was almost two a month – so I made that my target for 2018. Then in 2018 I actually managed 36, which was three a month. So that’s when four in a month sounded achievable.

Books of the decade Show all 40 1 /40 Books of the decade Books of the decade Toni Morrison – God Help the Child (2015) Toni Morrison died in August; her final novel, 2015’s God Help the Child, displays her award-winning powers of elegant prose and imagination. Children are mistreated and prejudice abounds in this disturbing modern fairy tale set around the enigmatic character of Bride, who makes a mistake that has devastating consequences. (MC) Books of the decade Ian McEwan – Solar (2010) Solar, which was partly based on Ian McEwan’s own experiences during a trip to the Arctic island of Spitsbergen, is a darkly comic novel. Against the backdrop of the battle against climate change, McEwan tells the story of middle-aged Nobel laureate Michael Beard, a self-serving physicist whose own world is in danger of meltdown. (MC) Books of the decade Manning Marable – Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention (2011) Columbia University professor Manning Marable died on 1 April 2011, just days before the publication of his Pulitzer Prize-winning biography Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention. Marable drew from letters, diaries and FBI files for a meticulous, incisive and balanced account of the life of the civil rights’ leader. The book cuts through the myths to reveal Malcolm X in all his conflicted complexity. (MC) Books of the decade . Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey – She Said (2019) They wrote the story that changed the world and now they’ve explained how they did it. In She Said, the Pulitzer Prize-winning duo explain how they managed to barge through Hollywood’s ironclad gates and break the Weinstein story, publishing allegations from several women accusing the disgraced producer of sexual assault in The New York Times. While the details are sparse in terms of sources and specific tactics, there are some startling revelations, including how Gwyneth Paltrow became a helping hand and the extreme lengths Weinstein’s team went to in order to thwart both reporters and silence the alleged victims. (OP) Books of the decade Emily Witt – Future Sex (2016) Future Sex is perhaps one of the few nonfiction books about sex and relationships that came before #MeToo and somehow remains relevant today. Finding herself suddenly single at the age of 30, Witt immerses herself in the sexual subcultures of San Francisco, trying her hand at everything from polyamory to orgasmic meditation. It’s a fascinating piece of work, one that illustrates Witt’s talents as an essayist and gives plenty of room to many astute observations on sexual liberation. (OP) Books of the decade Yuval Harari – Sapiens (2011) Every now and then a book comes along that tilts your perspective on the world. This internationally best-selling phenomenon is one of them. Covering just about the entire sweep of human history, it makes you understand the fits, starts and savagery of progress. (CR) 36. Emily Witt – Future Sex (2016) Books of the decade Emma Cline – The Girls (2016) The Girls is about exploring the appeal of being in a cult. Inspired by Charles Manson’s murderous “family”, the book serves up a more tense, richer depiction than Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, one that puts women at the centre, examining what motivates and captivates them. (OP) Books of the decade Marlon James: A Brief History of Seven Killings (2014) The Booker-winning A Brief History of Seven Killings, by Jamaican-born Marlon James, follows the lives and deaths of seven of the would-be killers in the failed 1976 assassination attempt on Bob Marley. The novel cleverly weaves fiction and fact – and the language has a musical rhythm. Some of the epiphanies in the book are linked to songs. (MC) Books of the decade Raynor Winn – The Salt Path: A Memoir (2018) Terminal illness and bankruptcy shouldn’t make for an inspiring read but they somehow do in Raynor Winn’s poetic, provocative memoir. After losing the family home, Win and her husband set out to walk the South West Coast path, shaking a fist at his grim diagnosis. It’s as much a meditation on the power of nature as Books of the decade Nina Stibbe – Love, Nina: Despatches from Family Life (2013) There’s deadpan and then there’s Nina Stibbe, who proves herself the heir to Adrian Mole in this novel written in the form of letters to her sister from a child-minding job in London. A provincial girl grappling with the strange salads of the metropolitan literary elite, Stibbe is comic gold. (CR) Books of the decade Patrick deWitt – The Sisters Brothers (2011) The assassins Eli and Charlie Sisters were played by John C Reilly and Joaquin Phoenix in the film version of Canadian-born writer Patrick deWitt’s second novel. The narrator Eli captures the lawless, unpredictable nature of frontier life in the mid-19th century. The Sisters Brothers is a compelling, unsettling tale of the Gold Rush era. (MC) Books of the decade Gail Honeyman – Eleanor Oliphant is completely fine (2017) Every office has its misfit, and this is the funny, deeply touching story of a woman whose aversion to social niceties and the work Christmas lunch hides a traumatic past. Common acts of kindness rekindle the protagonist in this beautifully told debut. (CR) Books of the decade Anna Burns – The Milkman (2018) Anna Burns became the first writer from Northern Ireland to win the Man Booker Prize, when she triumphed with The Milkman in 2018. Burns’s challenging, intriguing novel presents an unnamed 18-year-old girl’s perspective of her life during the Troubles in the Seventies. The 41-year-old paramilitary leader known as “the Books of the decade Sophie Mackintosh – The Water Cure (2018) Thanks to Margaret Atwood and the state of the world, feminist dystopian fiction is having a moment and Sophie Mackintosh’s The Water Cure is a notable contribution to the genre. It is perhaps one of the most creative of additions, cleverly weaving mystery and murder with sex and sisterhood, all while Mackintosh seduces the reader into her Shakespearean realm. (OP) Books of the decade Anne Tyler – A Spool of Blue Thread (2015) Anne Tyler is a master of stories about family life in middle-class America. A Spool of Blue Thread, the 20th novel from the author of The Accidental Tourist, adroitly shines a light on sibling rivalry, family secrets and the wounding power of grief. Her tale of four generations of the Whitshanks demonstrates again her gift for comic detail. (MC) Books of the decade Anne Enright – The Green Road (2015) The Green Road, by Dublin-born Anne Enright, is set in County Clare, a wild place geographically and emotionally. Enright’s keen gift for observation is at play in this family saga based around Hanna, Dan, Constance and Emmet’s Christmas return to the home that their scary matriarch, Rosaleen, is selling. A funny, painful tale of selfishness and compassion. (MC) Books of the decade Amor Towles – A Gentleman in Moscow (2016) The gentleman in question is Count Rostov, a bon vivant and aristocrat placed under house arrest in a fancy Moscow hotel after the communists seize control. His wit and enduring humanity make this charming, quirky novel sing. (CR) Books of the decade Elif Batuman – The Idiot (2017) When fact meets fiction, the result is almost always fascinating as the reader spends hours trying to discern which is which. Such is the appeal of The Idiot, Elif Batuman’s debut novel, which tells the semi-autobiographical tale of a young woman studying at Harvard in the mid-Nineties. After pontificating on the purpose of email, she soon becomes obsessed with an enigmatic Hungarian student whose insouciance will leave you spinning in a state of total frustration. (OP) Books of the decade Orhan Pamuk – The Red-Haired Woman (2016) Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk’s 10th novel was the short, stunning The Red-Haired Woman, which is at once a fable and a gripping tale of youthful obsession, exploring protagonist Cem Celik’s desire for the red-haired, enigmatic member of a theatre troupe. The father-son relationship in the novel also allows Pamuk to deftly explore the changing nature of Turkey. (MC) Books of the decade Ariel Levy – The Rules Do Not Apply (2017) A dazzling insight into the mind of one of The New Yorker’s most prolific writers, Ariel Levy’s memoir will seem relatable to all those who have at one time or another felt a startling sense of dissociation from their life, which is probably most of us. Levy’s personal tragedies will leave readers reeling. There is one passage in particular that will stay with you for months in which Levy describes how she suffered a miscarriage on a hotel room floor while on an assignment in Mongolia. She was 19 weeks pregnant at the time and her son, born alive, died in her arms. It is a story of resilience to the highest degree. (OP) Books of the decade Marilynne Robinson – Lila (2014) Lila was the third novel in Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead Chronicles – following Gilead (2004) and Home (2008) – and tells, in unflinching terms, the story of Lila, the young woman who married the elderly Reverend Ames in a dusty Iowa town. Robinson writes beautifully and, as a sophisticated religious thinker, asks searching questions about faith and doubt. (MC) Books of the decade David Sedaris – Calypso (2018) There are few writers as gloriously strange, acerbic, funny and faintly ruthless as Sedaris, who once again mines his family history in this collection of autobiographical short stories. It includes a tale in which he feeds his Books of the decade Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie – Americanah (2013) Both a love story and a look at how racial divides play out in the UK and the USA, Americanah is as enchanting as it is thought-provoking. It’s impossible not to root for Ifemelu, the clever Nigerian ingenue who ends up struggling to find a minimum wage job as she studies in America. (CR) Books of the decade Julian Barnes – The Sense of an Ending (2011) Julian Barnes’s novella The Sense of an Ending is a subtle examination of the search for answers to life’s unresolved relationships. The divorced sexagenarian protagonist Tony Webster, is thrown into emotional turmoil when he receives an unexpected bequest that prompts him to reconnect with a college girlfriend. He is forced to face up to “the accumulation, the multiplication, of loss”. (MC) Books of the decade Tara Westover – Educated (2018) No matter how many documentaries you watch or books you read on Mormonism, it’s almost impossible to understand such a community from the outside. Tara Westover opened people’s eyes with Educated, explaining how she went from growing up in a Mormon fundamentalist family in Idaho to studying for a PhD at the University of Cambridge. It’s an inspiring story of grit and determination that doubles up as an homage to the power of self-education and, well, reading. (OP) Books of the decade Maggie Nelson – The Argonauts (2015) Few things reinforce tired gender clichés like marriage and parenthood, so huzzah for Maggie Nelson with this subversive memoir. It subjects romantic love, pregnancy, motherhood and all the attendant tedious cultural baggage to an intensely intelligent, glittering critique. (CR) Books of the decade Richard Ford – Canada (2012) In Canada, retired English teacher Dell Parsons, the son of hapless bank robbers, looks back on the heart-breaking events of his teenage years and tries to “take account” of how his life was shaped. The settings include Great Falls, Montana, and Saskatchewan in Canada, but it’s Richard Ford sure-footed journey over emotional terrain that is so utterly majestic. (MC) Books of the decade Donna Tartt – The Goldfinch (2013) A 13-year-boy survives a terrorist bomb that kills his mother at an art museum, and as he stumbles through the wreckage, he takes a small painting called The Goldfinch. The tiny relic of the Dutch Golden Age becomes a source of both solace and enigma in Tartt’s superb, Pulitzer-winning third novel. (CR) Books of the decade Jonathan Franzen – Freedom (2010) Walter and Patty Berglund, the seemingly perfect couple who meet at college in the 1970s, are at the heart of Jonathan Franzen’s fourth novel. The story of their unravelling marriage is explored in a rich, nuanced novel. Freedom is more than just a tale of wedded unbliss: it is about the messiness of love and longing in the modern world. (MC) Books of the decade Elif Shafak – Honour (2011) A sprawling, multi-generational tale of a Turkish family who make a new life in London, this novel has a so-called ‘honour killing’ as its centre of gravity. Shafak, a best-selling author in Turkey and many other countries, conjures up the hypocrisy that holds women to different standards, with devastating results. (CR) Books of the decade Helen Macdonald – H Is for Hawk (2016) When Helen Macdonald lost her father, she acquired a hawk. This idiosyncratic approach to grief makes for a lyrical, moving probe into both the process of mourning and our relationship with the natural world. (CR) Books of the decade Margaret Atwood – The Testaments (2019) Not just a novel but a fully fledged cultural phenomenon, the sequel to the Handmaid’s Tale was met with midnight readings and fans decked out in the creepy red and white gowns from the TV adaptation of the original. A superb and suspenseful exposé of misogyny and the moral ambiguity at the heart of a fanatical regime. (CR) Books of the decade Jennifer Egan – A Visit from the Goon Squad (2010) Time is a central theme of Jennifer Egan’s vibrant A Visit from the Goon Squad, which interconnects stories involving Sasha, a kleptomaniac New Yorker in her mid-thirties, and her music business boss Bennie Salazar. The problems of relationships are explored in a witty novel that has interesting things to say about the loss of vitality in the digital world. (MC) Books of the decade Matt Haig – Reasons to Stay Alive (2015) There’s a reason why Matt Haig’s writing on mental health has earned him such high praise, with the Duchess of Sussex among his fans. And it all started with this bestselling memoir in which the children’s fiction author describes falling into a deep depression in his early twenties that left him contemplating taking his own life. It’s not an easy read, but in a society where suicide remains grossly misunderstood and gender stereotypes hinder men from speaking openly about their mental wellbeing, it’s a crucial one. (OP) Books of the decade Arundhati Roy – The Ministry of Utmost Happiness (2017) Twenty years after her stunning debut The God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy followed up with the mesmerising The Ministry of Utmost Happiness. With biting ironic wit, Roy’s epic dissects life in India in the wake of the partition conflict. The characters, including the transgender woman Anjum, are intimately drawn. Roy’s novel challenges you to care about life. (MC) Books of the decade Sally Rooney – Conversations with Friends (2017) The fêted 27-year-old author has acquired a reputation as a millennial literary powerhouse since her debut in 2017. While Rooney has gone on to publish a second novel, Normal People, which was shortlisted for this year’s Man Booker Prize, Conversations with Friends remains her best work. With its snappy short sentences, sophisticated plot and characters so complex that it’s hard to like any of them, the novel established Rooney as one of the most exciting new writers around. (OP) Books of the decade George Saunders – Lincoln in the Bardo (2017) Lincoln in the Bardo tells the story of a single night in the life of Abraham Lincoln – when his 11-year-old son was buried – through an experimental tale involving 166 narrators in the bardo, the transitional state between one’s death and rebirth, according to Tibetan Buddhism. George Saunders’ enchanting tour-de-force won the 2017 Man Booker Prize. (MC) Books of the decade Lisa Taddeo – Three Women (2019) In 2019, female desire warrants shrewd examination more than ever. Thank goodness, then, for Lisa Taddeo, who spent eight years documenting the sexual experiences of three very relatable but very different women. The result is a powerful collection of interspersed narratives that probe the most intimate corners of the female psyche. I can think of nothing like it. (OP) Books of the decade Paul Beatty – The Sellout (2015) An outrageous satire of contemporary race relations, Beatty’s The Sellout tells the story of a black man called Bonbon who is seeking to reinstitute slavery and segregation. When it won the Booker, the chair of the judges compared Beatty to Swift and Twain. (CR) Books of the decade . Hilary Mantel – Bring Up the Bodies (2012) The sequel to Mantel’s Booker-winning Tudor tour de force, Wolf Hall, Bring up the Bodies did not Let Down the Readers. Her immersive prose takes us back into the poetic, rigorous mind of the archetypal career politician, Thomas Cromwell. The subject is the stuff of school days – Henry Tudor’s marriage to Anne Boleyn, and her fatal failure to produce a male heir. To allow another marriage and safeguard the stability of the country, Cromwell engineers Boleyn’s downfall, constructing capital charges against the queen along with a few of his old enemies to boot. Despite the biggest spoiler in history, Mantel’s novel is so finely pitched that we feel all the tension of the luxurious, blood-tinged Tudor court. (CR)

Read wherever and whenever you can

The hardest thing about lots of reading is finding the time. I do it for 30-40 minutes in the morning on my way to work, for most of my lunch hour, and again on the way home.

I found that having a book in my bag meant it was more of a hassle to get out, and so I was more likely to just keep my headphones on. So, I now always go out the door with a book in my hand – that way I can start as soon as the opportunity arises. This is tricky with bigger titles and hardbacks, but totally fine for my majority of pocket-sized paperback novels.

I do sometimes read a bit in the evening – although I do have a husband who likes to speak to me occasionally and watch TV, so in reality, this is the time I read least. Weekends, holidays, lieu days and travelling are all opportunities to squeeze in a little bit more. I also found a way to fit in books while I was busy or on the go.

Audio books are your friend

Hear me out. When it comes to media, I’m as traditional as they come. I have so many books at home, I fear I’ll cause the collapse of our entire block. I work in digital media but keep print newspapers. I still buy CDs, for crying out loud. However, I have been converted to audio books – eight of which make up my list – and it has been an invaluable help.

Audible is a very easy app to use, and has lots of great deals, so I found that I could indulge in more books while I was in the gym, or walking around, or cooking dinner at home in the evening. Like most people, I’d really got into long-form podcasts in recent years, so this felt like a natural step up.

And this didn’t just feel like I was rushing through more books. If anything, I found some titles were really enriched through audio. I can still remember listening to Michelle Obama narrate Becoming, with her warm voice talking me through her life story while I took summer walks through Hyde Park on my lunch break. And I’ve careered through a few Henning Mankell novels on dark, early morning starts – imagining the surrounds of rural Sweden, even while I bustle through central London.

I will admit I’m more likely to buy novels on Audible that I know I wouldn’t keep as a physical copy, and when it comes to non-fictions and the kind of big tomes you like to have on the shelf, I still want that physical hardback. But audio books have their purpose too – use them.

Join a book club

Last June, I joined a gay book club that meets once a month to discuss a gay-themed book for a few hours. Well, we discuss the book for about 20 minutes before moving on to more pressing matters like the underappreciated performances of Christine Baranski. This has given me even more reason to keep up my reading – although I will never forgive them for making me read Little Women, of which I hated every minute (don’t @ me).

Read what you want and stop when you want

This seems a simple one, but I’ve mostly only read books I really wanted to read; books I was itching to start. This way, I found myself much more likely to go through it at speed, and much more likely to actually enjoy it. I’ve decided I’m not a big fan of Tom Clancy, but I will be going back for more from Karl Ove Knausgaard. Equally, I have gobbled up many volumes on Irish politics, which are probably not going to be for everyone.

I’ve always finished every book I started, but this year I learnt to relieve myself of this strict policy. I first tried to read Robert Bolano’s 2666 nearly 10 years ago, and only got a third of the way through, so I tried it again this year. I got almost halfway, but I still just didn’t like it. So I gave up – and it felt liberating. Now I just need to decide when it’s OK to give up. After a few pages? A third of the way through? Halfway through? Answers on a postcard please.

Conclusion

I read a lot of good books this year. My favourite in fiction was probably Colm Toibin’s 1996 novel The Story of the Night, about a young gay man coming of age in 1980s Argentina, although my favourite new release was Sally Rooney’s depiction of class-conscious Irish millennials in Normal People. I also dived fully into Armistead Maupin’s fantastic Tales of the City series for the first time this year and can’t believe I’ve left it this long.

My best pick in non-fiction is Say Nothing by New Yorker journalist Patrick Radden Keefe. It’s quite possibly the best book about the Northern Ireland Troubles, which is part history and part true-crime thriller. I also really enjoyed Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari, and spend literally months retelling the amazing things I’d learnt about humankind from it, as my friends will attest.

I’m not going to give myself a crazy target for next year. If I land somewhere between 30 and 40, I’ll be happy. And if I break any new records, I’ll let you know.

My 2019 reading list in full:

Heroic Failure: Brexit and the Politics of Pain – Fintan O’Toole

Night of Camp David – Fletcher Knebel

Normal People – Sally Rooney

Breaking News: The Remaking of Journalism and Why It Matters Now – Alan Rusbridger

They Both Die At The End - Adam Silvera

Election Fever: Groundbreaking Electoral Contests in Northern Ireland – Alan F. Parkinson

Leo Varadkar: A Very Modern Taoiseach – Philip Ryan and Niall O’Connor

Jiving at the Crossroads – John Waters

The Story of the Night – Colm Toibin

The Border: The Legacy of a Century of Anglo-Irish Politics – Diarmaid Ferriter

The Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruiz Zafon

The Hunt for Red October - Tom Clancy

Conversations with Friends – Sally Rooney

Mythologies – Roland Barthes

Tales of the City – Armistead Maupin

The Almost Nearly Perfect People – Michael Booth

Cosmopolis – Don DeLillo

Say Nothing – Patrick Radden Keefe

Convenience Store Woman – Sayaka Murata

Ulster Alien – Stephen Birkett

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind – Yuval Noah Harari

Please Look After Mother – Kyung-Sook Shin

Patriot Games – Tom Clancy

The Stonewall Reader – Jason Baumann (Editor)

My Brother’s Husband (Vol 1) – Gengoroh Tagame

My Struggle Book 1: A Death in the Family – Karl Ove Knausgaard

History of Violence – Edouard Louis

Becoming – Michelle Obama

Tin Man – Sarah Winman

The Abolition of Britain – Peter Hitchens

Bad Blood: A Walk Along the Irish Border – Colm Toibin

Modern Romance – Aziz Ansari

The Girl Who Takes an Eye for an Eye – David Lagercrantz

More Tales of the City – Armistead Maupin

Red, White & Royal Blue - Casey McQuiston

Notes on a Nervous Planet – Matt Haig

The White Lioness – Henning Mankell

Talking To My Daughter About the Economy – Yanis Varoufakis

The Ten Loves of Mr Nishino – Hiromi Kawakami

National Populism: The Revolt Against Liberal Democracy – Roger Eatwell and Matthew Goodwin

Dancer from the Dance – Andrew Holleran

Burned: The Inside Story of the ‘Cash-For-Ash’ Scandal and Northern Ireland’s Secretive New Elite - Sam McBride

Animal Farm – George Orwell

Further Tales of the City - Armistead Maupin

Little Women – Louisa May Alcott

Educated – Tara Westover

We Have Always Lived in the Castle – Shirley Jackson

The Year of Living Danishly - Helen Russell

The Reluctant Fundamentalist - Mohsin Hamid

A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens

Sushi & Beyond: What the Japanese Know About Cooking – Michael Booth