Are all books on Goodreads 3.59?

Whenever I look up a book on Goodreads, it feels like I see the same number every time. No matter whether the book was awful or awesome, the Goodreads rating apparently remains stubbornly the same.

Or is that just my memory playing tricks on me?

I read a lot of books this year, and I had Emacs record the Goodreads rating for every book. So now I have data! Behold:

OK, my memory shouldn’t be relied on, but it wasn’t that far off — the mean rating of the books I read was 3.86, but the spread is pretty small — 90% of the books are between 3.4 and 4.5.

It seems like this is a smaller range than on imdb, but perhaps that’s more to do with the range on imdb being 9 and it being 4 on Goodreads.

Let’s math it… If you have a 90% spread of 1.1 on Goodreads, you’d expect a 90% spread on imdb to be 2.5, while it’s… 3, according to Google. Well, that’s not really a huge difference.

But you almost never see ratings charts like this on Goodreads. Because you rarely have brigading going on there, while on imdb it’s pretty common — whenever a movie goes viral for being soooo bad (in one forum or another), you have all these morons going on imdb and rating pretty mid movies “1”. (Or “10” in the opposite case.)

You almost never see a book on Goodreads that has a different shape than this: More than 60% of the votes are going to be 3 or 4 stars.

But do ratings matter? Well, I’ve found that an imdb rating of 6 or less is a pretty solid indication of the movie probably being naff. But so is a rating of 7.5 and up — then it’s either been brigaded, or it’s some mid movie that nerds are totally into. So an imdb rating of around 6.3 is usually a good indicator of the movie being spiffy.

Before I started the book blogging project last year, I assumed that the same would be the case for Goodreads ratings, but… not really? Yes, you have the same nerdiness effect:

Fantasy books, for instance, have a way too high rating. Most of these books were totally mid, but almost all of them have a rating above 4. I.e., fantasy readers have pretty bad taste.

I mean, they’re really enthusiastic about their hobby.

Science fiction readers are similarly enthusiastic, but not to the same degree.

Literature readers, on the other hand, are more realistic — most books are kinda mid.

And perhaps a bit surprisingly — mystery readers are also pretty realistic in their assessments.

OK, these data sets are pretty small, of course, so perhaps I’ve just chosen Totally Fantastic fantasy books to read, and Pretty Mid mystery books? It’s possible, of course. But my conclusion from this is that you should subtract one point from fantasy book ratings, and half a point from science fiction books. If you want a more realistic score.

But overall, I found myself agreeing with the Goodreads score more often than I thought I would. I guess I’m not as contrarian when it comes to books as I thought I am.

Let’s see… can I torture this insignificant data set some more?

That’s how many books per genre I read (or skipped; I dropped 15 of these books mid-reading). I thought the literature/junk ration would be lower…

And I didn’t think my recency bias (heh heh) was that bad, but there you go.

Book Club 2025 Redux

When I started the Book Club 2025 blog series last January, I didn’t really mean to read so many books this year. But it turns out that having a venue to bloviate about what I’d just read somehow made reading books more compelling? It’s the (somewhat) performative aspect of it all, too — not that anybody much actually read these posts. It’s just that doing anything “in public” makes one more obsessive, right?

But the major reason for “why all these books” is because I’ve been feeling under the weather a lot, especially the last half of this year. I think I’m better now? Possibly? It’s also led me to up the trash quotient of what I’ve read a lot, because reading a mystery novel is about the lowest energy setting I have — it’s a lot more relaxing to read a stupid book than to watch a stupid TV show. Watching TV takes more energy.

I’d say my normal literature to trash quotient is 1:2, but this year it’s been more 1:8.

Before I get to the all-important List Of Books, I feel a whole bunch of blathering coming on, because it’s been three days without blogging! My god!

About My Methodolody:

I’ve set aside this portion of the main bookshelf for unread books. There’s, let’s see, 6×3=18 of these cubbies, plus one overflow cubby (not shown here). So that’s, like, 20×18=360 unread books, roughly. When I want to read a book, I go and stand before this shelf, and I feel like I’m at a bookstore that caters to my tastes, which is a very nice feeling.

This is after this year’s reading…

… and at the start of each new year, I compact the books down and to the left. So the bottom left cubby here has the oldest unread books, and the topmost right has the newest. Tu vois ?

So I read about two hundred books (*gulp*) this year — so why isn’t the shelf half empty now!? Because I bought 130 new books.

*sigh*

Well, that’s just what happens when you read a book — it reminds you of other books you might want to read, like All Other Books By This Author, which is a refrain of mine…

Seems to be correct — three and a half cubbies (including the overflow one) have been emptied, and that’s about 70 books… The math is mathing!

Thrilling, I’m sure. Which brings me to more blathering about:

Or rather, lots of people on Twitter talking about what “counts” as “reading a book”.

I just find the entire thing so weird, because I like reading books. It’s like having a discussion about what counts as eating a cake.

“No! Cupcakes don’t count!”

“No! All real cakes are marzipan cakes, and marzipan makes me throw up, so if you eat more than four cakes a year, you’re not savouring the cake!”

“No! All true cakes are made from granola, and give you healthy digestion! If a cake doesn’t improve your digestion, it’s nothing to brag about.”

And here I’m just posting pictures of cakes because I like cakes and I think it’s fun talking about the cakes? Why would anybody consider posting pictures of cakes as being a brag?

But of course, people have these hangups about reading books. Here’s my working hypothesis: Many people don’t really enjoy longform reading, so they invent strange rules (“only Greek philosophy books count”). This has two effects: 1) Whenever somebody else says “I read this book”, they can protect their own egos by saying “that doesn’t count”, and 2) by limiting what “counts” to books to “hard” books, they can feel better about not reading many books, since reading books is hard work.

It’s pretty transparent and somewhat circular logic.

This thread (well, sort of thread) by Joyce Carol Oates about “life changing books” is also apposite — some people have such melodramatic views of literature: They read a book, and if they can’t post “literally life changing” afterwards, it’s not worth it, or something.

Most books are pretty mid, of course. That’s fine — of the following books, 15 were so bad that I abandoned them after starting to read. And I have no compunction about dropping books — there’s an approx. infinity number of good books out there, and a second spent reading something you don’t enjoy is a second you could have been spending on something you do enjoy.

Many people feel differently, and that’s fine. “Perhaps if I persevere, I’ll start liking it? WHAT IF IT TURNS OUT THAT THE LAST PART OF THE BOOK IS THE BEST THING EVER!!!” Well, you’re only going on odds. The likelihood of the last part of the bad book you’re currently reading is going to be great is smaller than the likelihood that some other random book is going to be great.

And it’s not about “hard” books vs “easy” books at all. My approach makes you a more fearless reader — you can start reading any book, no matter whether you think you’re going to like it or not, and no matter how “hard” it looks. If it turns out to have been a bad choice, just go on to the next one.

The one bad thing about this is that sometimes I find myself thinking “eh… am I enjoying this book sufficiently? How about now? Now then?” which is not ideal.

But these books are good. I’ve stashed away last year’s books, and these were the ones that I thought I could remember enjoying particularly much. I may be misremembering, of course. I mean, I wouldn’t want to double-check by clicking on the links down there.

Cover

Year

Author

Title

Goodreads

1977

Robert Barnard

Death of an Old Goat

3.53

1974

Georgia O’Keeffe

Some Memories of Drawings

4.34

2021

Elizabeth H. Bonesteel

Arkhangelsk

4.17

2021

Pet Petterson

Mitt Abruzzo

3.9

1931

P. G. Wodehouse

Doctor Sally

3.69

1987

Paul Auster

In the Country of Last Things

3.91

1988

Charles Reznikoff

Poems 1918-1975

4.48

2022

James S. A. Corey

Memory’s Legion

4.37

2012

Louise Penny

Still Life

3.9

1968

Lawrence Block

Here Comes A Hero

3.68

2020

The Paris Review 234

3.29

1968

Georgette Heyer

Powder and Patch

3.57

1984

Marian Babson

Paws For Alarm

3.3

1990

Marian Babson

Past Regret

3.46

1830

Stendhal

The Red and the Black II

3.86

1933

P. G. Wodehouse

Heavy Weather

4.25

1970

Iris Murdoch

The Sandcastle

3.83

1996

Lois McMaster Bujold

Cetaganda

4.17

2025

Charles Stross

A Conventional Boy

4.28

2004

Alexander McCall Smith

In the Company of Cheerful Ladies

4.09

2021

Mur Lafferty

Station Eternity

3.7

1990

Marian Babson

In the Teeth of Adversity

3.51

2007

John Brandon

Arkansas

3.72

1983

Robert Barnard

School for Murder

3.56

1953

Samuel Beckett

The Unnamable

4.0

2020

Ben Aaronovitch

Tales from the Folly

4.03

1966

Lawrence Block

The Thief Who Couldn’t Sleep

3.75

2024

Rachel Cusk

Parade

3.58

2024

Steven Brust

Lyorn

4.41

2024

The Paris Review #250

3.30

2012

Brandon Sanderson

The Emperor’s Soul

4.38

2022

Helen DeWitt

The English Understand Wool

4.08

2011

John Barnes

Daybreak Zero

3.59

1998

China Miéville

King Rat

3.56

2012

Ursula K. Le Guin

Finding My Elegy

4.03

2005

McSweeney’s #17

3.71

2014

Michael Cunningham

The Snow Queen

3.08

2008

Helle Helle

Ned til hundene

3.66

1980

Marian Babson

Line Up For Murder

3.55

1993

Roberto Bolaño

De romantiske hundene

3.95

2014

Bing & Bringsværd

London 2084

2.93

2015

Umberto Eco

Numero Zero

3.17

2014

Elizabeth Moon

Deeds of Honor

4.34

2021

Tor Eystein Øverås

Fakkelen er tent!

4.5

1995

Robert Barnard

The Bad Samaritan

3.61

1935

P. G. Wodehouse

The Luck of the Bodkins

4.06

1980

Marguerite Duras

L’été 80

3.51

2022

Richard Porter

The Moon and The Echo

2022

Lois McMaster Bujold

Penric’s Labors

4.28

1926

Wallace Thurman

FIRE!!

4.37

2025

Seraphina Nova Glass

Nothing Ever Happens Here

3.53

1990

Robert Barnard

A City of Strangers

3.45

2020

Jandek

The Rays Of Light That Did Not Illumine

4.04

2007

Anne Holt

1222

3.35

2012

Unni Lindell

Djevelkysset

3.49

2002

Jill Paton Walsh

A Presumption of Death

4.02

1992

The Paris Review #122

1984

Richard Stevenson

On the Other Hand, Death

3.92

1997

Anne Holt and Berit Reiss-Andersen

Løvens gap

3.48

1956

The Paris Review #13

2018

Ursula K. Le Guin

The Books of Earthsea

4.46

1986

Richard Stevenson

Ice Blues

3.89

1959

René Goscinny & Jean-Jacques Sempé

Le Petit Nicolas

4.14

1991

Annie Ernaux

Passion simple

3.92

2000

Helen DeWitt

The Last Samurai

4.11

2019

Amy Hempel

Sing to It

3.64

1996

Nan Goldin

I’ll Be Your Mirror

4.64

1992

Richard Stevenson

Third Man Out

4.1

1989

Elizabeth Peters

Naked Once More

3.91

1980

Marion Chesney

Regency Gold

3.43

1936

P. G. Wodehouse

Laughing Gas

3.88

Rex Stout

Fer-de-Lance/The League of Frightened Men

4.22

1981

Barbara Michaels

Someone in the House

3.67

1966

Thomas Pynchon

The Crying of Lot 49

3.69

1964

Philip Larkin

The Whitsun Weddings

3.9

2024

Ken MacLeod

Beyond the Light Horizon

4

1984

M. C. Beaton

The French Affair

3.56

1986

M. C. Beaton

To Dream Of Love

3.79

1986

M. C. Beaton

Those Endearing Young Charms

3.58

2024

M. C. Beaton and R. W. Green

Death of a Spy

3.81

2024

Cherie Priest

The Drowning House

3.43

1970

The Paris Review #251

3.73

2007

Brandon Sanderson

The Well of Ascension

4.38

2020

Emi Yagi

Diary of a Void

3.5

1982

The Paris Review #84

2025

Anthony Horowitz

Marble Hall Murders

4.37

2022

David Sedaris

Happy-Go-Lucky

4.17

2023

Diane Williams

I Hear You’re Rich

2.6

1995

Richard Stevenson

Shock to the System

4.07

1996

Dag Solstad

Professor Andersens natt

3.39

1997

Lao Tzu

Tao Te Ching

4.29

1984

Joanna Russ

Extra(Ordinary) People

3.73

1965

The Paris Review #34

3.5

1937

P. G. Wodehouse

Summer Moonshine

4.1

1996

Tore Renberg

Matriarkat

2.68

2021

David Sedaris

A Carnival of Snackery: Diaries (2003-2020)

4.21

2004

Roberto Bolaño

2666

4.21

2004

C. J. Cherryh

Forge of Heaven

3.9

2009

Lois McMaster Bujold

Horizon

4.06

1992

The Paris Review #124

2014

Emma Healey

Elizabeth Is Missing

3.71

2008

Chip Kidd

The Learners

3.58

2017

Martha Wells

All Systems Red

4.13

2009

Bob Fingerman

Connective Tissue

3.44

M. C. Beaton

A Governess of Distinction

3.77

2025

Ben Aaronovitch

Stone & Sky

4.25

2004

Catherine Asaro

Irresistible Forces

3.52

2023

Lars Sjunnesson

Åke Jävel: Kuken

5

1913

Marcel Proust

À la recherche du temps perdu — Du côte de chez Swann

4.16

2021

Charles Stross

Escape from Yokai Land

3.92

2021

Jen Campbell and Adam de Souza

The Sister Who Ate Her Brothers

4.15

1998

Phyllis Gotlieb

Flesh And Gold

3.39

1903

P. G. Wodehouse

Tales of St Austin’s

3.46

2011

Sara Gran

Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead

3.7

Lizzy Mercier Descloux

Desiderata

3.64

2020

Lawrence Block

The Burglar in Short Order

3.84

2023

Richard Stevenson

Chain of Fools

3.85

2015

Jaakko Pallasvuo

Scorched Earth

4.31

2021

The Paris Review #236

3.67

1994

A. J. Orde

Long Time Dead

3.83

2017

Karl Bartos

The Sound of the Machine

4.28

2024

Tony Tulathimutte

Rejection

3.81

2015

Guro Skumsnes Moe

Ville hester lim på hjertet

2003

Claire McNab

Blood Link

3.91

2017

Mercedes Lackey

Pathways

4.1

1959

Grace Paley

The Little Disturbances of Man

3.94

2024

Miranda July

All Fours

3.44

1968

Barbara Michaels

Ammie, Come Home

3.98

1992

Mary Gentle

Grunts

3.51

1993

M. C. Beaton

The Glitter and the Gold

3.8

1996

Lev Raphael

Let’s Get Criminal

3.79

Bertolt Brecht

Fatzer

3.57

1905

Jack London

The Love of Life

2001

J. T. LeRoy

The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things

3.63

1987

Paul Auster

The New York Trilogy

3.86

1989

Tove Jansson

Rent spel

3.89

1994

Caroline Stevermer

A College of Magics

3.71

2003

Anne Holt

Sannheten bortenfor

3.60

1990

Lois McMaster Bujold

The Vor Game

4.27

1996

Elizabeth Alexander

Body of Life

3.70

2007

Ben Katchor

The Dairy Restaurant

3.60

2001

Julie Hecht

Was this man a genius?

3.72

2018

Martha Wells

Artificial Condition

4.25

2016

Camae Ayewa

Fetish Bones

4.46

2024

Chris Heath

Pet Shop Boys. Annually. 2024

3.80

1996

David Foster Wallace

Infinite Jest

4.25

1987

Lois McMaster Bujold

Borders of Infinity

4.26

1986

Lois McMaster Bujold

The Warrior’s Apprentice

4.27

2018

Mercedes Lackey

The Hills Have Spies

4.04

John Morgan Wilson

Simple Justice

4.15

2025

Per Petterson

Du er hjemme nå

3.83

1939

P. G. Wodehouse

Uncle Fred in the Springtime

4.21

1961

Janet Frame

Faces in the Water

4.02

1958

Lawrence Ferlinghetti

A Coney Island of the Mind

4.16

1995

Jonas Gardell

Frestelsernas berg

3.39

1993

Kjersti Ericsson

Katten stryker seg inntil oss

3.00

1998

Richard Stevenson

Strachey’s Folly

3.78

1993

Jeff Noon

Vurt

4.04

2001

Geir Gulliksen

Våkner om natten og vil noe annet

3.49

2000

Joan D. Vinge

Tangled Up in Blue

3.67

1955

The Paris Review #10

1962

Ann Bannon

Beebo Brinker

3.68

2025

Thomas Pynchon

Shadow Ticket

3.79

2000

Marian Babson

To Catch a Cat

3.79

1960

Rex Stout

Three at Wolfe’s Door

4.1

2004

Anne Holt

Det som aldri skjer

3.56

2006

Stephen McCauley

Alternatives to Sex

3.41

2024

Robert Aman

Serier för vuxna

4.16

2003

Joe Pernice

Meat Is Murder

3.41

2003

Storm Constantine

The Wraiths of Will and Pleasure

4.23

2002

Marian Babson

The Cat Next Door

3.54

1991

Robert Barnard

A Scandal in Belgravia

3.79

1999

Robert Barnard

A Murder in Mayfair

3.54

1991

Eileen Myles

Not Me

4.28

1993

Iain M. Banks

Against a Dark Background

4.1

1987

Marian Babson

Reel Murder

3.5

1952

Agatha Christie

They Do It With Mirrors

3.78

1939

Agatha Christie

Murder Is Easy

3.77

1988

Robert Barnard

At Death’s Door

3.48

2025

Anne Holt

Diamanter og rust

3.98

2025

Agnes Ravatn

Doggerland

4.15

2017

Samuel Hasler

The Gob

1988

Lynda Barry

The Good Times Are Killing Me

4.2

1928

Georgette Heyer

Helen

3.28

1963

Muriel Spark

The Girls of Slender Means

3.65

1997

Jan Erik Vold and Steffen Kverneland

Ikkje

1996

Alice Notley

The Descent of Alette

4.31

2025

Chris Fink

Forage Like A Bear

4.59

1981

Edward O. Phillips

Sunday’s Child

3.56

2025

Helen DeWitt and Ilya Gridneff

Your Name Here

3.74

2018

Martha Wells

Rogue Protocol

4.24

2025

Raymond Biesinger

9 Times My Work Has Been Ripped Off

4.65

1974

Lawrence Block

Make Out With Murder

3.46

2018

Martha Wells

Exit Strategy

4.37

1949

Agatha Christie

Crooked House

4.08

1988

Joe Keenan

Blue Heaven

4.15

1942

Agatha Christie

The Body in the Library

3.81

2024

Robert Jackson Bennett

The Tainted Cup

4.3

1957

Tarjei Vesaas

Fuglane

4.14

1969

Jan Erik Vold

Kykelipi

4.03

2025

Robert Jackson Bennett

A Drop of Corruption

4.49

1982

Robert Barnard

Death and the Princess

3.46

1939

Agatha Christie

And Then There Were None

4.27

*phew*

This year, I’m gonna read more comics and watch more movies.

The Best Comics of 2025

It’s been an OK year for comics? It hasn’t been the best, though — in December, I usually go through best-of lists like The Comics Journal’s to see everything I’ve missed, and there were like … five? … books there that I hadn’t read and sounded interesting (so I’ve ordered them now). That’s almost nothing — usually I find tons and tons of great stuff via those lists.

I.e., I’ve already read almost everything of interest that’s been published.

After Diamond went under, there’s apparently been a great contraction in the US comics “market”. Not only have many micro publishers been left without a distributor (so they’ve disappeared), but the majors (Fantagraphics and Drawn & Quarterly) have cut back heavily on their schedules. Fantagraphics mostly repackages Disney and Marvel (!) comics these days, and NBM went bust recently (after having retreated into publishing Extruded Biography Comics for a while). And other previously reliable outfits (the ones still going, like Fieldmouse and Uncivilized) seem to have retreated into safer (i.e., more boring) territory. It’s a bit depressing.

Well, let’s see what I have here… when I read a comic and I’m totally impressed with it, the comic moves to a special shelf I have here in the living room, and these are the ones that landed there:

Froggie World by Alee Errico (Cram Books)

You can get this from here. It’s great.

Alive Outside edited by Cullen Beckhorn and Marc Bell

This anthology is amazing. It’s a classic. You can get it from here. And it’s on sale! When it’s gone it’s gone.

Life After Life by Joshua Barkman

Get it from here.

World Within The World by Julie Gförer (Fantagraphics)

Wrong by Skeleton Bones (TBC)

I guess this is really CF? And it’s old, but it was republished in 2025, so.

Jaywalk #5 (Domino Books)

Get it from here.

Fruit Salad by Cathon (Pow Pow Press)

Extremely funny book.

A Scientific Study of Transsexuality by Oscard Woodiwiss (Fieldmouse Press)

Get it from here.

Lava by Annika Lind Verdal Homme (Aschehoug)

Norwegian comics!

Cannon by Lee Lai (Drawn & Quarterly)

This is the only D&Q book here — they really scaled back, but they also went even more middlebrow this year, publishing “worthy” book after “worthy” book. This one is really good, though.

Salt Green Death by Katarina Thorsen (Conundrum Press)

This book is fantastic.

Laser Eye Surgery by Walker Tate (Fantagraphics)

Smoke Signal #44 by Gary Panter (Desert Island)

This is sold out, unfortunately.

Lost & Found by Mia Wolff (Fantagraphics)

Smoke Signal #45 by Tara Booth (Desert Island)

Lifehole by Mary Moore Dalton

Get it from here.

And that’s it for 2025, although I’ve got a stack of unread comics, so perhaps there’s more brilliance here:

Or here:

But I also read some older, noteworthy comics. These are mostly from 2024, I guess, but a couple older ones:

Bottlecaps & Breadcrumbs by Travis Head

Whispered Words by David Enos

Neeext! Volume II by Heather Loase

Brilliant.

Kaskelot by Sebastian Larsmo

Six Treasures of the Spiral by Matt Madden (Uncivilized Books)

Processing by Tara Booth (Drawn & Quarterly)

Mythologies and Apocrypha #2 by Tim Lane (Fantagraphics)

Yearly 2024 by Andrew White

I really enjoy these yearly anthologies from Andrew White… and I see now there’s a 2025 and a 2026 out?! *sounds of me ordering them*

Les Trembles by Thomas Merceron (Quintal éditions)

This is a French book, but it’s wordless, so you can read it.

And you totally, absolutely should.

The Retirement Party by Teddy Goldenberg (Floating World Comics)

This one is amazing.

And… that’s it. Another year dawns.