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Tracking your reading?
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I don't read to much non-fiction either and only record it on my "read" shelf on Goodreads

So yes, I can track my non-fiction books! No problem. I read lots and lots of them. I adore biographies, both non-fiction and those of historical fiction. What is good about the historical fiction ones are that a good author will get you inside the head of the protagonist, and hopefully this will be correct if they have done a thorough analysis of the character! Unfortunately some books of historical fiction are pure garbage.
I have tons of great biographies. Julia, just check out my bio shelf: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list...
There you can choose which people interest you. I do not use a strict definition. Any book which is about a real person is registered that way. It can be hf or biography or autobiography. I like following people who have lived through historical events. I want to know how history has shaped people and cultures, not a bunch of dates and names, which soon filter out of my brain anyhow. You can also see in the list which books I have read and my rating and there is even a column of the reviews, if you are interested in how I reacted to the book.
I like keeping track of my books.

Wondering, has anyone tried to keep a track of the non-fiction topics you've read?
Thanks in advance!"
I am not a big reader of non-fiction so I just lump all the nonfiction topics together. So my answer is "no". However, if I was going to do it I would create specific shelves such as Chrissie describes.




Anyone else, feel free to chime in, too :) I'm trying to understand the reasons why it's worth building organized shelves and tracking reading.

Oh, well if you are more interested in organized shelving rather than nonfiction shelves, I'll chime in. As Chrissie said, I also use my shelves to help me find books by how I might remember them so I do extensive cross-shelving.
For example, I recently read Bel-Ami which I shelved under guardian (for books from the Guardian newspaper's list of 1000 novels everyone should read), french (because it was written originally in French), classics (because it was written before 1925), kindle (for obvious reasons) and social-commentary (because the novel dealt with society). I could have also put it under humor (since it was a satire). I also am pretty anal-retentive about making sure the reading dates are correct so I can also use GR to find the book by when I read it.
Regarding why I do it (or even have an account here on GR), I love lists so recording my books is a way to combine my love of reading with my love of lists. It's fun for me!


art
biography
botany
entomology
herpetology
history
mammals
maps/mapping
natural history
nature field guides
nature writing
ornithology
science/technical
travel
It certainly helps when looking for particular books on my shelves and I always find it interesting for some reason to see the distribution of subjects. I also split down to some book series, so my New Naturalist and New Naturalist monographs have their own shelves as well.
I wonder at times about splitting my history book shelf, though I need to put some thought into how to divide it (ancient empires, medieval, China/Asia, exploration are possible splits I could make).
Wondering, has anyone tried to keep a track of the non-fiction topics you've read?
Thanks in advance!