I have never kept score. I do know that in the UK, where I mostly lived until 1991 I had a library card at age five. When I was ten years old my parents were so tired of me borrowing their cards to access books not available on my card, they lobbied for me to have a card of my own for the adult's library. I usually had three books out at any given moment, and went to change them once a week. I never even imagined the possibility of ebooks in 1966....
When I left the UK the lack of books in english at realistic prices led me to Gutenberg, and to returning from visits to family in UK with bootloads of books from Oxfam etc. I will read in french, but only if that is the language in which the author wrote.
Now I am so glad to have a lifetime supply of reading on kindle, a great deal of it free, and no need to build more bookshelves or catch a bus to the library. In any case, the nearest library which owns more books than I do is 65 km away, and I would have to drive there
I still have many paper books but probably now more ebooks. I sometimes read books from my original Gutenberg DVD, the first one, 10,000 books, which I copied and sent all over the world. Can you imagine what it must mean to live in a third world country with poor or no internet access and to be able to get that DVD for nothing, just by asking for it? It is sad that Michael Hart didn't live long enough to see Project Gutenberg's expansion, he was a man who should have staues erected to him in every library in the world.
Digression over.......enjoy the privilege of being able to read or listen to books every day. Appreciate your good luck, we were born at the right time in the right place., and break down the barriers of ignorance and illiteracy!

for reading this