My magazine reading is much reduced from years ago. Now down to Backwoodsman, Muzzleloader, and Woodcarving Illustrated. Book reading is extremely varied (a nice word for weird). Hobby-related books on drawing, fly tying, and whittling. Ancient history from Herodotus and Thucydides, especially the Landmark series, and Shelby Foote's Civil War trilogy. Literature can be anything from Canterbury Tales, 18th and 19th century poetry, Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey series, adventure stories by Jules Verne, H. Rider Haggard, Robert Howard (not just the Conan stories), etc. Fantasy by George MacDonald who inspired both Tolkien and CS Lewis. Everything by CS Lewis and Tolkien, both academic and fiction, and related books. (I read Lord Of The Rings every year. Last year was the 57th time.) Then there is what I consider reading just for fun, well-written and fun: the Matt Helm books, Pat Macmanus, early pulp magazine writers, Nero Wolf mysteries, the Liturgical Mystery series by Mark Schweizer (laugh out loud hilarious), and similar. The vast majority of modern fiction is poorly written and predictable. Books on current events are enraging if accurate or disgusting if slanted. Avoiding them leaves more time for reading worthwhile material.
In my sixties I discovered 'childrens' books. Classics like Wind In The Willows, Beatrix Potter, Winnie-The-Pooh, and some newer ones like the Brambly Hedge series, and Gnomes. These are creative and charming and will make you smile. But the illustrations are beyond superb and worth study as art.
A final note. I almost always look for physical copies. I don't like relying on e-books or letting some technical gremlin have access to my library.
Fun topic that got me thinking.
Jeff