yes, all the time, i read 111 books last year, not usually that many but lockdown helped. currently reading peter frankopan's the silk roads.
only ever a proper paper book, can't get onboard with a kindle or audiobooks.
I really like travel and non-fiction. Probably about three quarters of my books are non fiction. I've read both the Silk Roads and The New Silk Roads - in fact they're sitting on the books shelf behind me now. Both are excellent. Other NF favourites of mine are William Dalrymple, John Simpson, John Humphries, Jon Ronson, Paul Theroux and, for informative crossed with light comedy and a great turn of phrase, Bill Bryson.
I do have a few novels I've enjoyed. Parrot and Olivier in America by Peter Carey, Netherland by Joseph O'Neill and pretty much anything by Iain Banks spring to mind.
Sadly, to answer the OP's question I've barely read at all in lockdown. I used to commute to work in London and travelled a lot to work with clients. Three hours a day on a train or two flights plus nights alone in a hotel would see me get through books at a huge rate of knots. I felt like I was forever in WH Smiths in a London Station or Gatwick Airport. Now I'm probably looking at a laptop ten hours a day and going no further than my local Tesco. The last thing I want to do when I put the laptop down is read more. I've got the Thursday Murder Club and Alex's Adventures in Numberland lying untouched and unread on the same bookshelf.