For the first time in my life, I kept track of the books I read this year. I was curious how many I read in an average year (67, this year), and I wanted some record to help me remember. I forget things really easily (which is why I love to re-read things. I'm always surprised!). I'm really glad I did - it's been fun to remember the year in books! When I started reading Changeling, I had no idea that by the time I read Snow we would own a house and have another little one on the way! I THINK differently about the world, too, in part because of the wonderful things I've read. I wonder what will happen in my next year of books?
A caveat - I'm easily pleased, especially with books. Mostly, I use reading as an escape. If it takes me somewhere new, I'm happy, even if the writing is not great. That being said, I've bolded my favorites - ones that made me think differently or that were particularly charming. I also wrote down some of my favorite quotes.
Also, there are some spoilers. I've tried to hide them by making them white text, but let me know if there is something I've missed.
Also, there are some spoilers. I've tried to hide them by making them white text, but let me know if there is something I've missed.
"Perhaps there is some secret sort of homing instinct on books that brings them to their perfect readers. How delightful if that were!"
* 2-11. Rapture of the Deep. Jacky Faber book 7. E-book. Jacky goes deep sea diving for gold for the British. She's actually with Jamie for once! Read in a day, as usual.
* 2-25. The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. What a beautiful story. Santiago the shepherd seeks his Personal Legend across the deserts of Egypt. In the same sort of vein as The Little Prince, and touched me similarly. What is my Personal Legend? How to I listen to the omens and to my heart?
"When we strive to become better than we are, everything around us becomes better, too. Love is the force that transforms and improves the Soul of the World."
"Maybe God created the desert so that man could appreciate the date trees."
"If you can concentrate always on the present, life will be a party for you, a grand festival, because life is the moment we're living right now."
* 3-18. Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins. E-book. Recommended by John Green and didn't disappoint! A girl is sent to Paris for her senior year and finds love (after they stop being morons) The characters were full and well-rounded and interesting. The Ellie thing got a little stale, but it was so charming I didn't really care. I devoured it.
* 4-30. Bridget Jones's Diary by Helen Fielding. Silly, light hearted. Her shallowness is a little sad - what she obsesses about is ridiculous, but am I any better? Good fluff to read while moving.
* 5-7. The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley. SO fun. Eleven yr old Flavia has a passion for poisons, and no idea about family relationships. Her Dad has a pretty awesome history too. An awesome mystery in a little English village. Adore. Looks like there are more books - I want!
* 5-30. The Dogs of Riga by Henning Mankell. Wallender book 2, audiobook. Really good detective novel. Wallender is a real life person - its awesome to hear his story. Very believable. And I don't actually know much about Latvia's revolution from the Soviet Union, but this was a fascinating way to approach it. I'll be finding more of these for sure. Bless Amy for getting me onto them!
* 5-2. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. Spectacular. Amazing to write a hopeful book about Nazi Germany. Hans-Papa- was my favorite. I loved his silver eyes. The writing was like poetry - the descriptions of the sky were particularly beautiful. And I always love Death as a narrator.
* 5-16. The Reformed Vampire Support Group by Catherine Jinks. Library book. Really enjoyable. Being a vampire isn't glamorous, it's actually more like having AIDS. Nina and Dave have some adventures, even though they are sick all the time. The descriptions of the pains of vampire-age were awesome.
* 5-18. Soul Music by Terry Pratchett. Library book. DEATH and Susan - two of my favorite characters. Always a romp. Buddy Holly was awesome, too. Abs the Dean - rebel without a pause.
* 5-22. Snuff by Terry Pratchett. Library book. Good, as usual, but I do feel like they don't run as smoothly as they used to. Not sure if it's from Terry Pratchett's Alzheimer's, or cause I'm tired. I do love Vimes, as usual.
* 5-27. The Scar by Sergey and Marina Dyachenko. Audiobook, translated from Russian. And you can tell its a Russian novel! Fascinating story about character and consequences. Curses, swordplay, and eventually, redemption. I agree with Mom - I do wish that the redemption had come sooner, that we could see Egert and Toria in real life. Their relationship was pretty spectacular, though!
* 6-1. The Wake of the Lorelei Lee by L. A. Meyer. Audiobook. Starring Jacky Faber! Always always love it! And the narrator is spectacular! All the various accents and the tunes to the songs are perfectly right!
* 6-5. The Mark of the Golden Dragon by L. A. Meyer. Audiobook. Jacky Faber. This might be one of my favorites. I really liked her interacting with the London ton. The stuff with Mad Jamie kind of felt like an afterthought, though.
* 6-10. The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde. Thursday Next book one. Yay! A wonderful new series! I think this is one that would stand up to rereading very well. There were so many references that I'm sure I didn't catch them all. (it would probably help to read Jane Eyre...) The whole alternate reality is really fun, and LiterTec sounds like the dream job of any English major!
* 6-11. Driving Mr. Dead by Molly Harper. Audiobook. Fluffy romantic novel, but definitely parts to skip. And language.
* 6-11. Driving Mr. Dead by Molly Harper. Audiobook. Fluffy romantic novel, but definitely parts to skip. And language.
*6-14. Lost in a Good Book by Jasper Fforde. Thursday Next book 2. After killing Acheron, changing Jane Eyre to end happily and trapping Jack Schitt in The Raven, Thursday thinks she'll get a break. She didn't account for a little sister trying to kill her with coincidences, or her husband never being born, or having to save the world form being destroyed by Strawberry Dream Topping.
* 6-16. The Well of Lost Plots by Jasper Fforde. Thursday Next book 3. Thursday hides out in a book to have her baby and try to figure out how to get her husband back. She is apprenticed by Miss Havisham and foils a plot to upgrade books. So so much fun. I'm loving these, as evidenced by how quickly I'm reading them! I even went to the Orem library to pick up the rest in the series, because the Lehi library didn't have them.
* 7-9. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. Audiobook. Interesting story with mediocre writing. It needed more editing. The ideas were pretty clever, though, especially with the berries at the end. I'm annoyed by the beginning of the Peeta/Gale thing. It's way contrived, and is unappetizing. And I'm sure it'll only get worse.
* 7-19. The Fourth Bear by Jasper Fforde. A Nursery Crimes Novel. Silly fun, awesome to pick out the nursery rhymes.
* 7-20. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins. Audiobook. Again, interesting story but needed a pickier editor. The pacing was kind of weird. There are some seriously clever moments - the clock arena is really cool, and President Snow is believably vile. I just wish the emotions and dialogue were as well thought out. I'm not sure I'll listen to the third one - everyone I know was really grumpy with it.
* 8-23. To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis. Audiobook. So many genres all in one book! SciFi, history, mystery, romance, its amazing. Its fun to re-read and put the pieces together. I especially love all the Victorian stuff- its always the butler! I have a bunch of book suggestions from it, too, like Three Men In a Boat and Dorothy Sayers. The reader was fantastic, too. All the right voices and emphasises.
* 10-1. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy. Translated by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky. What an amazing book! The breadth of topics it covers is amazing, from adultery and politics to class warfare and society to art and philosophy to Russian history. And spectacularly written. If I ever was tempted to commit adultery, this book would be a great deterrent! Anna's life is so terribly miserable, and it's all because of her own choices. Levin might be one of my new favorite fictional characters. Even when he is doubting, he lives his life in such a lovely way. I love the scene where he threshes with his peasants, and feels so at peace. And the chapter near the end where he realizes that he must live for the soul and remember God is one of the most beautiful and hopeful things I've ever read. I feel like that's how revelation really works - it is a reminder in your soul of something you already knew. I need to buy my own copy of this - its a reread for sure.
"It showed him the eternal error people make in imagining that happiness is the realization of desires."
"But neither of them dared to speak of it, and therefore everything else they said, without expressing the one thing that preoccupied them, was a lie."
"...it was up to him to change that so burdensome, idle, artificial and individual life he lived into this laborious, pure and common, lovely life."
I'm amused that Stepan never quotes things quite correctly.
"Rummaging in our souls, we often dig up something that ought to have lain there unnoticed."
"Spring is a time of plans and projects."
* 10-9. Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner. Very interesting book. I think it might make me more suspicious of conventional wisdom. I don't necessarily think that all of their premises are true, but they all are fascinating.
* 10-17. The Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin. This is the first from the Among Others recommendations. I actually got these books a while ago from Jon. I remember starting this in the tub at our apartment, but it didn't really grab me. I think I had been reading too much modern stuff, so I took a break. This time, I was determined to give it a fair shot. There must be a reason it's so popular! The first thing that struck me (the second time) was the beautiful prose. All of the words are spot on perfect. And when I started letting the words wash over me, the story became so much more interesting! It really does feel like an established legend. And I loved what the shadow's name turned out to be.
* 10-20. The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K. Le Guin. Second in the Earthsea books. Really interesting. I thought Ges would be in it more, but I really liked Tenar. It was less of a legend-feel. We basically lived her life with her. I'm really pleased with all of the self-examination after the collapse of the tombs. It made her a much more real character. I wish I had read these books when I was a kid, and had them as part of my personal mythology. My kids certainly will!
* 10-23. The Farthest Shore by Ursula K. Le Guin. Third in Earthsea series. LOVED it. I don't know if I'm just getting better at reading her style, or if this one was a little different, but it was a much easier, faster read. Maybe I was just more interested in the story. I am kind of sad we didn't get more of Ged's adventures -maybe they'll be in the other books. I loved him as a wise old man who still had some of his personality traits from the first book. And Arren's hero worship was wonderful. It was a great start to the book! Funny - in reading reviews, this seems to be people's least favorite of the series. I guess the eternal optimist in me always knew that they would save the world, and that all the names would return.
* 12-10. A Tree Grows In Brooklyn by Betty Smith. An American classic. A lovely book about growing up poor in Brooklyn before WWI. And seeing to beauty in everyday things - Getting drunk by looking at a tulip, or a cold clear perfect night when you can almost touch the stars. A book like Girl of the Limberlost, that makes me grateful and a harder worker. I think it means more to me now than it would have before being married with a baby. I understand Katie better than I would have, with her thin invisible steel.
Francie's little rituals for reading on the fire escape are a lot like mine for reading in the bath. It makes it special, an event.
"Home at last, and now it was the time she had been looking forward to all week: fire-escape-sitting time. She put a small rug on the fire-escape and got the pillow from her bed and propped it against the bars. Luckily there was ice in the icebox. She chipped off a small piece and put it in a glass of water. The pink-and-white peppermint wafers bought that morning were arranged in a little bowl, cracked, but of a pretty blue color. She arranged the glass, bowl and book on the window sill and climbed out on the fire escape. [...] Francie breathed the warm air, watched the dancing leaf shadows, ate the candy and took sips of the cooled water in-between reading the book."
"The world was hers for the reading."
And the quote that starts with this: "People always think happiness is a faraway thing..."
If you made it all the way to the end, you deserve a prize. So, what's your favorite book you read this year? Or what book has changed the way you look at the world?