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What Have You Read This Year?

S. Gomez

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
Should be easy to figure out what this topic is. What books have you read this year? I'm all about reading (but love movies as well) and I always read a ton each year. These were some of my highlights:

  • The James Bond books by Ian Fleming (started the series in 2007, finished it in 2008)
  • Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen
  • Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
  • Fatherland by Robert Harris (what started off as a choice for a 'lighter read' quickly became surprisingly deep)
  • Blankets (An Illustrated Novel) by Craig Thompson
  • Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
  • The Hyperion/Endymion quartet by Dan Simmons
  • The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield
  • Armadale by Wilkie Collins
  • The Time Machine and The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells
  • At The Back of The North Wind by George Macdonald
  • The Thin Man by Dashiell Hammett
  • The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas (Translated by Richard Pevear)
  • The Martian Chronicles and The October Country by Ray Bradbury
  • By Neil Gaiman: Coraline, Fragile Things: Short Fictions And Wonders, The Graveyard Book, Neverwhere, and finally finished The Sandman.

I was also (finally) introduced to Peanuts and Nathaniel Hawthorne. I feel like it's been a good year in reading for me.
 
Read:

Watchmen by Alan Moore (Great)
The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffeneggar (Best book I've read in years)
The Choice by Nicholas Sparks (stupid mistake!)
The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall (Good, not great--but a good head trip)
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro (Kinda dull, nice plot twist, last two pages made me cry)
The Surrender by Toni Bentley (an erotic memoir about the authors embrace of anal sex. Actually kinda boring)
The Abstinence Teacher by Tom Perotta (okay, expected better from him)

Currently Reading:

Twilight by Stephanie Meyer (Dumb and ridiculous yet a page-turner, won't be reading the rest)
Lush Life by Richard Price (fantastic prose so far, neat mystery)
A Game of Thrones by George RR Martin (I hate fantasy but love this book a lot)
The Lost Fleet: Fearless by Jack Campbell (I hate sci-fi but found this book series fairly good)

Next up:
After Dark by Haruki Murakami
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
 
I've read quite a lot this year!

http://kirareads.blogspot.com/

I haven't read much in the past couple of months, though. I just finished Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates, and I have Brideshead Revisited and The Tennant of Wildfell Hall next on my list. My goal was to read 50 books this year- I went well over that! :D
 
In no particular order:
Six Terminator novels.
Battlestar Galactica: Sagitarius is Bleeding
The Dark Knight novelization
Star Wars Darth Bane Path of Destruction (currently reading the sequel, The Rule of Two)
Roughly 30 Star Trek novels (maybe more) encompassing all the various series
All of Richard Hatch's Battlestar Galactica novels

And maybe more. I read so much, I can't remember half of them.
 
Oh shoot, something I've (re)discovered this year is the joy of listening to audiobooks. When read by the right voice, they're perfect to send me off to Slumberland. Listened to the whole of The Chronicles of Narnia (some fantastic actors, including Derek Jacobi, Kenneth Branagh, and Patrick Stewart). Neil Gaiman does his own work very well indeed; I went through Fragile Things, M Is For Magic and Coraline. I just finished a set of a few Sherlock Holmes stories and desperately want to find the rest.
 
So far this year I've read

The Absolute Sandman (just recently finished the fourth and final volume. Amazing stuff, first time I've ever read it)
V for Vendetta
Watchmen
The Temple of the Golden Pavillion
Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets
The Corner: A Year in an Innercity Neighborhood
Writing in Restaurants
Letters to a Young Poet
The Stand
Bag of Bones
I am Legend

I'm sure there are others too but I can't quite remember
 
I've read a ton of stuff. Definitely over 50 books. Not sure how much more than that. Majority of it was various non-fiction titles.
 
The second Dexter novel: "Dearly Devoted Dexter."

And my first Lois McMaster-Bujold novel, "Paladin of Souls."

Plus some other stuff I can't remember right now.
 
Mornings on Horseback by David McCullough and
The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Morris

--both of them fascinating biographies of Theodore Roosevelt depicting different points in his life, also The River of Doubt by Candice Miller, which chronicled Teddy's (and a team of men, of course) trip down a then unnamed tributary of the Amazon River in 1914, five years after he left the presidency. I read the first on recommendation of a friend then searched out the others. I had NO IDEA what a bizarrely fascinating individual he was; there was so much more to Theodore Roosevelt than a myopic, jingoistic president bent on expansion of America's power. I had no idea that he was a severe asthmatic as a child or that he had a weak heart, which is probably why he died when he was only 60. He'd been warned against strenuous physical activity by a doctor when he was young but refused to live a sedentary life. His wife didn't want him to go down the Amazon (with their son no less) but he felt he had to do it. He was also a mad lefty hippie conservationist (also an avid hunter) and an author of many books.

I also read Edith Kermit Roosevelt: Portrait of a First Lady by Sylvia Morris. It chronicled the life of Theodore's wife, Edith, with whom he had 6 children. I had no idea that Theodore's oldest daughter, Alice--who was such a hellion that she constantly made the papers with her antics--was actually the child of his first wife. I'd had no idea that there was a first wife (who died from kidney disease 2 days after baby Alice was born). Theodore never spoke of his first wife again after the funeral. Never. He refused to talk about her to their daughter. In fact, he called Alice "Baby Lee" or "sister" because his first wife's name had been Alice Lee. That's how severe his denial was of his grief...he didn't speak the name "Alice" unless he absolutely had to do it. The only way he could function was to suppress his grief completely.

In fact, there's a surviving letter showing that Roosevelt would have given up custody of his daughter to his older sister, Anna. He left baby Alice with Anna for 2 years after her birth while he went out to the badlands to try his hand at cattle ranching. Edith had been a childhood friend of his with whom he reconnected when he travelled back to New York for a month after his first year out west. He married her a year and a half later after he returned to New York for good. It was Edith who insisted he take his daughter back from his sister. Not Theodore. He was perfectly content to leave little Alice with her aunt. His denial of his first wife would have been complete had his second wife not insisted the child come back into their home. Alice would have been raised by her paternal aunt and her surviving maternal grandparents had her stepmother not insisted the 3 year old girl come home to Sagamore Hill to live. Theodore and Edith were married until he died. Ironically enough, they were better suited for each other than Teddy and the first Alice had been, though he'd loved Alice dearly.

How's that for an interesting bit of psychology on Theodore?
 
Those that I can remember:


First off, I have to mention this:

THE ROAD - one of the most extraordinary books I've ever read. Cormac McCarthy. Go pick it up - seriously.


Astrophysics of the Diffuse Universe - Dopita ... Niche audiences only

This Republic of Suffering - Drew Gilspin Faust - ABSOLUTELY a fantastic read. Effectively about death in the Civil War. Really about America as a whole. Great read.


THE ALGEBRAIST - Iain M. Banks. Pick it up.

GUNS, GERMS, AND STEEL - Jared Diamond

Radiative Processes in Astrophysics - Rybicki and Lightman

Ringworld - Larry Niven
 
How's that for an interesting bit of psychology on Theodore?
Not bad at all! Biographies are so fascinating.

On a long shot: Has anyone read a book called A People's Tragedy by Orlando Figes? It's a book about the Russian Revolution, and I ask because I'm thinking of picking it up at the library tomorrow. Pretty thick, though.
 
Torts, 10th Edition (Prosser, Wade and Schwartz) by Schwartz, Kelly and Partlett
Crimnal Law and Procedure, 10th Edition by Boyce, Dripps, and Perkins
Cases and Materials on Contracts (University Casebook Series) by E. Allan Farnsworth, William F. Young Jr., Carol Sanger, and Neil B. Cohen
Civil Procedure by Stephen C. Yeazell


School has ruined reading for me. I guess you can read for pleasure, too? That seems so weird.


-nobody
 
I mainly read non-fiction, plus murder mysteries and the occasional sci-fi book

Books that I remember reading this year.

Miracle of the Andes - Nando Parrado

Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors - Piers Paul Read) (this is about the fourth time I have read this book - I reread it before reading Nando's book)

Children of England : The Heirs of King Henry VIII - Alison Weir

Man Flies: The Story of Alberto Santos-Dumont - Nancy Winters

Collapse - Jared Diamond

Pack of Thieves: 52 Port Arthur Lives - Hamish Maxwell Stuart and Susan Flood

Hijack: The Real Story of the Heroes of Flight 705 - David Hirschman (this is about the FedEx Flight that was hijacked by a FedEx employee. The flight crew were severely injured but managed to fight off the hijacker and land the plane).

And the four books in the Inspector Erlendur series by Arnaldur Indridason.

Silence of the Grave
Jar City
Voices
The Draining Lake

These are murder mysteries set in Iceland. The fifth book in the series is due out early February 2009.

I am currently reading

The World Beneath the City: Hobart Underground - Peter MacFie. This book deals with the the buried waterways, water and sewerage systems, tunnels, drains and air-raid shelters that exist or used to exist under my city. It sounds boring but is really quite interesting.
 
Actually, the only thing I've read this year is World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie Wars.

Awesome.
 
LOTS! including every Ultimate Marvel collection i own...

others include:

Order 66: A Republic Commando novel is 5/5

Destiny: Gods of Night is 5/5

Titan: Sword of Damocles is 5/5

TNG: Greater Than the Sum is 5/5

Klingon Empire: A Burning House is another 5/5

Dale Brown's Dreamland: Retribution is 4/5

but Strike Force by the same author was 5/5

Buffy: Blackout was 5/5

the collection of New Frontier: Turnaround was 5/5

currently reading Dreamland: Revolution with Destiny: Mere Mortals after that.

I also re-read the entire HP series and a LOT of Discworlds...

Tek War which was 2/5

and some old old Trek tie-ins; Corona (2/5), Planet of Judgement (1/5) and Mudd's Angels (1/5)
 
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