Thursday, January 14, 2010

books of the decade


I’ve been fighting the urge to post a list so close on the heels of another list. That said, January is a “listy” time of year, what with making resolutions and refreshing the “to-do” lists. But, here we go: At some point during my vacation in Princeton, I realized that we were upon the end of a decade. Yes, I’m late to the “close out the aughts” party, but I’ve been hunkered down as an art student with nary a moment to come up for breath. A breath that would allow me to see what I’m missing while mired in deadlines and revisions. Yes, I missed all those fun end-of-the-decade lists of best music, best books, best movies. And I think it’s okay because, as an inveterate list-maker, those round-ups would have driven me to the brink of insanity, if I wasn’t there already. Yet I decided to make my own favorite books of the decade, which was relatively easy to do. I just dipped into the black Filofax where I have recorded my reading habits since 1993. Someday, I’d like to marry this list with the one I started in 1984.





Between the dawn of the millennium until the last day of 2009, I finished close to 400 books (395, to be precise). I don’t keep track of abandoned books, even if I almost finished reading them. Imposing a little discipline to my crazy is sometimes necessary. I love maintaining these lists because they are a great reminder of what I was up to. In the last decade, I had four jobs, one of which had a book group that met over the lunch hour. I had two babies in 2000 and distinctly remember cradling Simon while he napped, reading Mark Kurlansky’s A Basque History of the World. After I left Holtzbrinck in 2000, freeing me to read whatever book struck my fancy but obligating me to purchase my own books, I got the first library card of my adult life. When I see Linda Greenlaw’s fabulous Lobster Chronicles on the list, I’m transported to our first magical trip to Maine. Likewise, Alan Bennett’s subversive Uncommon Reader was devoured on a plane to New York City for a whirlwind weekend of museums and food, while Vincent Lam’s quiet Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures was read in a bright window at Vesuvio’s in San Francisco, channeling the ghosts of Kerouac and Ginsburg. Tony Bourdain’s Cook’s Tour (2002) began an obsession with Thomas Keller and The French Laundry. And the countless books that I have read with the Storknet gals or with my book group trigger warm feelings of community that share the love of reading.


A few statistics:
First book finished in the decade: Galileo’s Daughter (Dava Sobel, read for book group)
Last book of the decade: Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Steig Larsson)
First book checked out on the first library card of my adult life: Two Moons (Thomas Mallon)
Books by men: 179
Books by women: 216
Nonfiction: 113
Fiction: 182





And now, my favorite books, by year, in no particular order. What constitutes a favorite books? Anything I'd press on someone else to read or that I would re-read in a heartbeat. Clearly, some years were better reading years than others! 


2000: Catfish and Mandala (Pham), Interpreter of Maladies (Jhumpa Lahiri), Bee Season (Myla Goldberg), The Fig Eater (Shields)


2001: Operating Instructions (Anne Lamott), Being Dead (Jim Crace), A Walk in the Woods (Bill Bryson), In a Sunburned Country (Bill Bryson), The Corrections (Jonathan Franzen), White Teeth (Zadie Smith), Up in the Air (Walter Kirn), Personal History (Katherine Graham), Lecturer's Tale (James Hynes)


2002: The Hobbit (JRR Tolkien), A Beautiful Mind (Sylvia Nasar), Atonement (Ian McKewn), Life of Pi (Yann Martel)


2003: Empire Falls (Richard Russo), The Quiet American (Graham Green), The Two Towers (JRR Tolkien), Soul of a Chef (Michael Ruhlman), The Singular Pilgrim (Rosemary Mahoney), Eyre Affair (Jasper Fforde), Lobster Chronicles (Liinda Greenlaw), Persepolis (Marjane Satrapi), Bel Canto (Ann Patchett), Don’t Let’s go to the Dogs (Alexandra Fuller), Saul and Patsy (Baxter)


2004: Naked from Baghdad (Paul Auster), Long Quiet Highway (Goldberg), The Photography (Penelope lively), Miles from Nowhere (Savage), Three Junes (Glass), Candyfreak (Steve Almond), Cook’s Tour (Tony Bourdain), Bangkok 8 (John Burdett), Swimming to Antarctica (Lynne Cox), Ender’s Game (Orson Scott Card)


2005: Gilead (Marilynne Robinson), Polysyllabic Spree (Nick Hornby), Man Walks into a Room (Nicola Krauss), Saturday (Ian McKewn), Nice, Big American Baby (Judy Budnitz)


2006: The World to Come (Dara Horn), Toast (Nigel Slater), Age of Innocence (Edith Wharton), Calcutta Chromosome (Amitav Ghosh), Never Let Me Go (Kazuo Iishiguro), The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Muriel Spark), My Life in France (Julia Child), The Big Oyster (Mark Kurlansky), Housekeeping vs. The Dirt (Nick Hornby), Girl in Landscape (Jonathan Lethem)


2007: Shadow of the Wind (Zafon), Henry Huggins (Beverly Cleary), Fieldwork (Mischa Berlinski), Girls of Slender Means (Muriel Spark), Astrid and Veronika (Linda Olsson), Brief History of the Dead (Kevin Brockmeier), Eat, Pray, Love (Elizabeth Gilbert), The Yiddish Policemen’s Union (Michael Chabon), The Year of Magical Thinking (Joan Didion), The Places in Between (Arthur Phillips), Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian (Sherman Alexie), Uncommon Reader (Alan Bennett), Feeding a Yen (Calvin Trillin)


2008: What Is the What (Dave Eggers), Service Included (Pheobe Damrosch), Sunday Philospher’s Club (Alexander McCall Smith), Omnivore’s Dilemma (Michael Pollan), Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (Winifred Watson), Death at La Fenice (Donna Leon), Shark’s Fin and Sichuan Pepper (Fuchsia Dunlop), Then We Came to the End (Joshua Ferris), Hens Dancing (Raffaella Barker), Homer Price (Robert McCloskey), Invention of Hugo Cabret (Brian Selznick), Gumbo Tales (Sara Roahen), French Milk (Lucy Knisley)


2009: Me Talk Pretty One Day (David Sedaris), Revolutionary Road (Richard Yates), Graveyard Book (Neil Gaiman), Script and Scribble (Kittey Burns Florey), Acqua Alta (Donna Leon), Beat the Reaper (Josh Bazell), Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Junot Diaz), Case Histories (Kate Atkinson), How I Live Now (Meg Rosoff), Cold Comfort Farm (Stella Gibbons), Spy Who Came in from the Cold (John leCarre), Elephanta Suite (Paul Theroux), Hunger Games (Suzanne Collins), Catching Fire (Suzanne Collins), Mysteries of Pittsburgh (Michael Chabon), Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Steig Larsson)

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Books Read in 2009

Happy New Year!! 2009 was a somewhat slow blogging year, and I missed writing about the books I'd read. Even so, it was a good reading year. I finished 58 books, which is close to my all-time record. Most of those books were read prior to September 5, which is when I returned to school and become a full-time student. The last quarter of the year has been spent reading design theory course packets and Joseph Albers' Interaction with Colors (seminal color theory and art),  Construction for Interior Designers, but I still managed to knock out Dan Brown's latest blockbuster (though it took me six weeks to read what would normally take a few days). For posterity, here is the list of books that I read in 2009, followed by a sm statistical analysis:


1. Dressed for Death (Donna Leon)
2. Hunger Games (Suzanne Collins)
3. Ghostwalk (Rebecca Stott). book group, 41 for 41
4. Unaccustomed Earth (Jhumpa Lahiri), Conversations with Books, 41 for 41
5. Deltora Quest 04: Shifting Sands (Emily Rodda), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
6. Warriors 02: Fire and Ice (Erin Hunter), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
7. Me Talk Pretty One Day (David Sedaris), audio
8. House (Michael Ruhlman)
9. Death and Judgment (Donna Leon) 
10. Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks (E. Lockhart), Tournament of Books
11. Netherland (Joseph O’Neill) audio, Tournament of Books
12. Revolutionary Road (Richard Yates), book group, 40 for 40
13. Deltora Quest 05: Dread Mountain (Emily Rodda), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
14. Little Bee (Chris Cleave)
15. Warriors 03: Forest of Secrets (Erin Hunter), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
16. Graveyard Book (Neil Gaiman), 41 for 41
17. Yarn Harlot (Stephanie Pearl-McPhee)
18. Little House on the Prairie (L. I. Wilder), 41 for 41, re-read
19. Warrior 04: Rising Storm (Erin Hunter), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
20. Script and Scribble (Kitty Burns Florey) 
21. Acqua Alta (Donna Leon) 
22. Delicate Edible Birds (Lauren Groff)
23. Loving Frank (Nancy Horan) audio, Conversations, 41 for 41
24. Fatally Flaky (Diane Mott Davidson)
25. Other Side of the Mountain (Allegra Goodman), 41 for 41
26. Beat the Reaper (Josh Bazell) audio
27. Warriors 05: Fatal Path (Erin Hunter), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
28. James and the Giant Peach (Roald Dahl), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
29. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle (Barbara Kingsolver), 41 for 41
30. Quietly in Their Sleep (Donna Leon) 
31. Bad Mother (Ayelet Waldman) 
32. Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Junot Diaz), Caryl
33. Case Histories (Kate Atkinson), book group, 39 for 39
34. Barefoot (Elin Hilderbrand)
35. White Mary (Kira Salak) audio, book group
36. How I Live Now (Meg Rosoff), Caryl
37. Warriors 06: The Darkest Hour (Erin Hunter), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
38. Unseen (Mari Jungstedt) 
39. Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing (Judy Blume), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
40. Deltora Quest 06: Maze of the Beast (Emily Rodda), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
41. Cold Comfort Farm (Stella Gibbons), 41 for 41
42. Spy Who Came in from the Cold (John leCarre), read in Sweden, 39 for 39
43. Elephanta Suite (Paul Theroux), 41 for 41
44. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (J.K. Rowling), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics, Sweden
45. Catching Fire (Suzanne Collins) 
46. A Noble Radiance (Donna Leon)
47. You Can Never Find a Rickshaw When It Monsoons (Mo Willems)
48. The Sweet Life in Paris (David Leibovitz) 
49. Race to Dakar (Charley Boorman), read aloud to Mr. Bibliotonic
50. Lightning Thief (Rick Riordan), read aloud to Little Bibliotonics
51. One Good Turn (Kate Atkinson) audio, 39 for 39
52. Secret Speech (Rob Tom Smith) audio
53. Mysteries of Pittsburgh (Michael Chabon), 41 for 41
54. Lost Symbol (Dan Brown)
55. Lost Art of Gratitude (Alexander McCall Smith)
56. Far North (Marcel Theroux), National Book Award finalist
57. Palace Council (Stephen L. Carter), audio
58. Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Steig Larsson), 41 for 41


Statistics
Fiction: 51
Nonfiction: 7
Books written by women: 36
Books written by men: 22
41 for 41 challenge: 11
Mystery/thrillers: 13
Travel essays: 2
Culinary essays: 1
Donna Leon: 5
Children’s: 19
Story collections: 3
Audio: 8
Classics: 4
Graphic novels/memoirs: 1
First novels: 6