Thursday, December 31, 2020

The Big Book Post 2020

Merry bookmas! 

What that tree and 2020 have in common is I did not read very many books in either. My books-completed count is lower this year (10) than in past years (usually between 14 and 18) due to the lack of a subway commute for most of it (where I now realize I get most of my reading done), reduced time out in the world (in other words, away from my TV), and a newfound passion for jigsaw puzzles at home. I've had a puzzle going on my kitchen table almost non-stop since April.

But 10 is more than 0, so let's talk about the books I read this year.

In order

JAN: Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami
JAN: The Library Book by Susan Orlean
FEB: The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin
FEB: Belgravia by Julian Fellowes
MAR: Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister by Gregory Maguire
APR: Other Minds: The Octopus, the Sea, and the Deep Origins of Consciousness by Peter Godfrey-Smith
MAY: Willful Creatures by Aimee Bender
JUN-AUG: half of Outlander by Diana Gabaldon
SEP-NOV: half of The Overstory by Richard Powers
OCT: The Witches by Roald Dahl
DEC: Bel Canto by Ann Patchett
DEC: Medallion Status: True Stories from Secret Rooms by John Hodgman

10 is the number finished, but if you'll allow me to count Outlander and Overstory has half a book each, the count of total books read is 11.

The year was very front-heavy, most of the second half of the year taken up by long or dense books I did not end up finishing. My favorite book of the year was Darkness, garnering my only Goodreads 5-star review of 2020. I did not like Norwegian (which Goodreads tells me was the most popular book on their site that I read this year) or Witches.

One other interesting fact from Goodreads: Medallion was both the least popular (least shelved/reviewed) and highest rated book I read this year, which I think John Hodgman would find appropriate.

By the authors

Of the books I finished, 6 were by men and 4 by women. The authors were British (Fellowes, Dahl), Australian (Godfrey-Smith), Japanese (Murakami), and from the US (the rest). Two are deceased (Dahl, Le Guin). Of the living authors I read, Murakami is the oldest (although only 7 months older than Fellowes) and Hodgman is the youngest at 49. This year, I read my 6th book by Maguire, my 4th by Murakami (and possibly my last, woof), and my 2nd by Le Guin and Hodgman.

By publication date

I read no books that were published this year, but Medallion was the closest at the end of 2019. The oldest book I read was Darkness (1969). The rest were from the eighties (Witches, Norwegian), nineties (Confessions), aughts (Bel Canto, Willful), and teens (Minds, Belgravia, Library, Medallion).

By setting

These books took place largely far from home (NYC). The closest was Medallion, based in Brooklyn but chronicling mostly travel around the country. Library is centered mostly in LA and Willful was mostly non-specific but one assumes the US. The rest were abroad: Belgravia and Witches in the UK, Confessions in the Netherlands, Bel Canto in an unnamed South American country, Norwegian in Japan, Minds off the coast of Australia, and the farthest abroad was Darkness on the planet Winter. All are set in the recent past except Confessions (17th century), Belgravia and Library (19th century), and Darkness (presumably the distant future).

By genre

Fiction (7):

  • Fantasy: 2 (Confessions, Witches)
  • Science fiction: 1 (Darkness)
  • Historical fiction: 1 (Belgravia)
  • Short stories: 1 (Willful)
  • Plain-old novels: 2 (Norwegian, Bel Canto)
Non-fiction (3):
  • History: Library
  • Science: Minds
  • Memoir: Medallion
Awards

No Pulitzers, Man Bookers, or NBAs among the books I read this year. I don't know the literary awards landscape too well, but the ones that seem notable here are the Hugo Award (Darkness) and the PEN/Faulkner award (Bel Canto).

Movies and book clubs
  • After reading Belgravia, I watched the TV miniseries on EPIX (via Amazon Prime)
  • I read Witches with the Page & Popcorn Book & Movie Club. We watched both film adaptations of the book (1990, 2020). I also watched Where'd You Go, Bernadette? (which I read last year), and Little Women and The Hate U Give (which I did not read) with P&P.
  • After reading Bel Canto, I watched the 2018 film with my friend Sue Ha on Prime.
  • After not finishing Outlander, I likewise did not finish the first season of the Starz series on Netflix
  • I watched Crazy Rich Asians (which I read last year) on a plane
  • I watched a few episodes of the new Tales of the City, but this series isn't based on the one book I read (years ago)
  • I watched Unorthodox, a miniseries based on the book by Deborah Feldman, which I read years ago
  • There is no movie made of Minds, but I did watch My Octopus Teacher which was a similar story of a diver connecting with an octopus
How the books came to me
  • Loaners: Norwegian was loaned to me by Holly, Confessions by Lindsay (or maybe "stolen from" would be more accurate), and Minds by my boss
  • Gifts: Library, Belgravia, and Medallion were all gifts from my parents, I believe from three separate birthdays/holidays
  • My bookshelf: Bel Canto and Willful have been in my possession for a while, 4 and 14 years respectively
  • Purchases: Darkness (Housing Works), Outlander (Community), Overstory (Terrace Books), Witches (Center for Fiction)
Goals old and new
  • Library, Darkness, Belgravia, Bel Canto, and Outlander were all goals I set for myself in last year's big book post which I (mostly) achieved.
  • The Starless Sea, The Testaments, and A Favourite of the Gods were goals from the last big book post which I'll carry into 2021.
  • I'm sure I'll come up with other goals as I dismantle the book tree and see what's hiding in there, but I know I will want to read Dreyer's English (which I got this summer on the same trip to Center for Fiction when I got Witches) and Motherless Brooklyn, which my book club just chose as its next selection.
Happy new year and happy reading!

Friday, July 3, 2020

Things I read, watched, saw, and did in the first half of 2020

At last, an excuse (quarantine) to have read so many books and watched so much TV (although you'll notice the quantity is not much different from that of last year's mid-year post).

Keep up with my content consumption and other activities week by week by reading my quarantine diary on Instagram.

Books

I'm one book behind on my reading goal for the year, and it does not help that that book is the 850-page tome Outlander by Diana Gabaldon.

Podcasts

In January, I finished The West Wing Weekly podcast.

My audio obsession of the moment is the You're Wrong About podcast, which I've listened to in its entirety (91 episodes) in the space of a month.

Now that I'm caught up with You're Wrong About, my next podcast of choice will probably be Ologies by Ali Ward.

Puzzles

While I voraciously consume episodes of You're Wrong About, I busy my hands with jigsaw puzzles. The following are puzzles I've completed since April:

  • Eight Arms for You (1000 pieces, a few days)
  • Mammals With Mohawks (500 pieces, one day)
  • Potato Chips (500 pieces, two weeks)
  • Dog Gallery (1000 pieces, a few days)
  • Vegetables/Légumes (1000 pieces, a few days)
  • Owl with pentagram (500 pieces, a few weeks, did not finish)
  • NPR Podcasts (1000 pieces, two days)
  • The New Yorker: A View of the World from 9th Ave (1000 pieces, a few days)
  • NPR: Sound Community (1000 pieces, a few days)
  • Geo Toys: Brooklyn magnetic city puzzle (100 pieces, an hour)

TV (aka things I watched at home)

Series continued:
  • Call the Midwife: season 8
  • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: season 7 (ongoing)
  • The Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj: volume 6
  • Steven Universe: season 5, movie, and follow-up series Steven Universe Future
  • Black Mirror: season 5
  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: season 3
  • Star Trek: Discovery: season 2
  • The Politician: season 2
  • Sex Education: season 2
  • Dead to Me: season 2
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation: various episodes here and there
  • American Crime Story: The People vs. O.J. Simpson: all (rewatch inspired by You're Wrong About)
  • Hannah Gadsby: Douglas (1 and a half times)
  • Ever After (rewatch)
  • Parks & Recreation special
Series started:
  • Breaking Bad: seasons 1-4 (with Cricket and Mark in person)
  • Big Little Lies: season 1
  • Killing Eve: season 1
  • The Good Fight: all (4 seasons)
  • Castlevania: all (3 seasons)
  • Unbelievable: all
  • The Stranger: all
  • Hollywood: all
  • Mrs. America: all (while texting Cricket as we watched simultaneously in our homes)
  • Star Trek: Picard: all
  • Star Trek: Short Treks: all
  • Fosse/Verdon: all
  • Belgravia: all
  • The Great: all
  • Upload: all
  • Ilana Glazer: The Planet Is on Fire
  • One Child Nation
  • Downton Abbey movie (on a plane)
  • Crazy Rich Asians (on a plane)
Movies (streamed):
  • The Laundromat
  • Late Night
  • Bombshell
  • Bad Education
  • Whitney Cummings: I'm Your Girlfriend
Live-streams and virtual watch parties:
  • NYMAAC watch parties: Ant-Man and the Wasp, The 13th, and Just Mercy (via Netflix Party); Where'd You Go, Bernadette? (with the Page & Popcorn Book & Movie Club via Kosmi); West Side Story (via Kast); Jagged Little Pill (via Facebook watch party)
  • Puffs: 3 consecutive Fridays in April of virtual staged readings from the Puffs! canon
  • LGBAC "Home Together" and "Marching With the Band" series
  • Breaking Bad: season 5 (with Cricket and Mark via Netflix Party)
  • Saturday Night Seder
  • Dar Williams on Susie on Sundays
  • Judy's Live on Instagram
  • @Laurateachesyoga live on Instagram
  • Return to Mostly Sondheim
  • My niece's piano recital

In-person viewing

Movies (in theater):
  • Star Wars IX: The Rise of Skywalker (w/Kathryn)
  • Little Women (w/Page & Popcorn)
Live theater/shows
  • Hamilton on Broadway (2nd time, with family)

Things I did
  • Went to Hawaii with my parents and Cricket
  • Played in one concert: QUO Soliloquy of Dreams, Ian's first concert as artistic director
  • Performed and volunteered at LGBAC's Drag Bingo fundraiser at Slate
  • Two trips to NJ for NYMAAC service events, and two more for socially distanced pool parties
  • Celebrated 15 years as a New Yorker and 4 years at my current workplace, and turned 40
  • Went on 0 dates
  • Doodled Chicago and Washington DC
  • Got into a habit of taking regular long walks, and then out of that habit
  • Mourned the loss of Car2Go but welcomed CitiBike into my life
  • Taught some basic music theory to 3 people and led an online trivia night for 13 people
  • Adopted 2 new plants (string of bananas and echeveria) and kept all my other plants alive, and the cats are still alive too
  • Recorded percussion tracks for 4 virtual performances (Can-Can and Les Toréadors for QUO, Baba O'Reilly and Bad Guy for LGBAC)

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

The Big Book Post 2019

The books I read in 2019, in order:

Jan: Vita Nostra by Marina & Sergey Dyachenko
Jan-Feb: Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
Feb-Mar: Grunt: The Curious Science of Humans at War by Mary Roach
Mar: Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann
Mar-Apr: Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan
Apr: My Brother by Jamaica Kincaid
May: The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck by Mark Manson (didn't give the titular f*ck about this book and therefore didn't finish it)
May-Jun: Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari
May-Jul: Birds of America by Lorrie Moore
Jul-Aug: How to Write an Autobiographical Novel by Alexander Chee
Aug: Where'd You Go, Bernadette? by Maria Semple
Sep-Oct: The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
Nov: The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin
Nov: Hiddensee: A Tale of the Once and Future Nutcracker by Gregory Maguire
Dec: Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami (still reading)

It was a lighter year than most, falling 5 books short of my goal of 18. I credit the low count to a lot of time spent reading Sapiens (nearly two months). Goldfinch also took a long time (or at least it felt like it), and I spent the last month of the year reading a book I didn't end up finishing (Norwegian). My favorites all fell in the second half of the year: Hiddensee, Lathe, and Bernadette. I rated Vita slightly lower than them, but in retrospect I'd like to bump that up to a favorite as well, and it was certainly the most interesting book I read last year. Of the books I finished, I liked Brother the least, but will try Kincaid again. Subtle is not worth talking about, and I will discuss Norwegian next year.

Goodreads would like you to know that Goldfinch was the most read on Goodreads of all the books I read in 2019, and it was also the longest book I read (although it took longer to read Sapiens). Lathe was the shortest, Brother was the least read, and Sapiens was the most highly rated (on Goodreads).

By the authors:
I finished books by 8 female authors and 6 male authors. Eight of them are American and the rest are Ukrainian, Korean, Singaporean, Antiguan, and Israeli. All of the authors whose books I finished are older than me, the youngest being Harari (b. 1976) and the oldest being Le Guin (1929-2018). This was my 6th read of Roach's, my 5th of Maguire's, and my 2nd of Tartt's. All other authors I was reading for the first time, but not the last for Le Guin and Kincaid, and I eagerly await the translations of more books by the Dyachenkos.

By publication date:
The oldest book I read was Lathe (1971), separated by a nearly 30-year gap from the 2nd-and 3rd-oldest books, Brother (1997) and Birds (1998). The rest of the books I finished were published in the 2010s, the freshest being Autobiographical in 2018. Two of the books I read were galleys, although in both cases the books had long since been published.

By setting:
The books took place in various locations around the US including New York, Seattle, Portland, Las Vegas, San Francisco, Oklahoma, New Hampshire, and Maine, and also in Russia, Korea, Japan, China, Southeast Asia, the Netherlands, Bavaria, Mexico, Antigua, and Antarctica.

By genre:
Fiction: 8

  • Fantasy: Vita, Hiddensee
  • Humorous: CrazyBernadette
  • Sci-fi: Lathe
  • Historical: Pachinko
  • Short stories: Birds
  • Plain old novel: Goldfinch


Non-Fiction: 5
  • Science: Grunt, Sapiens
  • Memoir/Essays: Brother, Autobiographical
  • History/True Crime: Killers
Vita and Crazy are both first books in a series and I will probably continue them both, but the former is more likely (contingent upon more books in the series being translated).

Major awards:

PachinkoKillers, and Brother were finalists for the National Book Award.

Goldfinch won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

Movies and book clubs:
  • Page & Popcorn: I read Bernadette and Goldfinch with the Page & Popcorn Book & Movie Club, but did not attend either gathering (there wasn't one for the former). I watched the latter on Prime.  I watched The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society with Page & Popcorn this year, which I read in 2009. I started the HBO series adaptation of His Dark Materials (I read the Golden Compass with Page & Popcorn in 2008 and saw the movie, and I read the Subtle Knife in 2009).
  • I read Crazy intending to watch the movie but haven't yet. 
  • This year I watched the miniseries adaptation of Good Omens (which I read in 2015). 
  • I read Sapiens and Subtle with an Astoria gay boys book club, and also discussed Less with them which I read in 2018.

Where the books came from, and why I read them:
  • Gifts: Vita, Pachinko, and Grunt were 2018 holiday gifts from my parents. Vita came recommended from Bethany and Pachinko from Mary.
  • Bought them in a store: Bernadette and Sapiens were intentional bookstore purchases (meaning I specifically set out to buy them) for reading with book clubs. Lathe, Hiddensee, and Brother were thrifts store finds. I had been wanting to try Le Guin and Kincaid.
  • Loans from friends: Goldfinch was loaned to me by Josh and I'm holding it hostage until he visits NYC. I borrowed Killers from my brother-in-law by way of my mom, both of whom read it and loved it. A coworker recommended and loaned me her copy of Autobiographical.
  • I found Crazy in a giveaway box in Kathryn's apartment building.
  • Birds had been on my bookshelf since David Sedaris recommended it on a speaking tour in 2003. I bought it when I was working at Borders and it still has the yellow personal property sticker on the cover.

To 2020!
  • Recently acquired: I got Susan Orlean's The Library Book and Randall Munroe's latest How To from my parents for Chanukah. Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness and Emma Donoghue's The Wonder are recent purchases from the Housing Works bookstore. The Island of Lost Maps jumped off of the shelf of Green Hand in Portland (ME) and into my green hands. Lastly, I nicked How Paris Became Paris (DeJean), The Last Girlfriend on Earth (Rich), and How to Talk About Places You've Never Been (Bayard) from Josh's collection before he left.
  • From the bookshelf: 2019 was the rare year in which I took a book that's been cluttering up my collection for over a decade and read it (Birds). I don't think I'll go as far back as 2003 this year, but here are the books I've pulled off of my bookshelf for consideration in 2020: Mother Night (Vonnegut), Nocturnes (Ishiguro), Bel Canto (Patchett), A Favourite of the Gods (Bedford), Bean Trees (Kingsolver), Belgravia (Fellowes), The Edible Woman (Atwood), A People's History of the United States (Zinn, which belongs to my brother-in-law and I really should return it eventually)
  • In the great beyond: I'm going to try and make time for Dreyer's English this year. I may seek out The Little Friend and finish the Tartt canon. I m hungry for Niffenegger's The Starless Sea and Atwood's The Testaments, but possibly not hungry enough to buy them in hardcover. Although I'll finish Norwegian Wood this year (this month, hopefully), I may want another Murakami. I might read the first books in the Outlander and Song of Fire and Ice series so I can finally start watching those TV shows.
  • Still on my list of movies to watch for which I've already read the books are The Namesake and Remains of the Day, along with the previously mentioned Crazy and Bernadette.