Thursday, December 29, 2022

2022 Big Book Post

In order:

Jan: Passing by Nella Larsen
Jan: Stay Sexy & Don't Get Murdered by Karen Kilgariff & Georgia Hardstark 
Feb: Circe by Madeline Miller
Mar: A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin
Apr: The Penelopiad by Margaret Atwood
May: Outline by Rachel Cusk
Jun: Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer
Jul: Solutions and Other Problems by Allie Brosh
Jul: Kindred by Octavia E. Butler
Aug: No One Is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood
Sept: What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat by Aubrey Gordon
Oct-Nov: Early Riser by Jasper Fforde
Dec: Play It As It Lays by Joan Didion
Dec (haven't finished): Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

By the authors:

In 2022, I finished 13 books by 12 female authors and 2 male authors. Two of the authors are BIPOC, 2 Canadian, 2 British, and at least one is Queer. Four are deceased (Le Guin, Larsen, Butler, Didion). Of the living authors, the oldest is Margaret Atwood (as she usually is) and the youngest is Allie Brosh. One author is one week older than me (Hardstark) and another is the same age as my parents (Krakauer).

About the books:

The oldest book I read is Passing (published 1929) and the newest is No One Is Talking About This (2021). I read 4 books published in the 20th century (Passing, A Wizard of Earthsea, Kindred, Play It As It Lays) and the rest are from this century.

The books were all fiction except for the 2 memoirs (Stay Sexy & Don't Get Murdered and Solutions and Other Problems), Under the Banner of Heaven (Mormons), and What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat (social justice). Of the 9 novels, 4 were fantasy. Of the novels set in recorded time, only Kindred is about a time period other than the author's own (the early 1800s, writing from the 1970s). Locales include New York, Maryland, Chicago, Seattle, Las Vegas, California (southern and northern), Greece (ancient and modern), Mormon country (mostly Utah), the lands of Allie Brosh (Idaho and Oregon), Wales, the Portal, and Earthsea. 

But let's talk about me:

Circe, Kindred, and Under the Banner of Heaven were my favorites of the year. I didn't dislike anything I read this year, but I'll admit that No One Is Talking About This was a challenge.

This year, I read my 10th book by Jasper Fforde, my 7th by Margaret Atwood, my 3rd by Ursula K. Le Guin, and my 2nd by Joan Didion. Of the authors I read for the first time this year, Madeline Miller and Octavia E. Butler will definitely be appearing in future Big Book Posts.

Passing (holiday gift swap), Under the Banner of Heaven (found it on a Brooklyn stoop), and Where the Crawdads Sing (bought with a gift card) were/are book club selections (all chosen because they've been adapted for film/TV). Circe (holiday gift) came recommended to me by many people, and led to me reading The Penelopiad (saw it in Powerhouse Books) due to the subject matter. Kathryn recommended and loaned me A Wizard of Earthsea and Solutions and Other Problems. Kathryn gave me No One Is Talking About This as a gift after seeing it on my Goodreads to-read list, but I don't remember why I put it there. I found Outline in a pile of books in the lobby and the neighbor who put it there recommended it to me. I love the "My Favorite Murder" podcast, so Stay Sexy & Don't Get Murdered (written by the hosts) was an obvious holiday wishlist item. I also love the "Maintenance Phase" podcast, so when a friend posted What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat (written by one of the hosts) as a giveaway on FB, I pounced on it. I got Kindred and Early Riser with a Books Are Magic gift card from my friend Mary (along with The Sword of Achilles which I'll read next year). My friend Sara loaned me Play It As It Lays after I finished Early Riser on my way to visit her and needed something to read on the trip back.

Goals:

  • This year's goal was to read only women authors, and while it is pathetic that I did not achieve that goal, I did read more women authors this year than in any previous year. I'd like to continue the trend of reading more women than men, and also better representing Queer, BIPOC, trans, and non-binary authors in the books that I read.
  • I read most of the books that were loaned or given to me this year, and that I got for myself. Top of the list for the coming year are the following books that I acquired recently: Fuzz by Mary Roach, Happy-Go-Lucky by David Sedaris, The Sword of Achilles by Madeline Miller, The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde, and more Ursula K. Le Guin (continuing the Earthsea series or the Hainish novels & stories)

Sunday, January 2, 2022

Everything else 2021

I just want to make sure I cover EVERYTHING okay?

In between and alongside periods of scary COVID spread, the following things happened in my life in 2021.

Milestones:

  • 5 years at my job and a promotion to Associate Director
  • 8 years in my apartment, and nearly 3 on the co-op board (why do I do this to myself)
  • 10 consecutive years on the board of NYMAAC (local alumni chapter of Phi Sigma Pi)
  • 16 years in the band, 12 in the orchestra
  • 16 years living in NYC
  • 41 years on planet Earth
  • My cats turned 9 (each), but they'll be 10 by the time you finish reading this post (possibly 11)
  • Reconnected with an ex (after 12 years)
  • Saw Claire & Chris, and Antonya, for the first time in many years
  • We got a bunch more CitiBike docks in Sunset Park, and that amped up my ridership (33 rides this year out of 47 total). I've ridden a total of 139 miles and visited 48 docking stations over the course of my membership (or, something-else-ship, since I'm not a member).
  • Joined Home Chef and cooked approximately 150 meals (I'm not going to go back and count, but it was 52 weeks at 3 meals a week with the occasional week off)
  • Fed many mourning doves after installing my first bird feeder (inspired by the Uttechs)
  • 92 consecutive weeks of what I used to call my Quarantine Diary, now "Weekly Shmeekly"
  • Several friends' pets died, including Penny
COVID-related milestones
  • 3 COVID vaccine shots
  • QUO, symphonic band, and marching band in-person rehearsals resumed
  • Started going back into the office 1-2 times a week (to make it easier to get to rehearsals)
  • NYMAAC resumed in-person events (we're doing both in-person and remote events now)
  • Saw my aunt, uncle, and cousins for the first time since pandemic at Thanksgiving

    Trips:

    • 2 visits to the Uttechs in Marathon: 1 for the Bears' wedding in nearby Cortland and another just for Labor Day weekend.
    • 2 visits to my sister in Colorado: 1 in July with my parents and 1 in December with the whole family
    • 1 trip to the Catskills (Prattsville) for my parents' 46th anniversary
    • 1 drive to the Poconos for Cassie and Josh's wedding
    • 1 journey up to North Haven, CT to visit the Bennetts and help staff Sara's Strange Charm Glassworks booth
    • Several trips to Rahway for swimming and hanging out with the Beckers, including my birthday party
    • Several trips to Pelham and Commack for various occasions, including a surprise 40th birthday party for Alex
    Live shows:
    • The Merry Wives of Windsor at Shakespeare in the Park with Álvaro, Jess, and Kyle, and babka from Breads Bakery.
    • Cullud Wattah at the Public with Kathryn
    • Slave Play at the August Wilson Theater with Kathryn
    • Caroline or Change at Studio 54 with Kathryn
    • Company at the Jacobs Theater with NYMAAC (and yes, Kathryn)
    • Brandi Carlile at the Forest Hills Stadium with mom & Tracee
    • Sō Percussion at Caramoor with Cricket, Mark, and the Neumanns
    • Loser's Lounge: Talking Heads at City Winery with Mike B @ family
    • Squeaky Bike's Real Guts, Virtual Glory
    • Saw a few shows at Wild Birds and Barbes in Brooklyn
    • Performed in 2 QUO concerts (and a third was canceled due to Omicron)
    • Performed in 2 LGBAC symphonic band concerts
    • Performed in 9 LGBAC marching band performances including an AIDS Walk thing, an impromptu performance at the AIDS Memorial in the Village, the Dyke March, the Heritage of Pride March (such as it was), a weird Mermaid Parade-inspired thing in the Hamptons, 2 Halloween Parades, the NYC Marathon, and a gig in Herald Square (no, not the Thanksgiving Parade, that's next year!)
    Other stuff:
    • Went to an anti-Trump vigil
    • Many Zoom calls with home friends
    • Many neighbor hangs at Judy's inside and outside
    • 4 dates, 3 with the same guy
    • Attended the virtual Phi Sigma Pi National Convention and represented NYMAAC as delegate
    • Recorded 3 tracks for a LGBAC symphonic band virtual performance
    • Helped record an audition video for Patrick & Jonah which by the way got them on TV in Baking It
    • Helped Jess & Kyle move
    • 1 last party at airbmb
    • Visits from Allison, Julie, Mark, and Charlin & Seth
    • Voted in the NYC mayoral (and other offices) primary and general elections
    • Got my passport renewed
    • Saw my first moose
    • Finally went to Hops Scotch, my parents favorite hangout with their friends Kate & Richie
    • 1 trip to the beach (Jacob Riis)
    • Interviewed and accepted a new co-op member
    • Painted a mural in Kate's apartment
    • Fed at least three neighbors' cats and watered one neighbor's plants
    • Made and sent a lot of cards
    • Received original art by Sara and Laura to adorn my home:

    2021 Puzzles & Podcasts

    Puzzles and podcasts are perfect complements. I can't just sit and listen to a podcast without doing something else, and that something else needs to leave me the brain space to enjoy and understand the podcast. Puzzling is just that thing. And puzzling in silence is sometimes nice, but why not multitask?

    Here are the podcasts I listened to in 2021.

    Weekly listening (or as often as they come out):

    • You're Wrong About: A biweekly (or as often as they feel like it) podcast in which they reexamine moral panics and news stories of the past, and debunk misconceptions and misrepresentations. Toward the end of the year, Michael Hobbes announced that he was leaving the show. I miss the banter between him and remaining host Sarah Marshall, but Sarah's great on her own, too.
    • Maintenance Phase: This is the podcast Michael Hobbes kept. He and Aubrey Gordon debunk myths and cover the rise and fall of health and wellness-related fads and schemes. Comes out biweekly, except when it doesn't.
    • You Are Good: Formerly "Why Are Dads?", You Are Good is described by its hosts (Alex Steed and, surprise! Sarah Marshall) as a "feelings podcast about movies." It comes out reliably every week, but I only listen when it's a movie I've watched or know enough about through the zeitgeist.
    • The Greatest Generation: "A Star Trek podcast by two guys who are a little bit embarrassed to have a Star Trek podcast" pretty much sums it up. I spent pretty much all of 2020 catching up, so 2021 was weekly listening for me. They finished Deep Space Nine at the beginning of the year and picked right up with Voyager, so I've had to keep my Star Trek viewing to just one episode a week to stay in sync with them.
    • Judge John Hodgman: I'm sorry to say I've fallen out of the habit of listening to this podcast, which is Hodgman, Jesse Thorn, and other guests and regulars discussing disputes sent in by listeners. I'd been listening to it weekly as it came out, and also working my way backwards through the archive. I guess My Favorite Murder replaced it.
    At my own pace:
    • My Favorite Murder: In May, a neighbor recommended this to me and I've been listening to it ever since. Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark tell each other murder stories and occasionally read letters from listeners about murders and other weird things. Laugh-out-loud funny, even while horrifying. I decided to listen to it in order from the beginning, so it's not weekly listening for me yet because I haven't caught up to the new episodes. I'm skipping the live episodes (which a friend tells me are worth listening to, so I may go back and listen to those later). This is basically what fills my listening time once I'm through with the new stuff on my other podcasts.
    • The Greatest Discovery: Another podcast by the guys from The Greatest Generation, covering the new Star Trek stuff as it comes out, and other related things. I only listen to it as often as I watch something they've covered (Discovery, Picard, Lower Decks, etc).
    • This American Life, 99% Invisible: There for me when I can't think of anything else to listen to.
    • Sandra (Gimlet Media): Fictional podcast miniseries about a woman who works as the human question-answerer behind a "Siri"-like interface. 
    • I Am All In: A Gilmore Girls podcast hosted by former cast member Scott Patterson ("Luke"). I listened to a few episodes and I enjoyed them, particularly the interviews with other cast and crew members. I guess I stopped because it sounds VERY produced. You can tell from listening to it that this is something iHeartMedia is spending money on. I like listening to podcasts that sound off the cuff, that are hosted by the people who came up with the idea for the podcast in the first place. Also, I didn't want to work in a Gilmore Girls rewatch into my TV viewing. Maybe I'll come back to it.
    • This Podcast Will Kill You: Good for a car ride (which is where I listened to I think the chickenpox/shingles episode). Didn't make its way into my pool of regular listening.
    • Slow Burn: A podcast where they take a deep dive into one major news story/scandal per season. I've listened to seasons 1-3 so far (Watergate, Clinton impeachment, Tupac & Biggie) and I'm currently listening to season 4 (David Duke).
    One-offs
    • The West Wing Weekly: A Special Benefit for When We All Vote: Hrishi and Josh came back to record an episode about the special benefit West Wing episode aired on HBO Max.
    Puzzles:

    Here are glimpses from 9 of the 32 puzzles I did this year.

    Clockwise from top left:
    • Obergefell v Hodges, 500 pieces by Litographs, gift from mom & dad
    • New York, 1000 pieces by Dowdle Folk Art, surprise in the mail from Beth
    • Convergence by Jackson Pollack, 320 pieces by Springbok (and billed as the world's most difficult puzzle), from a neighbor
    • Beachcomber Collection, 1000 pieces by New York Puzzle Company, gift from mom & dad
    • The Ultimate Double-Sided Per Person Puzzle (dog side), 500 pieces by Ben Lenovitz, gift from mom & dad
    • Full Bloom, 1000 piece by Galison, surprise in the mail from Justine
    • Vikram Madan Social Distancing Double-Sided (rhino side), 228 pieces by Artifact puzzles, gift from Patty
    • Crystal Snowflake, 1000 pieces by Bgraamiens, gift from Justine
    • And in the middle: Graffiti City, 1000 pieces by "Fred", loaner from Lauren (while visiting her in Colorado)
    The rest were also great. Take a scroll through my Instagram if you'd like to see them.

    By piece count:
    • 228: 1 (Social Distancing)
    • 320: 1 (Convergence)
    • 450: 1 (Swim Club)
    • 500: 9
    • 550: 1 (Paris)
    • 750: 2 (Vatican and Thatched Cottage)
    • 1000: 16
    • 1500: 1 (Pizza Arcade)
    I tend to stick to 1000 pieces or less so they'll fit on my table. The 1500-piece "Pizza Arcade" required a surface extension:



    By brand:
    • New York Puzzle Company: 4 (Night at the Opera, Leaf Peepers, Beachcomber, Mushrooms)
    • Galison: 3 (Graymalin, Full Bloom, Spring on Park Avenue)
    • Dowdle Folk Art: 2 (New York, Times Square)
    • Mudpuppy: 2 (Birds A-Z, Bookish Cats)
    • Buffalo: 2 (Cinque Terre, Pizza Arcade)
    • Sure-Lox: 2 (Vatican, Thatched Cottage)
    And one puzzle each by Litographs, Bgraamiens, Jiggy, Springbok, Pomegranate, Funwares, TDC, Ceaco, Fred, Ben Lenovitz, Eurographics, Artifact, and Ravensburger.

    By subject matter:
    • Cityscapes/buildings: 9 (New York, Night at the Opera, Cinque Terre, Times Square, Paris, Graffiti City, Vatican, Thatched Cottage, Spring on Park Avenue)
    • Animals: 8 (Animals Planet, Birds A-Z, F is for Feline: 2 puzzles, Bookish Cats, 2-sided Pet Person, Social Distancing)
    • Outdoor scene: 5 (Graymalin 2 -sided, Swim Club, Leaf Peepers, Seasine Beauty)
    • Art/Abstract: 3 (Crystal Snowflake, Convergence, Diego Rivera)
    • Collected objects on display: 2 (Beachcomber, Mushrooms)
    • Map/diagram: 2 (Full Bloom, Tree of Life)
    • Nostalgia: 1 (Pizza Arcade)
    • Words: 1 (Obergefell v Hodges)
    • Wine: 1 (Wine Time)
    Where they came from:
    • Gifts: 15 (5 from mom & dad, 2 from Jan, 2 from Justine, 2 from Jamie, and 1 each from Beth, Kathleen, dyAnne, and Patty)
    • Neighbor swaps: 7
    • Vacation puzzles: 3
    • Friend swaps: 2 with Bjorn & Todd
    • Found on the street: 2 (via Cricket and Kathryn)
    I still have most of them in my apartment if you'd like to do a swap!

    Success rate: 
    • I finished all the puzzles I started this year.
    • Some were pissing a piece or two, but I have confirmed I did not lose any pieces. :)

    2021 Viewing

    Hello! This was very much a year of the new, in terms of TV viewing at least. New stuff outnumbered continuations and rewatches of old series by a factor of 3 or so in my 2021 viewing. Listening to the My Favorite Murder podcast seems to have had an effect on my TV consumption which includes a lot more true crime than in past years (but it's not all murder! There is some art theft!). 

    It was thrilling to get to see people I know on TV this year! Ry Russo-Young's HBO Max documentary Nuclear Family was very engrossing, and featured my friends Max and Cade and their little one Sy. And my buddies Patrick and Jonah were one of eight competing pairs on Baking It (and I helped film their audition video!), which was an adorable show.

    Other highlights of the year include Better Call Saul, which I am anxious to finish once more of it appears on Netflix, Anne With an E which was very sweet, Fleabag which was genius, laughing my ass off at Star Trek: Lower Decks, a very engaging adaptation of The Wheel of Time which has further strengthened my resolve not to read the books (sorry, friends), The Serpent which was chilling and also a fun trip to Asia, Mare of Easttown which was amazing, the hilarious Q Force, the equally hilarious Schmigadoon which I got to watch with friends, and the deeply depressing but well acted and constructed Dopesick

    Here are the series I started and miniseries I watched in 2021:

    • Better Call Saul: seasons 1-4
    • Anne With an E: seasons 1-3 (all)
    • The Sinner: seasons 1-2, and some of season 3
    • Fleabag: seasons 1-2 (all)
    • Feel Good: season 1 and part of 2
    • Bridgerton: season 1
    • Star Trek: Lower Decks: season 1 (along with the Greatest Discovery podcast)
    • Call My Agent! (Dix pour cent): season 1
    • Manifest: season 1
    • The Wheel of Time: season 1
    • Hacks: season 1
    • High Score: all
    • History of Swear Words: all
    • Pretend It's a City: all
    • Crime Scene: The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel: all
    • Murder Among the Mormons: all
    • The One: all
    • Collateral: all
    • This is a Robbery: all
    • The Serpent: all
    • Life in Colour with David Attenborough: all
    • The Sons of Sam: Descent Into Darkness: all
    • Mare of Easttown: all
    • The White Lotus: all
    • Q Force: all
    • Schmigadoon: all (with friends)
    • Nuclear Family: all
    • Nova: The Planets: all
    • Dopesick: all
    • Baking It: all
    • Home Economics: some
    • Animaniacs reboot: some
    • Nine Perfect Strangers: some
    • The Chair: some
    • Only Murders in the Building: some
    • The Other Two: some
    • Ted Lasso: some (I would've watched it all but I don't have Apple+ yet)
    • And Just Like That: some
    • Mad About You: watched a few episodes of the revival
    • Bare Feet: a few episodes since it was on at Cricket's parents' house
    • Fuller House: a few episodes since it was on TV on vacation
    • Somebody Feed Phil: a few episodes since it was on TV on vacation
    Of the series I continued this year, Schitt's Creek was of course a standout. Impeachment was also good group watch material. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and now Voyager have been weekly viewing for me as I listen along with the Greatest Generation podcast.

    Old series continued or rewatched in 2021:
    • Call the Midwife: 2020 Christmas Special (season 10)
    • Friends: watched the reunion show and then rewatched seasons 1-7 and part of 8
    • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: rewatched season 7 (along with the Greatest Generation podcast)
    • Schitt's Creek: seasons 4-6 and the farewell feature
    • Fargo: finished season 4
    • The Handmaid's Tale: season 4
    • Castlevania: season 4
    • Star Trek: Discovery: season 3 (along with the Greatest Discovery podcast)
    • Sex Education: season 3
    • American Crime Story: Impeachment: season 3 (with neighbors)
    • Star Trek: Voyager: rewatched seasons 1-2 and part of 3 (along with the Greatest Generation podcast)
    • The Great: some of season 2
    • Angels in America: rewatch, all
    • The Simpsons: a few episodes since it was on TV on vacation
    I love a movie musical, and this year gave us In the Heights and Tick Tick Boom which were great, and I couldn't help but go back and rewatch Sweeney Todd with NPH. Perhaps not technically a musical but an adaptation of a play with a bunch of music in it, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom was also brilliant, and also musical theater-adjacent and lovely was Florence Foster Jenkins. Books made me watch a few of the below movies, and I finally went ahead and watched Remains of the Day, which I read eight years ago.

    Movies streamed (except where noted):
    • Sweeney Todd Live From Lincoln Center: rewatch
    • Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
    • The Trial of the Chicago 7
    • Motherless Brooklyn: with the Page & Popcorn book & movie club (remotely)
    • I Care a Lot
    • Betty White: First Lady of TV
    • New York Times Presents: Framing Britney Spears
    • The Last Blockbuster: once alone and once with Cricket & Mark
    • Moxie
    • Operation Varsity Blues
    • Seaspiracy
    • The Dig
    • Remains of the Day
    • Made You Look
    • The Lorax: with NYMAAC (remotely)
    • Okja: with Cricket and Mark
    • Florence Foster Jenkins
    • In the Heights: with the Uttechs
    • The Birdcage: rewatch, on a plane
    • Nomadland: on a plane
    • Blithe Spirit: on a plane
    • 500 Days of Summer: rewatch, on a plane
    • Tig Notaro: Drawn
    • Bo Burnham: Inside
    • The White Tiger: with the Page & Popcorn book & movie club (remotely)
    • The Royal Tenenbaums: with neighbor Maya who insisted I watch more Wes Anderson movies
    • Dune: the 1984 version with the Page & Popcorn book & movie club (remotely) and with Maya (in person) and with necessary substances
    • Dune: the 2021 with the Page & Popcorn book & movie club (in the theater)
    • Mayor Pete
    • Tick Tick Boom
    • Don't Look Up
    Other stuff:
    • WNYC's Get Lit With All of It book club: Jonathan Lethem's Motherless Brooklyn
    • Dar Williams: We Can Get Through February!
    Guess I'll go finish The Great now. Oh, and the Harry Potter reunion! Bye!

    Saturday, January 1, 2022

    The Big Book Post 2021

    Welcome to the only time of year I post in this blog: recap time!

    Somebody stop me, this is probably the most long-winded one yet.

    Jan: Dreyer's English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style by Benjamin Dreyer
    Feb: Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem
    Mar: The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern
    Apr: Days of Distraction by Alexandra Chang
    Jun: A Favourite of the Gods by Sybille Bedford
    Jul: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
    Aug-Sep: Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell
    Oct: Dune by Frank Herbert
    Dec: Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri

    I finished 11 books this year, beating last year's total by 1 and falling short of this year's goal by the same number. I read about 1/4 of Dune before giving up on it, making Dune this year's Outlander (maybe I should stop trying to read 800-page genre fiction?). 

    The first book I read this year was probably my favorite: Dreyer's (which Goodreads also tells me was the most highly rated of all the books I finished this year). I also gave high marks (4 stars) to Cloud and Distraction. My only 2-star review was Midnight, which I know is a popular book (the most shelved book of the ones I read this year, according to Goodreads), but I had problems with it (see my Goodreads review, linked above).

    More Goodreads nonsense:
    • Shortest book I read this year: Ocean (181 pages), but that honor would have gone to Passing if I'd finished it (and I will)
    • Longest book I finished this year: Cloud (509 pages), and it took me a good long time, too
    • Least popular book I read this year: Godspell (79 people shelved it to Midnight's 1.8 million, but I know one of them! Hi Rebecca if you're reading this.)
    And by the way, I think I'm in good book-nerd company on Goodreads this New Year's Day as the site is super slow.

    By the authors
    I finished 6 books by male authors and 5 by female authors (Passing by Nella Larsen would have evened the score). Bedford is the oldest author I read this year, Dreyer the oldest living author (unless de Giere, whose age I could not find, is older). I could not find the birth years of Chang or Brammer, but I suspect the latter is the youngest author I read this year. Morgenstern, 43, is the youngest author I read this year whose age I could track down. This year I read mostly American authors, with the exception of 4 English authors (Bedford, Haig, Mitchell, Gaiman) and possibly de Giere who may be Canadian (and let's give her the benefit of the doubt). Bedford was born in Germany but is considered English. Lahiri was born in England but identifies as American. I didn't dig too deep into this, but I read at least 2 LGBTQ+ authors (Dreyer, Brammer), and three authors in particular shared their ethnic heritage in their books (Chang, Brammer, Lahiri). Most of the authors were new to me, but this year I read my second book of Morgenstern's, Bedford's, and Lahiri's, and my sixth by Gaiman.

    By publication date
    The only book I finished this year published before 1999 was Favourite (1963). Passing, published in 1929, would have been the oldest. Many of my reading years feature a return to the books that were on the best sellers list when I was working at Borders in 2002, and this year's selection from that pool are Interpreter (1999) and Motherless (1999). The only book I read that was published in 2021 was Papi, but Distraction and Midnight were from 2020 and Dreyer's and Starless were 2019.

    By setting
    Most of the books I read this year take place in the present day (for the book). Godspell reaches back into the seventies to tell the beginning of that story. Favourite is mostly set in and around WWI. Cloud covers the widest time period, from the mid-19th century to unfathomably in the future. Five books take place partially or entirely in NYC (Dreyer's, Motherless, Starless, Godspell, Papi) and Distraction takes place mostly in New York state. The books by the UK authors take place mostly in the UK (Favourite, Midnight, Ocean) except Cloud, which is mostly in and around the Pacific Ocean. Interpreter takes us to Boston and India.

    By genre

    Fiction: 8
    • Fantasy: 3 (Midnight, Starless, Ocean)
    • Historical: 2 (Favourite, Cloud)
    • Sci-fi: 1 (Cloud)
    • Short stories: 1 (Interpreter)
    • Other: 2 (Distraction, Motherless)
    Non-fiction: 3
    • Language/Writing: 1 (Dreyer's)
    • Arts & Entertainment: 1 (Godspell)
    • Memoir: 1 (Papi)
    Awards
    • Motherless won the 1999 National Books Critics Circle Award for fiction
    • Interpreter won the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
    • Cloud won the 2005 British Book Award for literary fiction and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize
    • Ocean was the 2013 British Book Awards Book of the Year, and is the only book I read this year that was a #1 on the NYT best seller list
    Movies and book clubs
    • I read Motherless with the Page & Popcorn (P&P) Book & Movie Club, and we watched the 2019 film together (remotely). Motherless was also a selection in WNYC's Get Lit with All of It book club, and I watched Alison Stewart's interview with Jonathan Lethem. 
    • Passing, which I am reading now, is also a P&P selection. I also watched The White Tiger and the 1984 and 2021 Dune adaptations with P&P but did not read the former and did not finish the latter.
    • I haven't yet but plan to watch the 2012 film adaptation of Cloud, despite reports that it is bad and/or weird.
    • I watched the 1993 film of Remains of the Day, which I read 8 years ago.
    • I watched season 4 of Hulu's The Handmaid's Tale, which has by now gone way beyond the book, which I read in 2005 with the CHA book club. I also watched all of Anne With an "E" and The Wheel of Time, but have not read either of those book series.
    How the books came to me
    • Interpreter and Ocean were loaned to me by Holly and Garrett (respectively) when I arrived at their home having finished Papi on the train ride there. Distraction was a loaner from a coworker and Cloud was loaned to me by a neighbor, despite that I have a copy of it on my shelf loaned to me by a former roommate (Sharon, if you're reading this, do you want that back?).
    • Godspell was mailed to me by a friend whose job I guess is to get rid of books? I saw Godspell and an Ursula K. Le Guin compilation and claimed them both, and Aubrey Gordon's book What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About Fat is also on its way to me thanks to him.
    • Dreyer's and Starless were both holiday or birthday gifts from my parents, and Papi was a birthday gift from Álvaro
    • I found Midnight on the bargain table at Powerhouse in Industry City (it was damaged). Motherless must have been either a Housing Works or roadside giveaway find because it is ravaged. Favourite has been on my shelf for a few years, but I think it originally came from McNally Jackson.
    Goals
    • StarlessFavourite, Dreyer's, and Motherless were goals from last year that I successfully completed, yay. I didn't make it to The Testaments by Margaret Atwood, so that will come with me into the new year
    • I've just been handed a pile of loaners from Kathryn which I will prioritize, including Solutions and Other Problems by Allie Brosh, and the first three books in Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea series. I also have When Brooklyn Was Queer by Hugh Ryan on my shelf, a gift from Kathryn.
    • And speaking of gifts, I am now the proud owner of the following pile of books gifted from my parents which I should get on: 12 Bytes by Jeanette Winterson, Circe by Madeline Miller, and Stay Sexy & Don't Get Murdered by the My Favorite Murder ladies. I also got A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles from an office gift exchange, as well as the aforementioned Passing which I'm already half-way through.
    • As if the above weren't enough for one year, I'm also hoping to get through some of these which have been on the top of my pile for a while but keep getting bypassed: The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson, The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco, and Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood.
    • Do I dare to want more books after accumulating so many (the above being the tip of the iceberg)? Yes. This year I would like to acquire and read Fuzz by Mary Roach and Early Riser and The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde.
    And lastly
    In 2018, I made a post listing my most-read authors. Since then, my top three have not changed (Jasper Fforde with 9 books, David Sedaris with 8, J.K. Rowling with 7), but three authors have ascended into what is now a five-way tie for fourth place, I/me having read six of their books each. Joining Sarah Vowell and Margaret Atwood in this category are: 
    • Neil Gaiman after I read Ocean last year
    • Gregory Maguire after I read Hiddensee and Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister in 2019 and 2020 respectively
    • Mary Roach after I read Gulp in 2019
    And these authors have moved into the category of authors I've read more than once:
    • Donna Tartt after I read The Goldfinch in 2019
    • John Hodgman after I read Medallion Status in 2020
    • Erin Morgenstern, Sybille Bedford, and Jhumpa Lahiri having read their books in 2021
    • Ursula K. Le Guin, having read her for the first time in 2019 (The Lathe of Heaven) and again in 2020 (The Left Hand of Darkness)


    OK that's (more than) enough. See you in my next recap post!