Got a couple days to go and hopefully will finish a couple more books, been a hot-cold year as far as reading goes. Feeling a lot of ennui.
Starting in January of 2022:
1) The Boy, the mole, the fox and the Horse, Charlie Mackesy
2) Winnie-the-Pooh, A.A. Milne (Illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard)
3) Citizen-An American Lyric, Claudia Rankine
4) Fumbling, Kerry Egan (second time reading it, a man suggested it to me in 2005, he was part of my epiphany moment on my first Camino, the God in the small details of my life moment, my other huge moment was in 2019 when the voice in my head changed from angry, blaming, and shaming to saying/ "I love you.")
5) The Day of the Triffids, John Wyndham. I don't know what came before this book, but I see a slew of dystopian novels taking inspiration from it. (Yes, there was H.G. Wells, and George Orwell, but whole idea of a pandemic and two widely disparate responses to that event, remind me both Emily St. John Mandell, and Jose Saramago.)
6) Stella, Takis Wurger. Fiction, but based on the story of a real woman. Who would you betray to survive? And on the part of the narrator, what would you turn a blind eye to when you both lack a solid internal compass and are also drawn to a bright light wanting to be loved?
That was what I read until the end of May, and two of those were read on the first couple of days of January.
7) Bless the Daughter Raised by a Voice in Her Head, Warsan Shire (poetry)
8) The Memory Librarian: and Other Stories of Dirty Computer, Janelle Monae (and collaborators). Really good sci-fi/fantasy debut, and also helped me understand the album more. The story I originally avoided reading, because it didn't sound interesting, ended up being my favorite in the end. (I can't look it up, but it's the one with the three kids.)
9) The Throwback List, Lily Anderson. I don't know why I picked this up, maybe I wanted escape. I loved the three main characters! Didn't really want it to end. Main character loses her tech job in California suddenly and ends up having to move back to her small Oregon hometown. On her first night back in her old childhood bedroom, she opens up a diary (?) that had a "to do" list she wrote when she was a teenager and decides without any other prospects to fulfill it. The first is to tp her neighbor's house, a girl she didn't really get along with at the time, and then finds that her former best friend is now best friends with this woman. She does fulfill the list, finds a new job in the city, but realizes her life is in the hometown. Ending is ambiguous.
10) Persuasion, Jane Austen. I'm pretty sure I also read this one last year, but it's funny that since I've read the book fewer times than I have watched versions on film, I feel like I find things I've forgotten, and it's as if I had not read it before.
11) A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L'Engle. I read this one last year, too. I love this book.
12) Stolen Focus, Johann Hari. Hari did an experiment on himself, ditching his computer and smartphone (replaced with a Jitterbug phone for emergencies) and went and lived in the Hamptons, I think. Has to do with our addiction to technology and if there is any solution to that. He has some suggestions, but also acknowledges the level of privilege he had to be able to take the time away unplugged, and that not everyone can do that. The most interesting story for me was an interview with a veterinarian who is known for giving anti-anxiety (anti-depressants?) to animals in captivity and his acknowledgment that it's not a cure-all but helps to ease the suffering of having to live in such an unnatural environment.
13) Fame-Ish: My Life at the Edge of Stardom, Mary Lynn Rajskub.
14) Coyote Tales, Thomas King (illustrated. A children's book I read during Native American Heritage Month.) There are only two stories. It's adorable. Like poetry, and plays, children's books really need to be read aloud. Made me giggle the whole time.
15) Sea of Tranquility, Emily St. John Mandell. Borrows a bit from "The Glass Hotel," book about time travel. The first half of the book is set-up for the last half, and each story disconnected until the end. Unclear to me why Gaspar feels so strongly that he needs to intervene to change the outcome of one of the stories.
16) This Time Tomorrow, Emma Staub. Another book about time travel, does it better (though reviews compare it to "The Midnight Library" and find it lacking.) I haven't read the latter and enjoyed the former. I like that there are physical consequences, like as with a long-term addiction, that she feels it in her own body. That she can't change the outcome she most wanted to change, but that she bought herself more time.
17) Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Edward Albee. I'm not entirely sure what's going on, but I think the copyright might prevent me from talking about it.
Ooh, not many. If I finish the last three, I will update. Happy New Year!
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