My daughter is in college in the United States, and thus benefits from the bounty of libraries - her college's, the public library, and all libraries reachable by inter-library loan (which is basically all of them). Every time she comes home, she brings me a little handful of books she has checked out for me. The next three books were the ones she brought this time.
Book #93 of 2017 was Strange the Dreamer, by Laini Taylor. Actually, this one wasn't a library book at all, but an ARC my daughter won in a drawing. I enjoyed this very much, as I have all of Taylor's books that I've read, but the last line in the story was: "Because this story was not over yet." So now begins the wait for the next one in the series.
Book 94 was The Necessary Beggar, by Susan Palwick. This was just the kind of immigrant story I love, with the slight difference that the immigrants are from another dimension.
Book 95 was Life Among the Savages, by Shirley Jackson. This was entertaining. The voice is reminiscent of Gerald Durrell, except with children, not animals.
Probably book 96 was the last one I'll finish this year (although you never know). It was the seventh in the Inspector Gamache series, A Trick of the Light, by Louise Penny.
This was a good reading year. I didn't read as much as some years, and I read more than others, but in general the quality was high. Here are links to my reading update posts:
Books 1 to 5
Books 6 to 12
Books 13 to 21
Books 22 to 27
Books 28 to 36
Books 37 to 40
Books 41 to 45
Books 46 to 55
Books 56 to 60
Books 61 to 67
Books 68 to 75
Books 76 to 83
Books 84 to 92
And of course, if you scroll to the top of this post, you'll see books 93 to 96.
I encountered some amazing writers this year. One was Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. I actually read my first book by her right before the end of 2016, and I read several more this year. My favorite so far is Americanah, which I reviewed here, in May.
Another new-to-me writer was Derek Walcott, who died this year right after I started reading Omeros (reviewed here in April). I have been reading more of his poetry, and I hope to read more of his narrative works in 2018. Walcott's world is so similar to mine (he's a Caribbean poet, from St. Lucia), and I am fascinated by the way he blends history and mythology into the current lives of people of this region.
My daughter has been telling me about Mary Doria Russell for a long time, and this year I read three of her books. The Sparrow, reviewed here in July, was a harrowing but riveting reading experience.
Two more wonderful writers I've encountered in the last month or so are Imbolo Mbue and Julie Otsuka.
And now, the bonus from the title. In November 2016, I read Ted Oswald's book Little Flower. Ted was in my writing group, so I got to read a manuscript copy. Because it wasn't yet published, I couldn't put a link in the post when I reviewed it. I've since edited my review to add a link to the Amazon page, since the book came out this month. Go read it - it's really good!
At this time of year, I read lots of lists of what was good and what wasn't, and I've also noticed articles on how to get in the reading habit. While there are many good habits I need to cultivate, I am so very thankful that reading is firmly part of my life, no effort required. I can't imagine living without a book or two or more in process, and I'm privileged to have a job where I can share books with others (some eager, some reluctant).
What did you read in 2017? What should I add to my list for the new year?
This post is linked to the Saturday Review of Books at Semicolon for December 30th, 2017. People are sharing their reading lists for the year.
8 hours ago
1 comment:
Thanks for sharing! I love reading about your reading! May the New Year bring you many good books!
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