I had an OK year of reading this year, though I was pretty slow with some books - like Thomas Mann's Dr. Faustus, which took me forever! I wound up reducing my original reading goal on Goodreads from 103 to 100 and only got to 100 by reading a number of big comic books (sometimes called graphic novels, though two of these were non-fiction so wouldn't fit that description).
I'll go ahead and link to my Goodreads Year in Books.
It shows the results of my preliminary research on my "geek wars" book project - reading some classics in the field of fan studies, like Matt Hill's game-changing Fan Cultures which is one that I see cited in a lot of contemporary books, such as Benjamin Woo's Getting a Life: The Social Worlds of Geek Culture, which was a great place to start on a review of the recent scholarly literature.I also read Quinn Slobodian's excellent and very readable Crack-Up Capitalism: Market Radicals and the Dream of a World Without Democracy as research on the right-wing of geekdom. Partly because I was prioritizing that project this year, I also decided to read as many of the Hugo finalists as possible before attending the Glasgow World Con in August. Hardly any of my choices did well this year. I had voted for the Saint of Bright Doors which I didn't actually finish, but which was so much better than the other novels simply based on character depth, writing at the sentence level and general concept that it was a very easy choice. For me, the rest of the challenge was deciding which of the several nominees were the worst, since I thought several of the nominated novels were actually bad. I did like Arkady Martine's novella Rose/House much better than her Hugo-winning novel, A Memory Called Empire, which for me, was a slog.
Another influence on last year's reads was my participation in two book clubs through a local indie bookstore - one science fiction and one literary fiction. If I had managed to read them all, this would have been 24 of the books I read last year, though I wasn't able to particpate every month. I read 11 of the literary fiction club books, having missed the August book (The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden) because I was traveling at the time. For the SF book club, I missed more, reading 8 of the 12. Of the book club books I read this year, my favorite in science fiction were Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood, most of which I read while hanging out at my mother-in-law's last summer, Samuel Delany's Nova, and Adrian Tchaikovsky's Children of Time. I had expected to really like Octavia Butler's Wild Seed because I usually like her books, but this one just wasn't my favorite. It felt repetitive in places and sometimes the main character's motivations were hard to understand. For that group, I started but did not finish Annalee Newitz's The Terraformers which I just didn't like and A. Lee Martinez's The Automatic Detective which I really did enjoy, but just didn't have time for, and 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson, which was probably just too long given the time I had to read it. I didn't even start Fire Upon the Deep because I was out of town for a conference. In the lit fiction book club, the standouts were Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton; Marie-Helene Bertino's Beautyland; Louise Kennedy's Trespasses; and Bunny by Mona Awad - except for the ending, which I found really disappointing.
I just barely managed to finish the academic reading challenge, partly by counting books I had read along the way without realizing they had fulfilled the categories. Of those books that I read intentionally for the challenge, the best were Regina Kunzel's In the Shadow of Diagnosis: Psychiatric Power and Queer Life (book about mental health/illness); Red Hot City: Housing Race and Exclusion in 21st Century Atlanta by Dan Immergluck (book about housing, homelessness, etc), which I think every person who lives in this city should read; Rebecca Godfrey's Under the Bridge: The True Story of the Murder of Reena Virk, a frightening page-turner, which I read for the category of a place I've visited for under a month, since I spent a couple of days visiting a friend in Victoria many years ago, and Rashid Khalidi's The Hundred Years War on Palestine (book by a Palestinian author). Others I read for the reading challenge were also really good, including the The Man Who Caught the Storm about storm-chaser Tim Samaras, who died tragically while tracking a massive tornado in Oklahoma (book about weather and/or weather prediction). Of course, I love Jane Austen I read Northanger Abbey for the category "book written before 1900," and now because of reading her for the academic reading challenge year after year, I have read all but one of her completed novels.
I read some other random books while doing things like flying on airplanes and riding trains. Of these, I really enjoyed Brendan Slocumb's The Violin Conspiracy, which had some predictable turns and clunky moments, but was still entertaining and interesting because of its representation of racial dynamics in the world of classical music. I finally read Percival Everett's sharp and hilarious Erasure prior to seeing American Fiction. I admit to being charmed by Rainbow Rowell's Fangirl, which was read sort of for fun and sort of for work. My major guilty pleasure-read this year was Riley Sager's Home Before Dark, which I read on the plane coming back from England. I liked pretty much all the graphic novels I read, but for a new series, I especially enjoyed Amy Chu's new take on Sheridan Le Fanu's classic, Carmilla.
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