Time
|
Author
|
Review
|
|
1
|
Freedom
|
Jonathan
Franzen
|
A very well done character-heavy
story of family and love. Themes of
American conflict between nature and the energy industry, capitalism, fame,
and deceny, etc. are woven extremely well into this long dramatic tale. I sincerely enjoyed it.
|
2
|
Between
the World and Me
|
Ta-Nehisi
Coates
|
I'd been putting off this
book. Frankly, because I was scared of
it. I knew it was great from the
reviews and feedback from people I respect.
But I also knew the topic was a difficult one, and I expected to find
it depressing and upsetting. I was not
wrong. It was difficult. But it's also a beautiful work -- Ta-Nehisi
Coates' language is gorgeous. In many
of the sentences covering ugly truths, I can hear the lyrical history of his
early "bad poetry" as he calls it.
The book is written as a letter to his son and focuses on the physical
reality of living in a black body in America.
I am a very physical person. As
a result of his focus on the body, the fear and frustration experienced by
black people in America became more real to me than it ever has been. I am very glad I put in the work to take in
this book, even though at times the subject matter was very painful.
|
3
|
M
Train
|
Patti
Smith
|
I love Patti's voice and speech
patterns so much that I'd probably listen to anything she narrated. But, as with "Just Kids" the
writing here is honest, and beautiful and fascinating. This book is more poetic and dreamlike than
Just Kids, with a ton of references to TV and books (and coffee, so much
coffee).
|
4
|
Agent
to the Stars
|
John
Scalzi
|
A fun romp. The narrator is a talent agent in Hollywood
and the plot revolves around aliens wanting to be introduced to earth in the
most attractive way possible. Clever
and funny. Less intense than both the
Old Man's War series and Lock In.
|
5
|
The
Mother Tongue - English And How It Got That Way
|
Bill
Bryson
|
Typical Bryson--well researched
and thorough. From the Romans, the
Germans, the French, the Anglo Saxons and more, this book is a fun historical
story of the evolution of the English language. If you are a word nerd, this is certain to
tickle your fancy. The original
publication date was 2001, and so some of the facts and examples were a bit
off (as the language continues to evolve...).
Many of the points he was trying to make required spelling by letter,
which could probably get annoying in audiobook format if you aren't enthralled with word
details...
|
6
|
Hell
Bent
|
Benjamin
Lore
|
This book explored extreme yoga
(mainly Bikram) in depth and in a manner that spoke to me. Honest.
Balanced. Much of the good
explored along with the bad. He did a
great job of convincing me that maybe I should get over my aversion to Bikram
the man and return to a studio that offers Bikram the practice. Not going to happen anytime soon as I have
a multi-class card at another local studio to get through first that expires in 2017, but it speaks
to how well done the book is that it made me reconsider my position.
|
7
|
Neopolitan
Novels 2-4
|
Elena
Ferrante
|
Very enjoyable, distinct style of
prose that reads in a way where you are always aware that this story was
originally written in Italian. Complex relationship between friends.
|
8
|
On
the Road
|
Gloria
Steinem
|
So wonderful! I didn't know much about Ms. Steinem's life
and history and sincerely enjoyed learning all about her long and impressive
list of journalistic and community organizing experiences.
|
9
|
Big
Magic
|
Elizabeth
Gilbert
|
A how-to guide to being open to
inspiration and living a life of creative hard work, specifically the hard
work of being a writer. Definitely a
little on the woo-woo side of the spectrum, but pragmatic in its own way.
|
10
|
Notorious
RBG
|
Irin
Carmon, Shana Knizhnik
|
Awesome. Awesome.
Awesome. RBG really is as
likeable as you want her to be and the anecdotes in this one make it
clear. So much great legal and
feminist history in this one. Highly
recommended.
|
11
|
Shrill
|
Lindy
West
|
Memoirs focused on comedy,
fighting misogyny and anti-obesity bias, and just generally a good look at
current society from a smart woman.
|
12
|
One
Summer, America 1927
|
Bill
Bryson
|
(Bill Bryson has the coolest job
ever.) A very well researched look at
the Summer of Lindbergh's famous cross-Atlantic flight, Babe Ruth's home-run
record setting season, and a generally crazy time in American history.
|
13
|
A
heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
|
Dave
Eggers
|
I'd never read this one. It was released in my early 20s,
chronicling the 20s of the author, set in the same cities as my early
adulthood. It held up reasonably well,
although there's quite a bit of navel-gazing.
The author/narrator has a very high level of comfort with himself,
exposing many of his less-than-admirable thoughts. It's an interesting (and, frankly, to me,
brave) approach. He's very open about
his conflicting desires to be known (he auditions for the Real World) and
yet, be cool. I can't quite describe
how I feel about this book. I did
enjoy it, and yet, for some reason, while reading I kept an internal
checklist of the reasons I (or anyone) could choose not to like it.
|
14
|
Year
of Yes
|
Shonda
Rhimes
|
Shonda Rhimes is a bad ass. This memoir chronicles her year of being
more vulnerable, trying new things, and opening up to being different than
the bad ass who had so successfully owned Thursday Night Television for so
long. Her voice is unique and the
anecdotes are inspirational.
|
15
|
The
Chris Farley Show
|
Tom
Farley, Tanner Colby
|
Such a sad, sad, end to Chris
Farley's young life. This book
poignantly reports Chris's words, as well as those of his close friends and
family. A very honest look at
addiction.
|
16
|
The
Heart Goes Last
|
Margaret
Atwood
|
Typical Atwood. I tend to read her works with a sense of
dread for humanity and this was no different.
If you are looking for hope and love, this book is not for you, but if
you're looking for a very smart thought experiment about how humans can be
horrific to one another in unique and new ways while alternating time in a
prison and in the free world, then this is just the book for you. Despite my negative tone here, I did enjoy
this (and I'll read almost anything Atwood writes), I just need some recovery
time after I do.
|
17
|
Bird
by Bird
|
Anne
Lamott
|
A lovely thoughtful explanatory
book on the pragmatics of writing.
|
18
|
On
Writing
|
Stephen
King
|
Stephen King's very interesting
memoirs on his early career, his marriage, his struggles with addiction, and
how to write. He has a very strong and
distinct voice (both written and spoken as he read his own audiobook) and,
really, he's just quite the character.
I very much enjoyed this one.
|
19
|
Reckless
|
Chrissie
Hynde
|
Musician memoirs are one of my
favorite guilty pleasures. I would
never choose to live their lives, but I sincerely enjoy reading about the
chaos they choose to live with as well as their view of history and pop
culture as they are living in it. This
one was no different except that more of the characters met untimely demises
than usual, which made it a bit depressing.
|
20
|
the
Life-Changing Magic of Tidying
|
Marie
Kondo
|
Whimsical. Useful thought experiment before packing up
the whole house for storage. I do love
minimalism, to a point. Overall,
however, the full-blown Kon-Mari method felt a bit too wasteful to me. There are many useful things in my life
that don't necessarily spark joy, but would result in a financial outlay if I
had to replace them the next time I wanted to use them.
|
21
|
A
Man Called Ove
|
Fredrik
Backman
|
A fun tale of a curmudgeonly old
man and his misadventures in Sweden.
Very similar in tone and feel to Swedish author Jonas Jonasson's tales
such as The 100 Year Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared,
and The Girl Who Saved the King of Sweden.
|
22
|
MaddAddam
|
Margaret
Atwood
|
Revisited this one after finishing
Oryx and Crake. It, too, held up well
a decade later. I love the poetic
constructions of the tales and chants of the Crakers in this series, as it's
so obviously (to me) William Blake inspired (one of my favorite poets).
|
July 29, 2016
2016 Audiobooks To Date
Like other recent years, I'm consuming audiobooks faster than physical books and enjoying them. If you're interested in some reviews, here you go:
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2 comments:
100% agree on several of these (Between the World and Me, M Train, Heartbreaking Work...) and will be putting several others on my list! Thanks!
@Jen -- I look forward to your feedback!
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