I'm now done with full-time traveling, and a member in 2 book clubs, so I'm hopeful that alone will increase the reading in 2018. Also, I'm hopeful my body will let me keep increasing my running mileage, and soon it will be gardening season. Since I tend to rip through audiobooks while running and gardening, there's also that to look forward to.
Without further adieu, here's the write-up of the final books I read and listened to this year (see part 1 and part 2 for the earlier stuff).
Visually Read Books:
Title
|
Author
|
Review
|
Anonymous (C)
|
Analee Newitz
|
A dystopian future where robots
are indentured servants until they earn their way to freedom (which rarely
happens), and humans born into bad socio-economic situations are as
well. Our heroes are reverse
engineering anti-patent folks (although the patent law in this book is
*super* way off reality's basis). The
most heart-warming characters are a robot who was raised by humans and
appears to have some level of agency as well as a human illegal drug-runner
who traffics commercially developed therapies that are artificially inflated
as to price and unavailable to the masses.
Worth a read, but not worth the hype in the press.
|
The Hundred Secret Senses (A+)
|
Amy Tan
|
My favorite Amy Tan book so
far. I felt so taken in by the characters
and dialogue and references to places that I know, it was as if I'd known
these people in my past. The magical
realism of Kwan's view of the world juxtaposed against Olivia's attempts at
pure rationality are wonderfully lovely.
The story comes together on both planes slowly, but inevitably, and
the ending feels so satisfying and obvious even though I couldn't have
guessed where it would go 30 pages earlier.
Highly recommended.
|
In the Name of Salome (A+)
|
Julia Alvarez
|
This book was gifted to me by a good
friend years ago. I finally found time
to read it on our trip to Mexico and was so glad that I did so. The history of the Cubans, the Dominicans,
the Puerto Ricans, the other Spanish-conquered and American colonized areas
in this part of the world (including Mexico) and all of their US American
immigrants is so intertwined and complex.
The exceedingly well-researched but fictional telling of the 19th
century stories of Salome Enrique Unrena, a real-life poet and girls'
education pioneer in the Dominican Republic is epic. Sad, defiant, and full of love of life in a
way I can't explain but often recognize in good Latin American literature --
I loved this book so much that I packed it back up and brought it back to the
U.S. to gift to a good friend rather than leave the copy at the hotel as a
gift to a stranger, as I typically do.
|
The Wrong Side of Goodbye (B)
|
Michael Connelly
|
I bought this at a CVS across the
street from the hospital and it was everything I was looking for in a book at
the time. I like Michael Connelly's
Lincoln Lawyer books, but I've read them all as he doesn't produce them at
the rate he produces his detective Harry Bosch books. I'd listened to The Crossing, the Harry
Bosch book prior to this one, and I'd enjoyed his transition into private
investigator practice, so I was hopeful this one would be good as well, and
it was. Fast paced, excellent
portrayal of Los Angeles as the setting and also almost a character, and, of
course, an solid murder mystery that keeps you guessing but is neatly
wrapped up by the end.
|
Audiobooks:
Title
|
Author
|
Review
|
The Bourne Supremacy (B-)
|
Robert Ludlum
|
Glad I went back to re-enjoy this
one, as it was so very different than what the movie made the story out to
be. Set in Hong Kong and China. Marie is kidnapped but not killed at the
beginning and her life in danger is a major plot point.
|
Tough Sh-t: Life Advice From a Fat
Lazy Slob Who Did Good (B)
|
Kevin Smith
|
I'd had a bit of overload with the
doom and gloom I encounter on twitter and the news (and the dark side of the
Jason Bourne stories didn't help), so I sought this one out for solace. I've always been a big fan of Kevin
Smith. It was fascinating to listen to
this book, now, after all the Harvey Weinstein revelations, as Kevin Smith is
very open about worshipping Harvey in his early career and owing his entire
film success to the early chances that Harvey took on him. Over the years, their relationship soured
and Kevin's outlook matured to the point of realizing that when he thought he
was just so "Indy" he'd really been a "Miramouseketeer"
and "credibility clown" whenever Harvey asked him to do some press
to ensure that bad rumors about Miramax or the Weinsteins would be squashed. I was curious to see what his take on the
revelations was, and when I researched it was pleased to see that he was
clearly upset and is donating all of his residuals from all of the films he
made with Harvey Weinstein to a non-profit that helps female filmmakers. This book is, as you'd expect, funny,
profane, and lovably honest. The key
message is that life is short and you should live your dreams, which frankly,
is a message that needs much more airtime than it gets. Exactly what the
doctor ordered to cheer me up a bit.
|
Bourne Ultimatum (B-)
|
Robert Ludlum
|
I wanted to finish the full
series, and I was glad I did. At this
point, the plot is so far off from where the movies went that it's not
remotely the same story at all. David Webb is married to Marie, they have
kids, and they are living in a protective program in the Northeast US. Someone has revived the mythical Jason
Bourne as an assassin in Asia and some US intelligence operatives decide to
kidnap Marie to blackmail David into returning to the role (as a 50 year old)
to catch the imposter. The plot is
obviously ridiculous, but it's still a fun romp and a final showdown between
the Jackal and Jason Bourne.
|
Turtles All the Way Down (C+)
|
John Greene
|
This book was enjoyable YA, as
you'd expect from John Greene. The main
character has mental health issues and much of her inner monologue makes up
the prose, which means, as a reader, you are subject to obsessive thought
cycles, and detailed descriptions of compulsive behavior among other things. There's young love (of course) and youth
struggles with loving, but flawed parents (of course). All told, it was a light and easy treatment
of some difficult topics.
|
The Power (A-)
|
Naomi Alderman
|
A very clever exploration of
physical power and gender set in a science fiction/fantasy future where women
develop electrical impulse control and society evolves accordingly. My only complaint about this book is that
at times I felt the analogies were too forced. I get it, in this society, men are the more
sensitive, emotionally nurturing gender, and they are subject to the spectrum
of treatment from women in power that goes along with that. I couldn't help but feel that a book set in
today's society with that much of a focus on gender discrimination would seem
fake and preachy. The lack of random
interspersal of decent treatment with the discriminatory treatment was the
part that pulled this down from a true A/A+ for me.
|
Manhattan Beach (A)
|
Jennifer Egan
|
Well researched tale of a female
scuba welder working for the Navy during world war II interspersed with
timely drama related to immigrants, unions, the Irish and Italian mobs, and
the choices that were available to those of lesser means at the time. Engaging and believable.
|
Bonfire (B)
|
Krysten Ritter
|
A good debut novel by a multi-talented
actress, author, and musician. The
portrayal of small town America was mercilessly dead on, and the main
character was fascinatingly flawed while being believably semi-aware of it --
these two aspects were the things that most impressed me with the book. As far as thrillers go, it was good, but
not great. Occasionally, a turn of
phrase would catch me off guard with its insightfulness, but most of the time
I didn't notice the writing (which is typical for thrillers I enjoy). Overall, it was intriguing, light,
and easy to process. The voice acting
was good, although I was a little surprised that Krysten didn't do it herself
given her voice performance background.
If I have one complaint, it would be that it seemed to me to have too
much stereotypically "20-something feminine drama" for my taste and
a habit of dropping important plot points in half-explained sidebars. Worth a
read.
|
Murder on the Orient Express (A)
|
Agatha Christie
|
The new theatrical release of the
film based on this book inspired me. I
adore Agatha Christie novels and had read most of them in my teens. However, as I'd discovered when I'd re-read 10 Little Indians for the first time since teenagerhood, for Murder on the
Orient Express, I had also completely forgotten the characters and plot. This Audiobook production was excellent,
with a team of voice actors doing all of the various characters such that it
was more like listening to a play reading than a typical audiobook. Almost the entire text is made up of the
investigation by the famous detective Hercule Poirot after the death of one
of the passengers is discovered while the train is stopped in a snow
drift. It's impressive how much plot
Ms. Christie created in the words that are simply dialog between Poirot and
the other passengers regarding their behaviors and belongings. The tightness of the language and her
ability to contain an engaging and full story within such strict constraints
made me appreciate just how talented Ms. Christie was.
|
2 comments:
I keep going back & forth on whether to read "Turtles All The Way Down" but I didn't love "The Fault in Our Stars" so he may just not be my cup of tea.
@Angela -- it was *meh*. But a fast read, so it didn't take a ton of time...
Post a Comment