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.:A Year of Reading:.


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It’s an old question, but a good one . . . What were your favorite books this year?

List as many as you like … fiction, non-fiction, mystery, romance, science-fiction, business, travel, cookbooks … whatever the category. But, really, we’re all dying to know. What books were the highlight of your reading year in 2007?

My answer:
I haven’t made my official list yet but still wanted to respond to this post. Here are some of my favorites this year with links to reviews.  If I only had to pick ONE book other than the New Testament as my favorite, I would say it was To Kill a Mockingbird.

In chronological order.

Snow Flower and the Secret Fan***** by Lisa See
To Kill a Mockingbird***** by Harper Lee
The Book Thief ***** by Markus Zusak
The Road ****1/2 by Cormac McCarthy
Fahrenheit 451****1/2 by Ray Bradbury
The Giver****1/2 by Lois Lowry
The Handmaid’s Tale ****1/2 by Margaret Atwood
The Stone Diaries****1/2 by Carol Shields
New Testament*****
Coraline****1/2 by Neil Gaiman
The Secret Life of Bees****1/2 by Sue Monk Kidd
We ****1/2 by Yevgeny Zamyatin
Half of a Yellow Sun****1/2 by Adichie
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn ****1/2 by Betty Smith

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By the Decade Challenge Completed!

I finished 18 decades, and I’m ecstatic about it. My original goal was 15, and I’m so happy I was able to accomplish 18 decades this year. It really was an important reading goal for me. I’m very much looking forward to this challenge next year as well. The Decades 2008 Challenge website is here. It has many reviews from the 2007 participants, as well as book lists from each decade to peruse. Join us!

2000’s – Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See FINISHED
1990’s – The Giver by Lois Lowry FINISHED
1980’s – The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood FINISHED
1970’s – Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner FINISHED
1960’s – To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee FINISHED
1950’s – Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury FINISHED
1940’s – The Door in the Wall by Marguerite de Angeli FINISHED
1930’s – The White Stag by Kate Seredy FINISHED
1920’s – We by Yevgeny Zamyatin FINISHED
1910’s – O Pioneers! by Willa Cather FINISHED
1900’s – Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad FINISHED
1890’s – The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells FINISHED
1880’s – Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert L. Stevenson FINISHED
1870’s – The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald FINISHED
1860’s – Silas Marner by George Eliot FINISHED
1850’s – Phantastes by George MacDonald FINISHED
1840’s – Cricket on the Hearth by Charles Dickens FINISHED
1830’s – The Complete Stories of Nikolai Gogol Vol. 1 – Nikolai Gogol FINISHED

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Complete Tales of Nikolai Gogol Vol. 1

gogol.gifI read this quite awhile ago, and I did review most of the stories. I’ll add the rest of the stories in the next few days, but I wanted to get this post up because I have completed 18 decades in the Decades Challenge, and I am ecstatic about it. I’m very proud of myself for that accomplishment. All the stories in this book were published in the 1830’s.

Here are the stories I’ve reviewed so far, and I’ll add the rest later:

“The Fair at Sorochintsy,” a story from Evenings on a Farm near Dikanka
A peasant goes with his wife and daughter to a fair to sell wheat. What’s so scary about that? Well, for starters there’s a haunted barn, a devil on a quest for his lost red jacket, and other evil happenings. I wasn’t frightened much at all (actually, I like it that way–I’m a wimp), but it was still a very entertaining story.

“Saint John’s Eve” and “A May Night, or the Drowned Maiden,” stories from Evenings on a Farm near Dikanka
All three of Gogol’s stories so far have contained the devil in human form. It seems that Gogol’s mother warned him repeatedly about the evil one’s devilish schemes. I think the stories must have scared him to death when he was a youngster! They definitely had an impact on his imagination.

“Saint John’s Eve” is decidedly creepier than the “The Fair at Sorochintsy,” which was the first story in Evenings. Boy loves girl and uses the devil to obtain her. What the devil requires as payment is a heavy price to pay, but when the deed is done, boy doesn’t remember what he did to obtain girl. After they marry, he knows there is something he should remember, and he is obsessed with trying to figure out what it is and doesn’t even enjoy life with his wife. Does he ever remember? Read it and find out.

I didn’t like “A May Night, or the Drowned Maiden” as well as the first two. I had a little bit of a hard time following the story, and it was also longer than the other two. It is another tale of boy wants girl, but in this one, the father of the boy also wants the girl. Once again, the devil plays into it, as well as a witch with drowned maidens in a pond by a haunted cabin. This story wasn’t that scary, and it even had some funny parts in it.

“The Lost Letter“, “Christmas Eve”, and “A Terrible Vengeance,” stories from Evenings on a Farm near Dikanka
Of these three, “The Lost Letter” is the weakest. Grandfather must take a letter to the Czarina. He stops by a tavern, gets side-tracked, and loses the letter. The tavern owner tells him how to get the letter back by going into a certain area of the forest. When he gets there, he has to play a card game with some witches and win the game to get the letter. Impossible task, or maybe not. I wonder who outwits whom. . .

“Christmas Eve” once again has the devil in human form being used to get a girl. This time, though, it is the most pious man in the village “using” (outwitting) the devil to do it. Another witch is involved, as well as a snowstorm, and the Czarina’s slippers. Oh, yeah, and some sacks full of other “devils,” too.

“A Terrible Vengeance” was the creepiest of the three stories. A Cossack and his wife try to fend off the wife’s father, a sorcerer. What the father wants to do is the creepy part, along with some scary cemetery imagery.

1830’s for all stories, 259 pp.
Rating: 4

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Christmas Challenge Completed!

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I read three books and enjoyed them all.  I always try to read one or two Christmas books every year, so I was grateful for this challenge and hope there will be another one next year.

My choices:

  1. Mr. Ives’ Christmas by Oscar Hijuelos
  2. Cricket on the Hearth by Charles Dickens

Bonus:

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Cricket on the Hearth

dickenschristmas.JPGDickens’ Cricket on the Hearth was his third published Christmas book, after A Christmas Carol and The Chimes, and it outsold them both.

John the Carrier and his wife Dot are a couple with a new baby. Included in their home is a cricket on the hearth, who might turn out to be more than just a cricket. They are a happy couple until a misunderstanding arises, but of course, all is well in the end. Other characters include a toymaker and his blind daughter; the toymaker’s boss, Tackleton, who is a Scrooge-like character; and a young girl May (who is supposed to marry Tackleton) and her mother.

The book was quite humorous at times and heartwarming. Although I appreciated this novella at the end, I had a hard time getting into this book at first. In fact, whenever I tried reading it, I would fall asleep. That might have something more to do with me than the story, though. Ordinarily I love classics. The book I read the story in also includes A Christmas Carol and The Chimes, so hopefully I’ll get to read those two titles next year.

1845, 85 pp.
Rating: 4

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