Masterpiece
*****
Excellent
**** 1/2
Very good
****
Good
**** 1/2
Just okay
***
Not for me
**
Definitely not for me
*

What are your favorites books so far this year?

unwindI’m so far behind in reading blogs and in my own reading this year. Life definitely has gotten in the way. I haven’t read half of what I usually do, but I have read a few young adult books so far and enjoyed them. Among others, I’ve read the first two books in the Percy Jackson series, and the first three books in the Uglies series by Scott Westerfeld, but my favorite book of the year so far is Unwind by Neal Shusterman. Truly outstanding — I highly recommend it.

But, now I need some recommendations as I’ve been so far out of the loop. They don’t have to be young adult books, though of course I enjoy them. If you can recommend 2-3 titles that are your top reads of the year so far, I’d really appreciate it. After a few stressful months, I’m ready to get back in the reading  and review writing groove.

On the personal front, we finally sold our house in Kentucky after nearly 3 years. It has been stressful to say the least to have two house payments for that long. I’ve also been job hunting for the past 6 months or so with no luck at all, so that only added to the stress level. However, things now are looking up, so bring on the books!

Thanks in advance for the recommendations, and I can’t wait to start reading your blogs again!

2009: Mid-Year Report (TSS)

sundaysalon2.pngThe first half of the year is almost over, and I know I won’t finish any more books this month because I’ll be really busy for the next few days.  So I thought I’d go ahead and post my mid-year report because I’m a kind of a stats and numbers geek.

Overall, I’m happy with my reading for the first half of 2009, but there are some areas that I’d like to work on in the latter half of 2009.  The items in blue are the stats I’m excited about, and the ones in red are the ones I want to work on.

I am happy that I read 55 books, BUT, only 12,489 pages?  I usually like to read about 30,000 pages in a year so that’s way below target.  I read quite a few Newbery winners and other kids’ books so that’s why the total number of pages are low.  The stats I’m happiest with are that 55% of my books were from non-Americans and 25% were originally in other languages.  I like to keep it at least 50/50 American/non-American so I was very happy with 55%. And I won’t be too surprised if my 25% translated works even goes up in the second half.  I have some German and Japanese reading to do soon.

As far as the other figures go, I aim to go no greater than a 40/60 split either way on female/male authors; and although I think 71% is way too high a figure for books published in the 2000′s, the main reason for it is the Countdown Challenge, so I’m allowing myself a little leeway there.

My favorite book of the year so far was The Houskeeper and the Professor, and my least favorite was either X-Kai- Vol. 2 or Yarrow.

At the end of the books read are the challenges I’ve completed.

  • 55 books
  • 12,489 pages (way short of around 15,000 goal)
  • Average:  227 pp per book (kind of pathetic!)
  • 23 female authors; 32 male authors (42%/58% split)
  • 39 books (71%) were published in 2000-2009; 16 books (29%) were published pre-2000
  • American/non-American author ratio:  25/30 or 45%/55%
  • Number of pages in book:
    • under 200: 23 (42%)
    • 200-399: 30 (55%)
    • 400-599: 2 (4%)
  • Books in translation 14/55 books for 25%:
    • Japanese (4)
    • Spanish (4)
    • French (2)
    • German (1)
    • Polish (1)
    • Portuguese (1)
    • Yiddish (1)

January (8 books, 1742 pp.)

  1. The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing stars4h.gif by M.T. Anderson (2006, 368 pp.)
  2. The Little Giant of Aberdeen County stars4.gif by Tiffany Baker (2009, 341 pp.)
  3. The Houskeeper and the Professor stars5.gif by Yoko Ogawa (2009, 180 pp.)
  4. Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair stars4.gif by Pablo Neruda (1924, 1969 for English translation, 80 pp.)
  5. Thousand Cranes ***1/2 by Yasanuri Kawabata (1952, 147 pp.)
  6. Fear and Trembling stars4h.gif by Amelie Nothomb (1999, 2001 for the English translation, 132 pp)
  7. X-Kai- Vol. 2 by Asami Tohjoh (2000, English translation 2006; 200 pp.)
  8. Fugitive Pieces by Ann Michaels (1996, 294 pp.)

February (9 books, 1842 pp.)

  1. Life As We Knew It stars4.gif by Susan Beth Pfeffer (2006, 352 pp.)
  2. Kitchen stars4.gif by Banana Yoshimoto (1988, 1993 for the English translation; 105 pp.)
  3. The Reader stars4.gif by Bernard Schlink (1995, 1997 for the English translation; 224 pages)
  4. Morality for Beautiful Girls stars4h.gif by Alexander McCall Smith (2001, 227 pp.)
  5. So Long a Letter stars5.gif by Mariama Ba (1980-81, 90 pp.)
  6. The Kalahari Typing School for Men stars4.gif by Alexander McCall Smith (2002, 191 pp.)
  7. Solaris stars4h.gif by Stanislaw Lem (1961, 204 pp.)
  8. A Tale of Two Gardens by Octavio Paz (various copyrights, 111 pp.)
  9. Beneath a Marble Sky stars4.gif by John Shors (2004, 344 pp.)

March (10 books, 1924 pp.)

  1. The Full Cupboard of Life stars4.gif by Alexander McCall Smith (2004, 198 pp.)
  2. The Willoughbys stars4h.gif by Lois Lowry (2008, 174 pp.)
  3. The Wednesday Sisters stars4.gif by Meg Waite Clayton (2008, 288 pp.)
  4. Dear Mr. Henshaw stars4h.gif by Beverly Cleary (1983, 133 pp.)
  5. A Single Shard stars4.gif by Linda Sue Park (2001, 152 pp.)
  6. Kira Kira ***1/2 by Cynthia Kadohata (2004, 244 pp.)
  7. The Devil and Miss Prym stars4h.gif by Paulo Coelho (2006, 205 pp.)
  8. The Midwife’s Apprentice stars4h.gif by Karen Cushman (1995, 122 pp.)
  9. Zlateh the Goat and Other Stories stars4.gif by Isaac Bashevis Singer (1966, 90 pp.)
  10. Q & A stars4.gif by Vikas Swarup (2005, 318 pp.)

April (11 books, 2513 pp.)

  1. Summer of the Swans ***1/2 by Betsy Byars (1970, 144 pp.)
  2. Crispin: The Cross of Lead stars4.gif by Avi (2002, 297 pp.)
  3. Call It Courage by Armstrong Sperry (1940, 128 pp.)
  4. Finn stars4h.gif by Jon Clinch (2007, 304 pp.)
  5. Revolutionary Road ***1/2 by Richard Yates (1961, 355 pp.)
  6. Petropolis stars4h.gif by Anya Ulinich (2007, 324pp.)
  7. Natasha and Other Stories stars4.gif by David Bezmozgis (2004, 147 pp)
  8. In the Company of Cheerful Ladies stars4.gif by Alexander McCall Smith (2004, 233pp.)
  9. All the Living ***1/2 by C.E. Morgan (2009, 208 pp.)
  10. Jane Austen Ruined My Life by Beth Pattillo (2009, 270 pp.)
  11. The House of Paper by Carlos Maria Dominguez (2005 for Eng. trans., 103 pp.)
May (8 books, 2034 pp.)
  1. Lost in a Good Book by Jasper Fforde (2002, 399 pp.)
  2. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz (2007, 339 pp.)
  3. Blue Shoes and Happiness stars4.gif by Alexander McCall Smith (2006, 227 pp.)
  4. The End of the Alphabet stars4.gif by C.S. Richardson (2007, 119 pp.)
  5. The Tales of Beedle the Bard stars4h.gif by J. K. Rowling (2008, 111 pp.)
  6. Ravel by Jean Echenoz (2007, 117 pp.)
  7. Mistik Lake stars3.gif by Martha Brooks (2007, 224 pp.)
  8. Twiligh***1/2 by Stephenie Meyer (2005, 498pp)
June (9 books, 2434 pp.)
  1. The First Part Last stars4h.gif by Angela Johnson (2003, 131 pp.)
  2. An Abundance of Katherines ***1/2 by John Green (2006, 256 pp.)
  3. The Good Husband of Zebra Drive by Alexander McCall Smith (2007, 213 pp.)
  4. The Miracle at Speedy Motors by Alexander McCall Smith (2008, 214 pp.)
  5. Dream Angus stars4.gif by Alexander McCall Smith (2006, 173 pp.)
  6. The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer (2002, 380 pp.)
  7. The Angels Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafon (2009, 470 pp.)
  8. Yarrow by Charles de Lint (1986, 255 pp.)
  9. The Tricking of Freya by Christina Sunley (2009, 342 pp.)

First Half:  55 books, 12489 pp; average of 227 pages per book (kind of sad, really!)

Challenges Completed

Dracula: Read it; read it now!!

I’m loving it!!

I’m on disc 9 out of 15 and am absolutely enthralled. The gothic style, the ominous mood, the mesmerizing language…excellent!

Added note: I’m listening to the one performed by Susan Adams and Alexander Spencer.

2007 NYT Most Notable Fiction List

Starred titles are those I’m interested in reading.

THE ABSTINENCE TEACHER. By Tom Perrotta. (St. Martin’s, $24.95.) In this new novel by the author of “Little Children,” a sex-ed teacher faces off against a church bent on ridding her town of “moral decay.”

**AFTER DARK. By Haruki Murakami. Translated by Jay Rubin. (Knopf, $22.95.) A tale of two sisters, one awake all night, one asleep for months.

**THE BAD GIRL. By Mario Vargas Llosa. Translated by Edith Grossman. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $25.) This suspenseful novel transforms “Madame Bovary” into a vibrant exploration of the urban mores of the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s.

BEARING THE BODY. By Ehud Havazelet. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $24.) In this daring first novel, a man travels to California after his brother is killed in what may have been a drug transaction.

THE BEAUTIFUL THINGS THAT HEAVEN BEARS. By Dinaw Mengestu. (Riverhead, $22.95.) A first novel about an Ethiopian exile in Washington, D.C., evokes loss, hope, memory and the solace of friendship.

**BRIDGE OF SIGHS. By Richard Russo. (Knopf, $26.95.) In his first novel since “Empire Falls,” Russo writes of a small town in New York riven by class differences and racial hatred.

THE BRIEF WONDROUS LIFE OF OSCAR WAO. By Junot Díaz. (Riverhead, $24.95.) A nerdy Dominican-American yearns to write and fall in love.

CALL ME BY YOUR NAME. By André Aciman. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $23.) Aciman’s novel of love, desire, time and memory describes a passionate affair between two young men in Italy.

**CHEATING AT CANASTA. By William Trevor. (Viking, $24.95.) Trevor’s dark, worldly short stories linger in the mind long after they’re finished.

THE COLLECTED POEMS, 1956-1998. By Zbigniew Herbert. Translated by Alissa Valles. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $34.95.) Herbert’s poetry echoes the quiet insubordination of his public life.

DANCING TO “ALMENDRA.” By Mayra Montero. Translated by Edith Grossman. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $25.) Fact and fiction rub together in this rhythmic story of a reporter on the trail of the Mafia, set mainly in 1950s Cuba.

EXIT GHOST. By Philip Roth. (Houghton Mifflin, $26.) In his latest novel Roth brings back Nathan Zuckerman, a protagonist whom we have known since his potent youth and who now must face his inevitable decline.

FALLING MAN. By Don DeLillo. (Scribner, $26.) Through the story of a lawyer and his estranged wife, DeLillo resurrects the world as it was on 9/11, in all its mortal dread, high anxiety and mass confusion.

FELLOW TRAVELERS. By Thomas Mallon. (Pantheon, $25.) In Mallon’s seventh novel, a State Department official navigates the anti-gay purges of the McCarthy era.

**A FREE LIFE. By Ha Jin. (Pantheon, $26.) The Chinese-born author spins a tale of bravery and nobility in an American system built on risk and mutual exploitation.

**THE GATHERING. By Anne Enright. (Black Cat/Grove/Atlantic, paper, $14.) An Irishwoman searches for clues to what set her brother on the path to suicide.

**HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS. By J.?K. Rowling. (Arthur A. Levine/Scholastic, $34.99.) Rowling ties up all the loose ends in this conclusion to her grand wizarding saga.

**HOUSE LIGHTS. By Leah Hager Cohen. (Norton, $24.95.) The heroine of Cohen’s third novel abandons her tarnished parents for the seductions of her grand-mother’s life in theater.

HOUSE OF MEETINGS. By Martin Amis. (Knopf, $23.) A Russian World War II veteran posthumously acquaints his stepdaughter with his grim past of rape and violence.

IN THE COUNTRY OF MEN. By Hisham Matar. (Dial, $22.) The boy narrator of this novel, set in Libya in 1979, learns about the convoluted roots of betrayal in a totalitarian society.

**THE INDIAN CLERK. By David Leavitt. (Bloomsbury, $24.95.) Leavitt explores the intricate relationship between the Cambridge mathematician G.H. Hardy and a poor, self-taught genius from Madras, stranded in England during World War I.

KNOTS. By Nuruddin Farah. (Riverhead, $25.95.) After 20 years, a Somali woman returns home to Mogadishu from Canada, intent on reclaiming a family house from a warlord.

**LATER, AT THE BAR: A Novel in Stories. By Rebecca Barry. (Simon & Schuster, $22.) The small-town regulars at Lucy’s Tavern carry their loneliness in “rough and beautiful” ways.

LET THE NORTHERN LIGHTS ERASE YOUR NAME. By Vendela Vida. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $23.95.) A young woman searches for the truth about her parentage amid the snow and ice of Lapland in this bleakly comic yet sad tale of a child’s futile struggle to be loved.

LIKE YOU’D UNDERSTAND, ANYWAY: Stories. By Jim Shepard. (Knopf, $23.) Shepard’s surprising tales feature such diverse characters as a Parisian executioner, a woman in space and two Nazi scientists searching for the yeti.

MAN GONE DOWN. By Michael Thomas. (Black Cat/Grove/Atlantic, paper, $14.) This first novel explores the fragmented personal histories behind four desperate days in a black writer’s life.

**MATRIMONY. By Joshua Henkin. (Pantheon, $23.95.) Henkin follows a couple from college to their mid-30s, through crises of love and mortality.

**THE MAYTREES. By Annie Dillard. (HarperCollins, $24.95.) A married couple find their way back to each other under unusual circumstances.

THE MINISTRY OF SPECIAL CASES. By Nathan Englander. (Knopf, $25.) A Jewish family is caught up in Argentina’s “Dirty War.”

MOTHERS AND SONS: Stories. By Colm Toibin. (Scribner, $24.) In this collection by the author of “The Master,” families are not so much reassuring and warm as they are settings for secrets, suspicion and missed connections.

NEXT LIFE. By Rae Armantrout. (Wesleyan University, $22.95.) Poetry that conveys the invention, the wit and the force of mind that contests all assumptions.

**ON CHESIL BEACH. By Ian McEwan. (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, $22.) Consisting largely of a single sex scene played out on a couple’s wedding night, this seeming novel of manners is as much a horror story as any McEwan has written.

**OUT STEALING HORSES. By Per Petterson. Translated by Anne Born. (Graywolf Press, $22.) In this short yet spacious Norwegian novel, an Oslo professional hopes to cure his loneliness with a plunge into solitude.

**THE RELUCTANT FUNDAMENTALIST. By Mohsin Hamid. (Harcourt, $22.) Hamid’s chilling second novel is narrated by a Pakistani who tells his life story to an unnamed American after the attacks of 9/11.

**REMAINDER. By Tom McCarthy. (Vintage, paper, $13.95.) In this debut, a Londoner emerges from a coma and seeks to reassure himself of the genuineness of his existence.

**THE SAVAGE DETECTIVES. By Roberto Bolaño. Translated by Natasha Wimmer. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.) A craftily autobiographical novel about a band of literary guerrillas.

SELECTED POEMS. By Derek Walcott. Edited by Edward Baugh. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $25.) The Nobel Prize winner Walcott, who was born on St. Lucia, is a long-serving poet of exile, caught between two races and two worlds.

THE SEPTEMBERS OF SHIRAZ. By Dalia Sofer. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $24.95.) In this powerful first novel, the father of a prosperous Jewish family in Tehran is arrested shortly after the Iranian revolution.

SHORTCOMINGS. By Adrian Tomine. (Drawn & Quarterly, $19.95.) The Asian-American characters in this meticulously observed comic-book novella explicitly address the way in which they handle being in a minority.

SUNSTROKE: And Other Stories. By Tessa Hadley. (Picador, paper, $13.) These resonant tales encapsulate moments of hope and humiliation in a kind of shorthand of different lives lived.

**THEN WE CAME TO THE END. By Joshua Ferris. (Little, Brown, $23.99.) Layoff notices fly in Ferris’s acidly funny first novel, set in a white-collar office in the wake of the dot-com debacle.

**THROW LIKE A GIRL: Stories. By Jean Thompson. (Simon & Schuster, paper, $13.) The women here are smart and strong but drawn to losers.

TIME AND MATERIALS: Poems, 1997-2005. By Robert Hass. (Ecco/Harper-Collins, $22.95.) What Hass, a former poet laureate, has lost in Californian ease he has gained in stern self-restraint.

TREE OF SMOKE. By Denis Johnson. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.) The author of “Jesus’ Son” offers a soulful novel about the travails of a large cast of characters during the Vietnam War.

TWENTY GRAND: And Other Tales of Love and Money. By Rebecca Curtis. (Harper Perennial, paper, $13.95.) In this debut collection, a crisp, blunt tone propels stories both surreal and realistic.

VARIETIES OF DISTURBANCE: Stories. By Lydia Davis. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, paper, $13.) Dispensing with straight narrative, Davis microscopically examines language and thought.

**THE VIEW FROM CASTLE ROCK: Stories. By Alice Munro. (Knopf, $25.95.) This collection offers unusually explicit reflections of Munro’s life.

**WHAT IS THE WHAT. The Autobiography of Valentino Achak Deng: A Novel. By Dave Eggers. (McSweeney’s, $26.) The horrors, injustices and follies in this novel are based on the experiences of one of the Lost Boys of Sudan.

WINTERTON BLUE. By Trezza Azzopardi. (Grove, $24.) An unhappy young woman meets an even unhappier drifter.

THE YIDDISH POLICEMEN’S UNION. By Michael Chabon. (HarperCollins, $26.95.) Cops, thugs, schemers, rabbis, chess fanatics and obsessives of every stripe populate this screwball, hard-boiled murder mystery set in an imagined Jewish settlement in Alaska.

Reading speed

One of the benefits of the read-a-thon was that I think I got a fairly accurate picture of my reading speed. It will be much easier now to determine how long it will take me to finish a book. Here were the results:

Large, hardback novels: about .8 pages per minute

Children’s/YA novels: about 1.5 pages per minute

Trade paperbacks: 1.1 pages per minute

Overall: about 1 page per minute

I actually thought I read a little bit faster than that, but I still think it’s a good overall speed. Now I know that a typical trade paperback of 240 pages should take a little under 4 hours to read. That’s great to know when I’m trying to finish challenges under the wire!

Read-a-thon

24hourreader.jpg

I think I’m all set to go at 8 am Central time. I ordered 2 DVD’s from Netflix for my husband and kids to watch–that’s 8 episodes of Season 2 of Star Trek: The Next Generation. That should keep them busy for awhile!

I will be taking a break in the afternoon to watch the Kentucky-Florida football game. I have TiVo, though, so I can skip all the commercials and the half-time show.

List of potential books I want to read from during the read-a-thon:

Lisey’s Story (RIP Challenge)
Gossamer (RIP Challenge)
Picture of Dorian Gray (RIP Challenge)
A Scanner Darkly (Dystopian Challenge)
Never Let Me Go (Dystopian Challenge)
Veronika Decides to Die (Reading across Borders, 2nds, Armchair Traveler’s)

I expect to finish Gossamer and make great headway on Lisey’s Story. I also hope to get to A Scanner Darkly as I have the movie from Netflix and want to read the book before I see the movie.

I’m looking forward to it!

Blog Widget by LinkWithin