what did you read in 2016?

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I read:

Colin Winnette, Haints Stay
Yuri Herrera, Signs Preceding the End of the World
Claire Vaye Watkins, Gold Fame Citrus
Carter Scholz, Gypsy
Dana Spiotta, Innocents and Others
Greg Jackson, Prodigals
Charles Portis, Norwood
Elena Ferrante, My Brilliant Friend
Elena Ferrante, The Story of a New Name
Elena Ferrante, Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay
Ted Chiang, Stories of Your Life and Others

Still reading:

Jace Clayton, Uproot (Travels in 21st Century Music and Digital Culture)
Elena Ferrante, Story of the Lost Child
Zadie Smith, Swing Time

sam jax sax jam (Jordan), Wednesday, 21 December 2016 21:17 (seven years ago) link

Michael Lewis - The Big Short
Anne Hébert - Kamouraska
Milan Kundera - The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
Bohumil Hrabal - Too Loud A Solitude
Bohumil Hrabal - Closely Watched Trains
Elliott Chaze - Black Wings Has My Angel
John Huston - Fat City
John Williams - Stoner
Neal Stephenson - Necronomicon
Muriel Spark - Peckham Rye
David Grann - The Lost City of Z
Brad deLong & Steve Cohen - Concrete Economics
Gareth James et al - Introduction to Statistical Learning
Itzhak Gilboa - Introduction to Decision Under Certainty
James Bessen - Patent Failure
John Wyndham - The Chrysalids
Rivka Calchen - Atmospheric Disturbances
Stefan Zweig - Chess Story
Cynthia Ozick - Puttermesser Papers
Bob Gordon - The Rise and Fall of American Growth
Joe Henrich - The Secret of our Success
James Schuyler - Alfred & Guinevere
Martin Weitzman - The Share Economy
Cathy O'Neill - Weapons of Math Destruction
J.R. Ackerley - We Think The World of You
Alfredo Bioy Casares - The Invention of Morel
Caroline Blackwood - Great Granny Webster
Jay McInerney - Bright Lights, Big City
Helen DeWitt - The Last Samurai

flopson, Wednesday, 21 December 2016 22:42 (seven years ago) link

Books I read in 2016:

Ulysses, Hugh Kenner (lit crit)
Nathaniel's Nutmeg, Giles Milton (history)
Lady with Lapdog and Other Stories, Anton Chekhov
Passing, Netta Larsen
A Majority of Scoundrels, Don Berry
The Places In Between, Rory Stewart
The Light That Failed, Rudyard Kipling
Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen
Fathers and Sons, Ivan Turgenev
The Last Thing He Wanted, Joan Didion
The War in the Air, H.G. Wells
The Return of Eva Peron etc., V.S. Naipul
The Big Short, Michael Lewis
The Banditti of the Plains, A.S. Mercer
Blindness, Henry Green
A Hero of Our Times, Mikhail Lermentov
SPQR, Mary Beard
The Third Reich, Roberto Bolano
Voices From Chernobyl, Svetlana Alexeivich
The Farfarers, Farley Mowat
What I Talk About When I Talk About Running, Haruki Murakami
Hollywood, Gore Vidal
The Warden, Anthony Trollope
Symposium, Muriel Spark
Motherless Brooklyn, Johnathan Lethem
The Search for Vulcan, Thomas Levenson (history of science)
Miami and the Siege of Chicago, Norman Mailer
Rome and Italy (Books VI-X), Titus Livius (aka Livy)
Classics Revisited, Kenneth Rexroth
Tristam Shandy, Laurence Sterne
Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, Stieg Larsson
A High Wind in Jamaica, Richard Hughes
Monsieur Monde Vanishes, Georges Simenon
A Sorrow Beyond Dreams, Peter Handke
The Nothing Man, Jim Thompson
1493, Charles Mann
The Widow, Georges Simenon
The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Passage of Power, Robert A. Caro
The Professor's House, Willa Cather
On the Nature of the Universe, Lucretius (Melville translation)
The Man Without Qualities: Volume 1, Robert Musil
The Bookshop, Penelope Fitzgerald (started it on Dec.20)

Assorted short pieces by:

Isaac Bashevis Singer
Edith Wharton
Thomas Carlyle
Plutarch
Robert Louis Stevenson

Books started, but not finished:

The Thirty Years War: Europe's Tragedy, Peter Wilson
Confessio Amantis, John Gower

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Wednesday, 21 December 2016 22:45 (seven years ago) link

No one needs to be told how good PG Wodehouse, Agatha Christie and Ian Fleming are - except me, apparently, because I just started reading them this year. I'd always assumed Fleming was a bad writer, but the three Bonds I read (plus short stories) were all a total joy. Wodehouse too - again, I'd always assumed he was "amusing" and wasn't expecting so many actual lols. Idiot.

My next year in obviousness: need to finally read Ferrante and Patrick O'Brian, and also less stuff by men.

Christie - Cards on the Table, The Body in the Library, Pocketful of Rye, Hercule Poirot's Christmas
Malcolm - In the Freud Archives
Stevenson - Kidnapped
Gibbons - Cold Comfort Farm
King - Shawshank Redemption Yalom - Love's Executioner
Fleming - Casino Royale, Moonraker, Octopussy and The Living Daylights, From Russia with Love, For Your Eyes Only
Kastner - Emil and the Detectives
French - Broken harbour
Dumas - The Count of Monte Cristo
David - Star Trek: TNG: Vendetta: The Giant Novel
Wodehouse - The Code of the Woosters, Summer Lightning, Joy in the Morning
Gaiman - Nothing o Clock
Adams - Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency
Leonard - Mr Majestyk, Killshot
Price - The Whites
James - The turn of the screw
McBain - Let's hear it for the deaf man
Harris - The House of Fame
Gourevitch - A Cold Case
Portis - True Grit
Diaz - This is How You Lose Her
Doyle - The Sign of Four
Franzen - Purity
Aubyn - Lost For Words
Comics - Thor, Southern Bastards, Saga, lots O'Neill/Adams era Batman, Leo's Aldebaran/Betelgeuse/Antares, Phonogram, WicDiv, Green River Killer, Ex Machina, Black Widow

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 22 December 2016 06:16 (seven years ago) link

I started keeping a GoodReads list at the start of May, and this is what I've read since then:

The Chill - Ross MacDonald 4/5
A Wreath of Roses - Elizabeth Taylor 4/5
Bill the Galactic Hero - Harry Harrison 3/5
Cry of the Owl - Patricia Highsmith 3/5
How Star Wars Conquered the Universe - Chris Taylor 3/5
Remainder - Tom McCarthy 4/5
A Wizard of Earthsea - Ursula K LeGuin 4/5
The Dog of the South - Charles Portis 5/5
Patience - Dan Clowes 4/5
Finders Keepers - Stephen King 3/5
Amazing Spiderman: Worldwide - Dan Slott & Giuseppe Camuncoli 1/5
The Big Clock - Kenneth Fearing 4/5
The Engagement - Georges Simenon 3/5
Fade Out Act One - Ed Brubaker & Sean Phillips 4/5
A Hero of our Time - Mikhail Lermontov 4/5
The Name of the Wind - Patrick Rothfuss 2/5
The Savage Detectives - Roberto Bolano 5/5
Outcast Vol 1 - Robert Kirkman & Paul Azaceta 2/5
My Lunches With Orson - Henry Jaglom, Peter Biskind 3/5
Point Omega - Don DeLillo 3/5
The Driver's Seat - Muriel Spark 5/5 (an ILB recommendation that really hit the spot)
The Penultimate Truth Philip K Dick 4/5
Ingrid Bergman - David Thomson 3/5
Fade Out Act Two - Ed Brubaker & Sean Phillips 4/5
Fade Out Act Three - Ed Brubaker & Sean Phillips 4/5
Small Town Talk - Barney Hoskyns 3/5
Purity - Jonathan Franzen 3/5
Stoner - John Williams 4/5 (count me in the 'pro' camp)
Girl on the Train - Paula Hawkins 1/5
The Song Machine - John Seabrook 2/5
AAMA: The Smell of Warm Dust - Frederick Peeters 4/5
AAMA: The Invisible Throng - Frederick Peeters 4/5
AMMA: The Desert of Mirrors - Frederick Peeters 3/5
AAMA: You Will be Glorious, My Daughter - Frederick Peets 3/5
Starlight - Mark Millar & Goran Parlov 2/5
Chrononauts - Mark Millar & Sean Gordon Murphy 1/5
The Crossing - Michael Connelly 3/5
Hunger - Knut Hamsun 5/5
Worlds of Wonder - Robert Silverberg (ed) 5/5
The Golden Child - Penelope Fitzgerald 2/5
Very Naughty Boys - Robert Sellers 4/5
The Digger's Game - George V Higgins 4/5
Birth School Metallica Death Vol 1 - Paul Brannigan & Ian Winwood 2/5
Black Sabbath: Symptom of the Universe - Mick Wall 2/5
Best Served Cold - Joe Abercrombie 1/5
The Space Merchants - Frederik Pohl & C M Kornbluth 4/5
Twilight Children - Gilbert Hernandez & Darwyn Cooke 3/5

Darcy Sarto (Ward Fowler), Thursday, 22 December 2016 10:32 (seven years ago) link

Wow, highsmith gets the same middling score as king and franzen. That's cold.

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Thursday, 22 December 2016 10:39 (seven years ago) link

I'm a Highsmith fan, but I didn't think that one was top tier.

Darcy Sarto (Ward Fowler), Thursday, 22 December 2016 10:41 (seven years ago) link

Fizzles, I also thought House of Fame was a letdown after the first two. Harris is still a cracking writer - but plots get out of hand and over-herringed. Deep Shelter had same issues but much more intriguing plot.

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 22 December 2016 17:00 (seven years ago) link

Hanya Yanagihara – A Little Life
Harry Mathews – The Conversions
Richard Gott – Britain’s Empire
Joseph Conrad – Lord Jim
Elena Ferrante – The Story Of A New NAme
Nicole Krauss – The History of Love
DH Lawrence – Sons And Lovers
Patrick Modiano – Missing Person
Virginia Woolf – Mrs Dalloway
Michael Cunningham – The Hours
Lucia Berlin – A Manual For Cleaning Women
EM Forster – A Passage To India
Elena Ferrante – Those Who Leave And Those Who Stay
Lisa Mc Inerney – The Glorious Heresies
Evelyn Waugh – Vile Bodies
Graham Greene – Brighton Rock
Henry Green – Caught
Megan Mayhew Berman – Birds Of A Lesser Paradise
John Braine - Room At The Top
Shirley Jackson – We Have Always Lived In The Castle
Ann Quin – Berg
Angela Carter – Several Perceptions
Margaret Drabble - The Ice Age
Alan Warner – Their Lips Talk Of Mischief
David Mitchell – Slade House
Elena Ferrante – The Story Of The Lost Child
Kazuo Ishiguro – The Buried Giant (unfinished)
Chester Himes – A Rage In Harlem
Mary Gaitskill - Veronica
Nell Freudenberger – The Newlyweds
Richard Price – Clockers
Michaelangelo Matos – The Underground Is Massive
Martin Amis – Money
John Barth – The Sot-Weed Factor
Hanif Kureshi – The Buddha of Suburbia
Julian Barnes – England, England

I read a lot of canonical English stuff this year - a deliberate move to try and fill in a particular blind spot of mine. So the project was to try and read the British 20th Century decade-by-decade, and it certainly took on a new flavour after Brexit. There was a lot of stuff in there I didn't know much about and loved (Henry Green, Ann Quin, Angela Carter), a few things I expected to love and did (Woolf, John Braine), and some books I expected to hate and did (Lord Jim, Sons & Lovers and most of all Money, but there is no more 1980s book so I went with it). Of the rest, the Ferrantes obviously stand out, as does Veronica, which was devastating on more than one level.

Matt DC, Thursday, 22 December 2016 19:08 (seven years ago) link

If it wasn't for the Buddha of Suburbia, which I didn't expect to enjoy as much as I did, the whole project would have fallen completely off a cliff after 1970.

Matt DC, Thursday, 22 December 2016 19:13 (seven years ago) link

How'd you find Little Life? Sounds punishing. I

Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 22 December 2016 19:58 (seven years ago) link

Yeah, beyond all the gothic overdrive of the protagonist's backstory, it just seems perverse to write a novel about a group of queer male friends over multiple decades but leave the historical period so vague, given how drastically and often the conditions of life for gay people have changed over the last few generations. I want to give the novel a chance eventually, but most of what I've read about it sounds distinctly unpromising.

one way street, Thursday, 22 December 2016 22:13 (seven years ago) link

I didn't think it was very good, and the vagueness of the historical period was one reason why, possibly because it threw open a load of concerns that the writer was looking to dodge. People seem to have mobile phones from fairly early on though so maybe it was projecting into future decades.

It generally has the sense of a novel where the author decided to change direction midway, without rewriting any of the earlier sections. Whole chapters are dedicated to characters who are more or less abandoned half way through (extremely casually in one case). And I don't think I've ever read a novel read by a woman with so little interest in its female characters, like they've been included because you need some women around but they're barely even ciphers. One character meets an extremely violent and horrific end and is essentially disposed with in one sentence.

The handling of the central character is pretty good and the book would have benefited from having a lot of its surplus material skimmed off and more focus in general.

Matt DC, Friday, 23 December 2016 14:01 (seven years ago) link

jl carr - a month in the country
amy hempel - reasons to live
sam quinones - dreamland
colin barrett - young skins
joan didion - play it as it lays
e nesbitt - horror stories
gary indiana - three month fever
mary gaitskill - bad behaviour
ray bradbury - something wicked this way comes
sam lipsyte - venus drive
richard yates - eleven kinds of loneliness
barry hannah - long lost happy
carson mccullers - collected short stories
stuart dybek - paper lantern: love stories
karl-ove knausgaard - my struggle book 1
raymond queneau - exercises in style
muriel spark - the driver's seat
denis johnson - jesus' son

lots of journals and stuff also, the stinging fly, the moth, granta, and a good few short story collections which i dipped into from time to time without entirely finishing.

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Friday, 23 December 2016 14:30 (seven years ago) link

richard yates - eleven kinds of loneliness

How was this? I love "Revolutionary Road".

An Alan Bennett Joint (Michael B), Friday, 23 December 2016 17:36 (seven years ago) link

almost perfect - it's a set of short stories, i p much loved it start to finish. if you like cheever, carver etc, ,you will enjoy.

in my list i forgot mike mccormack's solar bones, to name one, a great book.

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Saturday, 24 December 2016 09:00 (seven years ago) link

Christopher Hitchens - And Yet: Essays
Brian Moore - The Mangan Inheritance
Stacy Schiff - The Witches: Salem 1692
Mary Gatskill - Veronica
Anna Bikont - The Crime and The Silence: Confronting the Massacre of Jews in Wartime Jedwabne
Asa Larsson - The Black Path
Patti Smith - M Train
Owen Gleiberman - Movie Freak
Don Winslow - The Cartel
Don Winslow - The Power of the Dog
Jo Nesbo - Midnight Son
Haruki Murakami - Sputnik Sweetheart
Peter Guralnick - Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock & Roll
Douglas Brinkley & Luke A. Nichter - The Nixon Tapes: 1973
Arnaldur Indriðason - Reykjavik Nights
Arnaldur Indriðason - Into Oblivion
Arnaldur Indriðason - Operation Napoleon
Jane Mayer - Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right
Helene Tursten - Night Rounds
Helene Tursten - The Treacherous Net
Helene Tursten - The Golden Calf
Julian Barnes - The Noise of Time
Leif GW Persson - He Who Kills The Dragon
Leif GW Persson - Linda, As In The Linda Murder
Mons Kallentoft - Autumn Killing
Molly Prentiss - Tuesday Nights In 1980
Erik Larson - Thunderstruck
Erik Larson - Isaac’s Storm
Olivia Lang - Alone In The City
Philip Jenkins - Decade of Nightmares (reread)
Dave Rimmer - Like Punk Never Happened (reread)
Simon Callow - Orson Welles Volume 3: One Man Band
Alan Furst - A Hero of France
Jhumpa Lahiri - Interpreter of Maladies
Barney Hoskins - Small Town Talk
Patricia Highsmith - Deep Water
Patricia Highsmith - Cry of the Owl
Patricia Highsmith - People Who Knock On The Door
Zadie Smith - White Teeth
Zadie Smith - NW
Zadie Smith - On Beauty
Bruce Springsteen - Born To Run
Jussi Adler-Olson - The Purity of Vengeance
John Le Carre - The Pigeon Tunnel
John Le Carre - Our Kind of Traitor
Tim Lawrence - Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor 1980-83
Charles Beaumont - The Intruder
Ian MacEwan - Nutshell
Helen MacDonald - H is for Hawk
Michael Connelly - The Wrong Side of Goodbye

just starting to read: Dava Sobel - The Glass Universe and Zadie Smith - Changing My Mind: Occasional Essays

cheers!

kanye twitty (m coleman), Saturday, 24 December 2016 17:27 (seven years ago) link

a few free-floating opinions:

Veronica & White Teeth were the best novels I read this year while The Crime And The Silence was the best non-fiction

liked H is for Hawk better than Alone in the City, thought both ran out of steam after very promising starts. appreciated the psychoanalytic piece in both

kanye twitty (m coleman), Saturday, 24 December 2016 17:33 (seven years ago) link

The books I enjoyed most in 2016 and would recommend, in no order :

Henry James- portrait of a lady
Thomas Mann - buddenbrooks
Joseph Roth - the radetzky march
Jm Coetzee - the life and times of Michael k
Tim Lawrence - lid and death on the New York dance floor
Robert caro - the power broker (still finishing)
Julio Cortazar- hopscotch
Adolfo Bioy Casares - the invention of morel
Penelope Fitzgerald - the blue flower
Helen DeWitt - the last samurai
Arno Mayer - the persistence of the old regime
Jm Bernstein- Adorno
Maggie Nelson - the argonauts
Marguerite Duras - the malady of death
Michelle Alexander - the new Jim Crow
WG Sebald - Austerlitz
David Kishik - The Manhattan Project

In 2017, I'm hoping to get better at putting away books I'm not enjoying and or not getting much or anything out of. I definitely hate-read the latter part of a few books.

Federico Boswarlos, Monday, 26 December 2016 16:47 (seven years ago) link

Indeed. I've gotten so good at that that these days I rarely even finish books I like.

How I Wrote Plastic Bertrand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 26 December 2016 17:17 (seven years ago) link

At this point I am living vicariously through James Morrison and Aimless.

How I Wrote Plastic Bertrand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 26 December 2016 17:43 (seven years ago) link

If not Alfred and xxyyzz

How I Wrote Plastic Bertrand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 26 December 2016 17:44 (seven years ago) link

Just credit ILB generally and you won't put your foot wrong.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 26 December 2016 18:25 (seven years ago) link

B-b-but where would the fun be in that?

How I Wrote Plastic Bertrand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 26 December 2016 20:42 (seven years ago) link

I was just cleaning porridge out of a 3yo's hair, not sure that is the vicarious experience you're after

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Monday, 26 December 2016 23:34 (seven years ago) link

Hey, this board is ILB, please take that over to I Love People-Making!

How I Wrote Plastic Bertrand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 26 December 2016 23:36 (seven years ago) link

Have been creeping about the WAYR threads pinching other people's good ideas for books to read. I experimented with other sources of suggestions (mostly fb friends) this year with, eh, mixed results. Anyway, I didn't manage to read much this year, primarily due to (a) being the busiest I have ever been at work and (b) the arrival of child #4.

Eric Hobsbawm - Age of Extremes. More scattered and less convincing than the previous volumes.
Cristopher Isherwood - A Single Man. Excellent.
Marlon James - A Brief History of Seven Killings. Like American Tabloid, except that it opens out from a shooting, rather than closing in on one.
John Darnielle - Wolf in White Van. Would not have read this but for ilx. Still intermittently roiling around the at-core impenetrability of the main character, still enjoying being denied the answers.
Muriel Spark - The Driver's Seat. A re-read, this time around it made more sense and consequently seemed somehow less callous.
Svetlana Alexievich - Voices from Chernobyl. The worst book to be reading while your wife is heavily pregnant.
Jean Rhys - Sleep It Off, Lady. Struggling to remember much about it other than the Saki ref (I had laid the complete short stories of Saki down to read up).
MR Carey - The Girl With All the Gifts. A recommendation from fb friends. Not great.
John Wyndham - The Chrysalids. The cruelty of the deux ex machina-y ending more than compensated for the deus ex machina-yness of the ending.
Christopher Moore - Lamb. Another fb recommendation. Shaolin Jesus concept wasted with weak joeks. Felt like it was written in a hurry.
Peter May - The Blackhouse. Competent enough. Lots of vomiting, iirc. Enjoyed the guga-harvesting passages.
JG Ballard - Concrete Island. JGB being my go to for a book I know I will enjoy so I don't get put off reading by a poor run of previous books.
Jonathan Schell - The Time of Illusion. Picked up following being told in front of my peers that my Myers Biggs personality type was "Richard Nixon". Given my propensity for carpet bombing SE Asia, I should have seen the parallels before. Book itself was lucid and a good overview of the period I was interested in. I don't have the depth of knowledge to make any sensible comment tbh.
Beryl Bainbridge - The Bottle Factory Outing. Fourth attempt at this one, finally cracked it. My first by BB. Reminded me of Spark or Martin Amis except that I felt that BB has more sympathy for her characters, which makes what happens to them all the more bleak. Suspect I will not have the mental strength to binge on Beryl.

Anyway, thanks to all on ILB for the impact you've had on my reading. I will continue to skulk about the ILB shadows in 2017.

calumerio, Thursday, 29 December 2016 12:40 (seven years ago) link

Re Bainbridge: her later historical fictions tend to be less bleak, but this is not a hard and fast rule

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Friday, 30 December 2016 04:25 (seven years ago) link

Here's what I read in 2016: http://wp.me/pzXeC-5MF

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 31 December 2016 17:12 (seven years ago) link

Ursula Vernon - Digger: The Complete Omnibus Edition
Michael McDowell - Blackwater VI: The Flood
Margo Lanagan - Sea Hearts
Susan Cooper - Seawise
Michael Moorcock - Behold the Man
Jose Saramago - Cain
C.L. Moore - Jirel of Joiry
Jack Vance - Eyes of the Overworld
Geoff Ryman - Unconquered Countries
Robert McCammon - Boy's Life
J.G. Ballard - The Venus Hunters
Tao Lin - Richard Yates
Tao Lin - Eeeee Eee Eeee
Tao Lin - Shoplifting from American Apparel
Tao Lin - Bed
Lydia Davis - Break It Down
Charles De Lint - Waifs and Strays
Theodore Sturgeon - More Than Human
Caitlin Kiernan - The Drowning Girl
Caitlin Kiernan - Alabaster
Caitlin Kiernan - Threshold
Faith Erin Hicks - The Nameless City
Christopher Barzak - Wonders of the Invisible World
Alan Moore - Watchmen
Robert Dunbar - Willy
Ted Chiang - Stories of Your Life and Others
Michael McDowell - Cold Moon Over Babylon
George MacDonald - The Wise Woman
Rebecca Rush - Kelroy
Alex London - Proxy
Jeff Smith - Bone
Thomas Ligotti - The Conspiracy Against the Human Race
E.M. Cioran - On the Heights of Despair
David Benatar - Better Never to Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence
Thomas Ligotti - Songs of a Dead Dreamer
Cordelia Fine - Delusions of Gender (in progress)
Andrea Dworkin - Woman Hating
Julia Serano - Whipping Girl
Gene Wolfe - Peace (in progress)

would advise the whole world to read: Sea Hearts; Eyes of the Overworld; the Blackwater saga

would advise the whole world to avoid: Proxy (and probably most dystopian YA SFF)

meant to read in 2016, but didn't: The Book of the New Sun and a couple more classic feminist texts (Sexual Politics; The Female Eunuch). I'm a little burnt out on books, so I figure I'll finish the Wolfe and the Fine and then take a break from looongreads for a bit.

schrute dwyte (unregistered), Sunday, 1 January 2017 21:39 (seven years ago) link

Fiction:
Amos Oz - To Know a Woman
Michelle Cohen Corasanti - The Almond Tree
Keigo Higashino - The Devotion of Suspect X
David Grossman - A Horse Walks Into a Bar
Yasmina Khadra - The Attack
Ann Leckie - Ancillary Justice
William Sutcliffe - The Wall
Leo Tolstoy - The Death of Ivan Ilyich
S. Yizhar - Khirbet Khizeh
Marco Lodoli - Cloud
Franca Treur - Threshing Floor Full of Confetti
Marlen Haushofer - The Wall
Joseph Conrad - Heart of Darkness
Marcellus Emants - A Posthumous Confession
Dave Eggers - The Circle
Lauren Beukes - Broken Monsters
Matt Bell - Scrapper
Iain Reid - I'm Thinking of Ending Things
Sébastien Japrisot - A Very Long Engagement
Georges Simenon - The Hanged Man of Saint-Pholien
Jenny Erpenbeck - The End of Days
Tarjei Vesaas - The Ice Palace
Sten Nadolny - The Discovery of Slowness
Noah Hawley - Before the Fall
Basma Abdel Aziz - The Queue
Kim Stanley Robinson - Green Earth
Yolanda Entius - The Cabinet of the Staal Family
William Golding - The Spire
Alexandre Dumas - The Count of Monte Christo (in progress)

Children's books read to my daughter:
Neil Gaiman - Coraline
Randall Jerrell - The Animal Family
L. Frank Baum - The Wizard of Oz
Robert Louis Stevenson - Treasure Island (Geronimo Stilton version)
J.M. Barrie - Peter Pan
Laura Ingalls Wilder - Little House in the Big Woods (in progress)

Non-fiction:
Greil Marcus - The History of Rock 'n' Roll in Ten Songs
Thomas Jerome Seabrook - Bowie in Berlin: A New Career in a New Town
Patrick Lencioni - Death by Meeting: A Leadership Fable
Lars Mytting - The Man and the Wood
John Vaillant - The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival
Henno Martin - The Sheltering Desert
Ryan Holiday - Ego Is the Enemy
Kevin Kelly - The Inevitable: Understanding the 12 Technological Forces That Will Shape Our Future
George Packer - The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America
Nick Lane - The Vital Question: Energy, Evolution, and the Origins of Complex Life
Robert Lustig - Fat Chance: Beating the Odds Against Sugar, Processed Food, Obesity, and Disease

ArchCarrier, Monday, 2 January 2017 16:25 (seven years ago) link

Children's books read to my daughter

Secretly the reason I'm most excited to have kids one day...

rhymes with "blondie blast" (cryptosicko), Monday, 2 January 2017 16:41 (seven years ago) link

As assembled by searching ILB posts, this is what I read in 2016:

The Cold Song by Linn Ullmann
Poems of Nazim Hikmet (translated by Blasing and Konuk)
Guantanamo Diary by Mohamedou Ould Slahi
The First Bad Man by Miranda July
Ronald Reagan: Fate, Freedom, and the Making of History by John Patrick Diggins
A Little Larger Than the Entire Universe by Fernando Pessoa
The Country Road by Regina Ullmann
Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges
Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry
The Golem by Gustav Meyrink
F by Daniel Kehlmann
The Man Who Was Thursday by G.K. Chesterton
Vox by Nicholson Baker
Mr. Sammler's Planet by Saul Bellow
Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates
The Rise and Fall of American Growth by Robert Gordon
Stoner by John Williams
Wolf in White Van by John Darnielle

o. nate, Tuesday, 3 January 2017 02:56 (seven years ago) link

Think I have come to the conclusion that hating on Stoner is futile, like hating The Dead or The Doors.

The Magnificent Galileo Seven (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 03:00 (seven years ago) link

_Children's books read to my daughter_

Secretly the reason I'm most excited to have kids one day...


This period doesn't last forever. One day comes that bittersweet moment when they can read themselves.

The Magnificent Galileo Seven (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 03:01 (seven years ago) link

But then you can buy them books, and use these purchases to sneak books for yourself into the house

I hear from this arsehole again, he's going in the river (James Morrison), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 03:07 (seven years ago) link

My chronological reading list from 2016. Starred books are wildly recommended:

Muriel Spark - The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
Jean Rhys - Wide Sargasso Sea
Karrie Fransman - The House That Groaned
Kay Redfield Jamison - An Unquiet Mind
Edward Ross - Filmish
Carol Tyler - Late Bloomer
Juan Rulfo - Pedro Paramo *
Roberto Bolaño - Woes of the True Policeman
Rachael Ball - The Inflatable Woman
Miguel de Cervantes - Don Quixote
Nicola Streeten - Billy, Me & You
Ariel Schrag - Awkward
Ariel Schrag - Definition
Ariel Schrag - Potential
Ali Smith - The Accidental
Stevie Smith - Novel on Yellow Paper *
Sheila Heti - How Should a Person Be?
Muriel Spark - The Driver's Seat
Adolfo Bioy Casares and Silvina Ocampo - Where There's Love There's Hate
Patrick Süskind - Perfume
Umberto Eco - Foucault's Pendulum
Philip Carr-Gomm and Richard Heygate - The Book of English Magic
John Matthews - The Secret Lore of London
Herman Melville - Billy Budd, Bartleby and Other Stories
Owen Davies - Popular Magic: Cunning-folk in English History
Don DeLillo - The Body Artist
César Aira - 3 Novels by César Aira
Ariel Schrag - Likewise
Luigi Serafini - Codex Seraphinianus
Allie Brosh - Hyperbole and a Half *
R. D. Laing - The Politics of Experience and the Bird of Paradise **
Kathy Acker - Empire of the Senseless *
David Adams Leeming - The Oxford Companion to World Mythology
Diana L. Paxson - Taking Up The Runes
Nancy B. Watson - Practical Solitary Magic
Hermann Hesse - Siddartha
Richard Kennedy - A Boy at the Hogarth Press
Various - Granta 129: Fate
Haruki Murakami - What I Talk About When I Talk About Running
Roberto Bolaño - The Unknown University
Sarah Kane - Sarah Kane Complete Plays **
B.S. Johnson - Albert Angelo
Miranda July - No One Belongs Here More Than You

A fair few of these are graphic novels in a bid to make it to 52 books by the end of the year (and out of a genuine love of the medium, of course), but sadly this target was not met due to assorted catastrophe, negligence and dysphoria.

This year I just want to read more psychoanalysis and non-fiction in general as I can feel my brain rusting over. I'm also looking forward to more ILB finds and maybe trying the 'read a lot of books by one author' method that a lot of you seem to advocate.

dance band (tangenttangent), Tuesday, 3 January 2017 12:16 (seven years ago) link

The Rise and Fall of American Growth by Robert Gordon

how was this? i read about it, i think in the new yorker, and it sounded interesting.

Bein' Sean Bean (LocalGarda), Thursday, 5 January 2017 09:30 (seven years ago) link

I'm actually cheating a bit to include it on this list, since I haven't completely finished it yet. I've just finished the 2nd of the 3 parts. The first part, on changes in quality of life from 1870-1940 is fascinating, or was to me at least. It probably helps to be the kind of person who would be interested in an exhibit on the development of the local sewer system in your town. It reads a bit like a text book at times, but includes a huge amount of information that helps to quantify and put in perspective how people's daily lives changed. The second part is the same type of survey for 1940-the present. This is bit more familiar ground so it wasn't quite as fascinating. The third part I believe is more of an economic analysis and prescriptions for reversing the trend of slowing productivity growth.

o. nate, Friday, 6 January 2017 02:13 (seven years ago) link

Alfred, what did you think of Joseph and his Brothers?

ArchCarrier, Friday, 6 January 2017 08:23 (seven years ago) link

first third of the Robert Gordon (thick description of how awful/itchy/stinky/short/&c&c life was in 1870, and how all of the small and under-appreciated innovations delivered us the cozy clean domestic life we now take for granted) is amazing, rest is ok

flopson, Tuesday, 10 January 2017 17:22 (seven years ago) link


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