Sep
03
2010
19

A Year of Reading 365 Books

Or not: 180ish books this year. Goodreads reports 168, but with a few friend’s books, a few books that would make me blush, and quite a few I forgot to mark down, I’m suspecting it is about 180 that I’ve read since last September. However, I am currently reading 18 books.

Now do you believe me about the ADD?

Kidding.

Sorta.

Anyway, the goal was 365 books in a year: one book a day. I read approximately one book every two days, which isn’t bad, in retrospect. I’m going to aim for 250 books this year. We’ll call it Book-a-Day Challenge: Year 2. Why not? I still want to reach 365 one year, but it’ll have to wait until I have a little less writing to do.

I did learn a few lessons. First, I have a tendency to finish books that are… lackluster. Second, I have trouble finding books that grab me and make me LOVE reading. Third, if I go through a dry spell of those exceptional, wonderful books, I lose my interest in reading.

So this year, I intend to be a little more picky when I choose books and spend more time finding those awesome reads. Also, I got lazy about keeping track. This year, I want to mark down every book I read right away, before I forget.

The following are the best of the best. If you want a full list of all the books I read this year, go to my 365-challenge Shelf at Goodreads.

Books That MaDe Me Love Reading

  • The Child Thief by Brom: Vivid, vivid writing. You can tell he has a comic background, because his writing is so visual. What blew me away the most was his use of verbs. His writing is so active. And it’s a wonderfully dark and dangerous Peter Pan story. LOVED it.
  • The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins: What can I say that hasn’t already been said? Probably the best YA to come out… ever? Killer writing, the kind of writing so good it’s depressing and inspiring, all at the same time. A series to make teens examine war and the older people who send young people off to fight war.
  • Kushiel’s Legacy series by Jacqueline Carey: Eight books so far, and this series rescued me from a blah reading streak. I love this series. It’s adventure fantasy in a world ruled by the precept: Love as thou wilt. And the erotic acts are beautiful and spiritual. It’s just beautiful, beautiful.
  • Vampire Academy series by Richelle Mead: The best vampire story in the young adult section. Yes, better than Twilight. Way, way, way better. Definitely one of the top five series in the YA section.
  • Raised by Wolves by Jennifer Lynn Barnes: A werewolf book that breaks every expectation and cliché. Parts are hard to read for we adults who are hardwired to protect children, but that is what makes it excellent reading for kids.
  • This Charming Man by Marian Keyes: Marian Keyes is an Irish storyteller through and through. This Charming Man is not chick lit, but it’s also not like women’s fiction. It’s just an awesome story through and through, with a lot of heart and a great message. Loved it.
  • Swoon by Nina Malkin: This book appears, at first glance, as if it’s a standard YA. But no. It breaks every cliché. I thought about this book for a month after I read it. Plus it gets kinky, so thumbs up on that one! ;-)

Punctuation, Be Still My Heart

I find style, grammar, and punctuation to be close to orgasmic. So. Not. Kidding. I can’t get enough. I hated this stuff in school, ignored it for years, and tolerated it when I first started writing. Something snapped in me a few years back and I totally geeked out on it. These were wonderful.

Books to Think By

Yes, I am staying in Arizona in the border zone (it is a 30–mile deep zone, at the very least—not a fence line). With helicopters flying overhead all the time, Border Patrol everywhere, migrants tracking northward right behind my RV Resort, road blocks where you’re asked multiple times a day if you’re a U.S. citizen, and hundreds of people dying in the desert, the first order of business was to educate myself on the issues.

  • The Border: Exploring the U.S.-Mexican Divide by David J. Danelo: If you have an opinion on the border, I am more likely to take it seriously if you’ve read this book. It is honorable journalism that presents almost all sides, intricacies, and subtleties of the border, written by a retired Marine and reporter. It is an unbelievably complex issue with so very many layers, and if your politician has led you to believe that the solution lies in one or two sentences, then please read this book.
  • The Death of Josseline by Margaret Regan: I’m going to be honest; it’s not the best writing I’ve read, but these are real stories collected from years of walking and doing in the border zone. These are true stories so heartbreaking that no matter how they’re told, they’ll make you cry. And they made me feel deeply ashamed and horrified at how our government is handling the border.
  • The World of Mexican Migrants: The Rock and the Hard Place: This book studies the life of Mexican migrants in the United States and in Mexico: where they came from and why, and the conditions they find in the U.S. Again, there are no easy solutions, and we had a hand in creating this situation, and thus a responsibility to do more than just write off migrants seeking honest work as criminals.

Friends to Be Proud Of

It was a great year for my friends! And, dear God, I fear I’ve left someone out. I hope not! I’m sorry. Do let me know if I have. Please. And okay, I don’t really read books not available on Kindle, even though I buy them. (“Okay,” as you’ll see by the end of this section, apparently also means “I’m sorry and please don’t hate me but—”)

And I get so nervous reviewing friends’ books. I’m terrible at it. I never do them justice, so I totally freak out. I get writers’ block about, swear to God.

  • Write with Fire by Charles Gramlich: Nitty-gritty awesomeness of real, practical advice on the writing business, the writing life, and the writing craft. It’s written with short chapters that make it particularly inspiring to read one a day before you sit down to write.
  • Dark and Disorderly by Bernita Harris: Bernita is one of the best writers I know. I have been looking forward to this book for years, ever since I first learned of Lillie St. Claire, a Talent who can see and help the dead. Her husband comes back to haunt her, and she must solve the mystery before he kills her. Lots of well-researched and wonderful stuff on ghosts in here, plus a great urban fantasy thriller besides. The writing: excellent, excellent, excellent.
  • Cattitude by Edie Ramer: Cats! Attitude! Romance! Totally awesome. There’s a big party today at Magical Musings, and you can learn about Belle and her story in a much more enticing way than I could ever describe it, so click here. I am so very excited for her and the book is totally awesome! Please read! Also available on Smashwords.
  • The Tavernier Stones by Stephen Parrish: Okay, I’msorryIhaven’treadityet, so it’s not officially on the list, but I couldn’t leave out this book in a list called “Friends To Be Proud Of.” I have read the beginning, and it’s fresh writing, wonderfully intricate plotting, and a book I really want to read. I bought it, but it’s a paper book. I sneeze every time I open it. It’s too precious to take to the pool, so I check every day to see if they’ve released it on Kindle yet. (Here, will you do me a favor and click this: “Tell the Publisher! I’d like to read this book on Kindle.”)
  • Freudian Slip by Erica Orloff: Okay, this also is not officially on this list because I read it a over a year ago, but the title of this part is “Friends To Be Proud Of.” The story and characters are fresh and creative in a wonderfully mind-bending way, and as with all of her books, it’s got a ton of heart. Loved it. She also released the second book in her Magickeeper Trilogy, which I know I’ll love, but it was not originally available on Kindle so I haven’t read it yet.
  • Eight for Eternity by Mary Reed and Eric Mayer: A‑freakin‑mazing. The setting for the mystery is to die for: 6th century Constantinople during the Nika riots. I got this book free to review, and I’m ashamed to say that I loved it so much, that when it came time for me to review it, I got writer’s block because I felt so inadequate at conveying how very good this book is. I want so very much to tell you how wonderful this series is, but Sue O’Brien from Booklist describes it better: “Reed and Mayer bring the time of the Nika Riots in Constantinople to vivid life in this eighth installment in their series, capturing the burning city, the mob mentality, the panic in the castle as the rioters come ever closer, and the effort to convince Justinian to use whatever methods are necessary to keep his throne.”
  • Stupid Cupid series by Rhonda Stapleton: Hilarious with heart. Utterly charming YA with a lot of heart. The idea? Cupids are not little angels shooting arrows, but people with little hand computers whose arrows are emails. In this series, they hire teens to be cupids in high schools. LOVE IT. Totally awesome series.
  • The Fallen by Mark Terry: Again, I can’t officially include this in the list because I read it a couple years ago, but—title of this section?—of course he’s a friend I’m proud of! Mark Terry sent this book to me as a birthday gift when I first got my Kindle! I love his fast-paced thrillers and have a bit of a crush on Derek Stillwater, if I’m to be honest. The Fallen has probably undergone a bunch of changes since I read it as Angels Falling, so I plan on re-reading the first three books before the fourth book comes out.
  • Claimed by Zoe Winters: Oh man, Anthony is HOT. And yummy. And I love this book. *fans self* Did I mention how much I love Anthony? I don’t think there’s any sex in it, actually, but Anthony sure is… yummy.

Books to Live By

One habit that didn’t die after I quit teaching was that I still tend to pick up every book on education and motivational psychology. I’m not much for feel-good stuff, and this year there were several well-researched and practical books whose lessons I applied successfully.

So those are the best books I read September 2009 – 2010.

What about you? What are the best books you’ve read this year? Do you keep track? Are you on Goodreads?

19 commments so far. Add yours!
Written by Natasha Fondren in: Book-A-Day Reading Challenge | Tags: ,
Apr
26
2010
22

A Favor & Some Fabulous Books

April is quite the month for our corner of the blogosphere! I’ve listed some great books and short stories below. Also, I’m guest-blogging at Smart Pop Books today, asking, “Do You Dare to be Different?” Will you go leave a comment, please? Make me look good?

And if you’re interested, my essay is available for free, for one week: The Domestication of a Vampire Executioner. You can comment on that, too, if you like. The comment form is waaayy on the bottom. I joked on Facebook that they clearly don’t know my commenters are smarter than I am.

In alphabetical order, here are some reads not to miss out on:

Chimes: Charles Gramlich

Chimes is a short horror story, available at Damnation Books. About the book: She should have brought her wind chimes in, she thought, when she heard them ringing in the first gusts of the approaching hurricane. She was sitting on the edge of the bed with her feet fishing for slippers when she remembered. She had brought the chimes in. They were hanging downstairs in her living room, where there was no wind to move them.

Charles’ blog, Razored Zen, is not to be missed, either, and I just ordered his book on writing, Write with Fire.

Eight for Eternity: Eric Mayer & Mary Reed

Eight for Eternity is an awesome read! The history is just fascinating.q I’m almost done with it, so I’ll probably give a more extensive review later. For now, here’s the blurb from Publisher’s Weekly:

Reed and Mayer’s excellent eighth John the Chamberlain mystery centers on the real-life Nika riots, which nearly destroyed Constantinople in A.D. 532. When two prisoners escape police custody, each a member of the two main factions who supported the opposing chariot teams at the races in the Hippodrome, Emperor Justinian sends John, his trusted chamberlain, to investigate. John soon finds the young men’s bodies in the chilly waters of a cistern. Meanwhile, two nephews of a former ruler may provide a rallying point for General Belisarius should he opt to stage a coup as rival political factions wreak havoc throughout the city. Subtle, well-drawn characters, from the ascetic John to the capricious and enigmatic Justinian; deft descriptive detail revealing life in the late Roman Empire; and sharp dialogue make this another winner in this outstanding historical series.

The Tavernier Stones: Stephen Parrish

I just ordered my copy of The Tavernier Stones, by Stephen Parrish. If you’ve read his blog, you know it has to be good! Here’s a shortened bit of what it’s about, but go here for a better overview. And go to tavernierstones.com to win a real diamond!

When the well-preserved body of 17th century mapmaker Johannes Cellarius floats to the surface of a bog in northern Germany, and a 57 carat ruby rolls out of his fist, treasure hunters from around the globe race to find the Lost Tavernier Stones of popular European folklore.

The race spans two continents. The finish line is in Idar-Oberstein, the gemstone capital of Germany. There, in chambers beneath an old church, where unspeakable events took place in centuries past, winners and losers alike find answers to age-old questions about the Lost Tavernier Stones.

Managing Maggie: Kate Sterling

I feel rather unjustifiably proud of this book, because I convinced Kate to submit it in more than one place, LOL. (I’m sure she would’ve gotten there on her own.) Managing Maggie was a bestseller at Cobblestone when it was released!

Maggie was devastated when her husband divorced her because she couldn’t have children, but she eventually moved on and started her own graphic design business. When her business partner Jason indicates he wants their relationship to be personal, Maggie is tempted by the sexy young designer, but she thinks she’s too old for him.

Yet an unexpected encounter featuring fuzzy handcuffs and a pink flogger leaves Maggie feeling he may just be “The One”. She’s riding a wave of happiness until a younger woman shows up claiming to be pregnant by Jason. Can Maggie and Jason’s relationship handle the strain?

The Fallen: Mark Terry

I read The Fallen in an earlier incarnation and loved it. Mark Terry has recently been on a blog tour that’s worth checking out. Some of his greatest blogs ever! From Booklist:

A summit of world leaders convenes at a beautiful Colorado resort just in time to encounter a former government agent gone rogue. Threatening to kill a world leader every hour unless his demands are met, the madman and his team seem impossible to stop. It falls on Derek Stillwater, an agent working undercover at the resort as a maintenance guy, to stop his former colleague. Unfortunately, because most of the people he used to work for believe he is dead and was a traitor, Stillwater must work alone and avoid being seen by both bad guys and good. Tense from the first page, The Fallen maintains its intensity up to the very end, and Stillwater is both a sympathetic and believable hero. Readers of previous Stillwater novels will eagerly wait to see him in action again, and those new to the series will seek out his earlier adventures (including The Serpent’s Kiss, 2009). –Jeff Ayers

Have you read any good books lately? Any favorites?

22 commments so far. Add yours!
Written by Natasha Fondren in: Books | Tags: ,

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