Saturday, January 13, 2024

What I Read in 2023

2023 felt like another kind of strange year for reading. I read 38 books for the first time, reread another half dozen or so, and read some in print for the first time (originally read in webcomic form). I did read a single nonfiction book, plus two memoirs, three additional graphic memoirs, and a semi-autobiographical short story collection. There were 19 graphic novels, 4 romances, 2 short story/novella collections, an epistolatory novel, a lot of sci-fi and fantasy, and only one vampire book.1 Goodreads tells me that I read over 12,000 pages (first time reads only), the longest book was George R. R. Martin’s A Clash of Kings, and my most shelved book was Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid.

1Nonfiction: Mother Tongue (Bill Bryson)
Memoirs: Lab Girl (Hope Jahren), Crying in H Mart (Michelle Zauner)
Graphic memoirs: Sunshine (Jarrett J. Krosoczka), Almost American Girl (Robin Ha),
    ¡Ay, Mija! (Christine Suggs)
Semi-autobiographical short stories: A River Runs Through It (Norman Maclean)
(Science) romances: The Love Hypothesis, Love on the Brain
    Loathe to Love You (Ali Hazelwood), The Soulmate Equation (Christina Lauren)
Short stories/novellas: A River Runs Through It (Norman Maclean), 
    Loathe to Love You (Ali Hazelwood)
Epistolatory (email) novel: Dear Committee Members (Julie Schumacher)
Vampire book: The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner (Stephenie Meyer)

Some notable reads:
A Clash of Kings and A Storm of Swords (George R. R. Martin) (A Song of Ice and Fire [ASOIAF] books 2 and 3) – Westeros is at war – there are too many kings and their armies are wreaking havoc across the continent. The Stark children are mostly missing, scattered from the Wall to King’s Landing. Meanwhile, Daenerys plots from across the Narrow Sea and something’s brewing north of the Wall. Despite their length and number of characters/plots, the ASOIAF books (to this point) are surprisingly readable and not excessively convoluted to follow. I’ve enjoyed this fantasy series so far.

The Night Circus (Erin Morgenstern) – The general consensus on this book is that the descriptive passages are magical, the plot somewhat less so. The premise is that there’s a travelling circus that appears, operates at night, and has the most incredible exhibits in its tents, then it disappears, perhaps not to return for years. The mystery of the circus is revealed throughout the book, and I do think the plot gets a little weird at the end, but the writing is worth it.

Daisy Jones & The Six (Taylor Jenkins Reid) – I’m a fan of mockumentaries, so I maybe shouldn’t have been as surprised that I liked this book as much as I did. Presented as an oral history, primarily featuring quotes from interviews of band members and those close to them, Daisy Jones & The Six follows the rise and fall of the band – how they came together, wrote a wildly successful album, and what led to them eventually going their separate ways. The author has talked about the story being inspired by Fleetwood Mac.

Mistborn: The Final Empire, The Well of Ascension, and The Hero of Ages (Brandon Sanderson) – Less of a commitment than The Stormlight Archive or The Wheel of Time, Mistborn was a good introduction to Sanderson’s work. The (first) trilogy takes place in a world where plants are brown, ash falls from the sky, and mists come at night and certain people, Allomancers, can use metals to gain different abilities. The first book is overall a heist novel, the second is more political, and the third turns philosophical. The world is built well, with varied characters, though the conclusion is a bit deus ex machina-y.

Before the Coffee Gets Cold and Tales from the Café (Toshikazu Kawaguchi) – An interesting take on time travel, where patrons of a café are allowed to go back in time, but only at one table in the café that they can’t get up from, and their stay is limited to the amount of time it takes a cup of coffee to get cold. The books are translated from Japanese, so the writing doesn’t always flow perfectly, but that’s not necessarily a negative for a translated novel.

The Sandman: Season of Mists and A Game of You (Neil Gaiman) – The Sandman continues with Morpheus taking a trip to Hell to see his ex, only to find the realm abandoned and having to deal with the consequences of that, then New Yorker Barbie travels to her magical dream realm to save it from the Cuckoo. A step removed from the real world, as befits the Lord of the Dreaming.

Sunshine (Jarrett J. Krosoczka) – It’s about a camp for children with cancer and their families, so of course it was going to be sad, but also poignant. Based on the author’s actual experiences.

Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Promise, The Search, and The Rift (Gene Luen Yang) – After Aang saves the world, Team Avatar still has a lot of work to do. Aang and Zuko must figure out how to rule a Fire Nation colony in the Earth Kingdom, Zuko looks for his mother, and Toph faces her family. The author did a good job continuing the story and portraying the characters.

Star WarsHeir to the Empire (Timothy Zahn), The Courtship of Princess Leia (Dave Wolverton), the Jedi Academy trilogy (Jedi Search, Dark Apprentice, Champions of the Force) (Kevin J. Anderson) – The Star Wars books I read in this year featured the emergence of Thrawn, Han chasing Leia to a planet of force witches, and Luke’s quest to establish an academy to begin teaching the next generation of Jedi. Everything was readable, if nothing spectacular.

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