Thought I'd start a thread for the books I read during this year, to keep track and share what I've been spending my time with. Happy for recommendations along the way, but do already have a decent-sized to be read pile (and ebook library). #books #reading #bookstodon
1) Station Eleven, by Emily St. John Mandel.
An interesting take on the post-apocalyptic tale with a focus on the power of culture and stories in a broken world. Very ambitious and the interlinking of the characters is well done, though I found the climax a bit rushed and perfunctory after the long buildup to it. #books #bookstodon
2) The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, by NK Jemisin
A fascinating fantasy set amidst the human elite in a world where gods are real and tangibly present. Sometimes a little overwhelming in the strangeness and I was scrabbling to keep track of it all. Want to see more of this world, especially how the people below live their lives in the shadow of the conflicts that rage above them, and I will be reading the rest of the trilogy.
#books #bookstodon
3) Walking, by Thomas Bernhard
Can you guess why I got this one? Turned out to not really be my cup of tea, but still some interesting ideas in there. A translated Austrian novella about two friends walking and talking about the events and thoughts leading to another friend going insane. Well, one of them does most of the talking while the other records his stream of consciousness. #books #bookstodon
4) The Old Ways, by Robert Macfarlane
The idea of how some pathways have survived centuries and help us to tell stories of our ancestors and ourselves fascinates me, so I really liked a lot of this. A reminder of some of the different ways of seeing a landscape and finding stories in it, yet Macfarlane is interested in the people around these routes now and their stories too. #books #bookstodon #walking
5) The Red Scholar's Wake, by Aliette de Bodard ( @aliettedb)
Enjoyed this. Has the structure of a romance novel, but set in a future of sentient ships and space pirate politics where the stakes are much higher than the fate of a relationship. Lots of strangeness to get used to, but introduced well through the characters. Not read anything in this Xuya Universe before, but now I want to read more from it. #books #bookstodon
6) The House of Wisdom, by Jonathan Lyons
Interesting but relatively short book on how the scientific progress and intellectual discoveries made by the Arab world were introduced to Europe in the medieval period. Learned a lot about the process of knowledge transfer, but would have liked to read more on the wider effects of it. #books #bookstodon
7) The Debatable Land, by Graham Robb
A book about the history of one part of the Anglo-Scottish border, but quite unfocused. It's like four or more different books are all vying for space, which gave me a feeling of constant digression and a lack of focus. A shame as the parts on the border families and the traditions of reiving were something I'd have enjoyed reading a lot more on. #books #bookstodon
8) Inverting The Pyramid: The History Of Football Tactics, by Jonathan Wilson
Not just a book about tactics, but a look at how the game's development was pushed by wider social and cultural factors. Perhaps a bit too much on England while the real (and more interesting) story was happening elsewhere and some poor editing (who is this Ronaldo Koeman?) but an interesting and informative read. #books #bookstodon
9) A Certain Idea Of France: The Life of Charles De Gaulle, by Julian Jackson
Superb biography, detailed but never overly so and seeking to answer the question of how De Gaulle became such a central figure in modern French history. Jackson is good at showing the possibilities of the times, exploring why the importance of the Free French, the Fifth Republic, and much else wasn't inevitable. Strongly recommended #books #bookstodon
10) Africa Is Not A Country, by Dipo Faloyin
A book I learned a lot from. Faloyin is a talented writer, mixing together righteous anger in sections on subjects like the Scramble for Africa and the looting of cultural treasures with a joyous wit in sections on Western media depictions of Africa and the jollof rice wars. A bit scattergun at points, but always interesting and illuminating. #books #bookstodon
11) Silver In The Wood, by Emily Tesh
A short tale, but one that drew me in well. It's a story about an old wood, its guardian and a newcomer who stumbles in, but there are plenty of layers to the story beneath that. Like an old tree, there's a lot going on beneath the surface, revealed as the story unfolds and grows. Will definitely be looking out for more from Tesh. #books #bookstodon
12) Lying For Money, by Dan Davies
I wasn't expecting to laugh out loud several times during a book on financial fraud, but Davies manages it. It would be easy for a book like this to turn into a financial analyst patronising us little folk while trying to explain complex things, but he's an excellent (and amusing) storyteller who explains both the how and why of fraud. Also refreshingly honest about how frauds get missed by overconfident analysts. #books #bookstodon
13) Endymion, by Dan Simmons
I enjoyed the Hyperion books last year, but this was a bit of a slog. Interesting world building from the previous books, but the story is mainly characters wandering the universe looking for someone to explain the plot to them until its time for the ending and a whole new plot device character drops in to make that happen. Add in some really icky undertones to one relationship and things aren't good here. #books #bookstodon
14) Conspiracy, by Tom Phillips and Jonn Elledge
A book that doesn't seem sure of what it wants to be. Some good in-depth sections (especially on health and pandemic conspiracies) but the rest is a very surface-level look at things with way too much jokiness., like diving into Wikipedia while someone tests out their standup material in the background. #books #bookstodon
(Disclaimer: I've know Jonn through social media for a while - and no, that doesn't mean you should snitch-tag him here - but I paid for this book)
15) Delicacy, by Katy Wix
"A memoir about cake and death" A touching and heartfelt memoir about dealing with grief and loss, loosely structured around memories of cakes and sweetness. Very relatable for me as I've lost family members to dementia and brain tumours, as Wix has, and very much about the realities of her life, not the sort of thing you'd usually expect from an actor's memoir. #books #bookstodon
16) Gideon The Ninth, by Tamsyn Muir
Read this for a book group, but also because I've seen people raving about it and wanted to try it myself. It didn't quite connect with me, but I can see why others love it. Hard to get into at the start as rhe universe is so weird and it reveals itself slowly. Does lead to an interesting and exciting conclusion and will probably follow up with the sequel eventually.
#books #bookstodon
17) SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome, by Mary Beard
Beard clearly knows a lot about Roman history, and is a good writer, but this book didn't really work for me. There's too much going on, and too many different facets of history being covered for this to feel like a coherent history, even when she she sets the finishing point before the Crisis of the Third Century. Falls between being comprehensive history and a snapshot view of key points. #books #bookstodon
18) The Rise of Endymion, by Dan Simmons
Here's a book that finally starts to pay off all the setup from the previous three, scaling into a crisis that's out of anybody's control...then decides to spend the second half of the book focusing on Raul's manpain that his perfect lover (who he's known since she was 11, so: eww) might have been with someone other than him. Really liked the first of the series, hence why I finished it, but it's been downhill since. #books #bookstodon
19) Pathfinders: The Golden Age Of Arabic Science, by Jim Al-Khalili
(I believe it's titled The House Of Wisdom in the US)
Second book I've read on this topic this year, and more interesting than the first. This is focused on the Arabic scientists and their stories rather than seeing them just in terms of what they gave to the West. Good on how Baghdad became a centre of science and the processes around that, but could have been longer. #books #bookstodon
20) A Memory Called Empire, by Arkady Martine
Took me a while to get through this but that's more because it took me a while to get focused enough on reading again after my trip. Somewhat overwhelming in the strangeness of the universe and the languages at the start, this does draw together all the thread of worldbuilding into a compelling conclusion while raising some interesting ideas about empire and humanity. Will be reading the sequel soon. #books #bookstodon
21) The Thousand Earths, by Stephen Baxter
A disappointment. The setting - a thousand flat Earths all in sight of each other, each slowly consuming itself - was a fascinating idea, but the characters were paper-thin and consumed by their plot function. Interspersed with a story about an astronaut on a long journey that felt like a parody of the typical Baxter protagonist, looking for nothing more than someone to moan at. #books #bookstodon
22) Nomadland, by Jessica Bruder
I still haven't seen the film version of this, but it's a fascinating read in its own right. A look into a growing subculture of the US, but one growing because of external pressure, not personal desire. People forced to live on the road as the only way to survive an increasingly inhumane economy is both our past and our dystopic future, and this captures the moment those meet. #books #bookstodon
23) The Kaiju Preservation Society, by John Scalzi
Like the author says in the afterword, it's a three-minute pop song of a book, not a symphony. It's fun, but nothing deeper than that, rattling along at a pace that's gast and light enough to have you questioning the premise or the coincidences the plot requires too much. Not breaking new ground, but people who like this sort of thing will like this. #books #bookstodon
24) Imagined Communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism, by Benedict Anderson
A book I first read back in the early 90s and have reread about once a decade since then. Still fascinating and thought-provoking in how national identities are created, developed and institutionalised over time. Let's se how it feels when I come back to it in the 2030s, shall we? #books #bookstodon
25) People Of The Sacred Valley, by Paul Eastham
A collection of local history tales from the NW of Cumbria and the #LakeDistrict. Some interesting stories in here, especially in how the politics of previous eras affected the area, but a bit disorganised in the telling. Some parts a bit unfocused and others little more than summaries of information, but enough in there to make me glad I picked it up at the bookshop in Keswick. #books #bookstodon https://www.fletcherchristianbooks.com/Sacred_Valley/p5921133_21146598.aspx
Sacred Valley

It might seem to be a picture-perfect, serene and utterly remote fragment of rural England. Yet the towns and villages along the sixty-mile course of the beautiful Derwent River inspired a lot of remarkable people - and saw a lot of trouble. Some of the inhabitants of Keswick, Cockermouth, Workington and their neighbours Maryport and Whitehaven created world-famous art and literature. Others built fortunes, wielded enormous political power, created industries or steered world-changing events. But these achievements often came at a heavy price. The twenty-one real-life stories in this work of Cumbrian history include: A corrupt moneybags accidentally made a town beautiful as he sneakily bought up an election. A pioneering doctor gave everything she had to establish a hospital for the poor, only to find her own Government was killing the people she aimed to save. An innocent German miner was bludgeoned to death by a jealous Cumbrian mob after he and his Continental colleagues left the...

Fletcher Christian Books Shop
26) The Unreal and the Real, Selected Stories volume 1: Where on Earth, by Ursula K Le Guin
Some good stories in here, but ran up against my usual problem with short story collections that I get disappointed that the ones I like aren't longer and find some I fail to engage with. Probably need to stop being such a completist and feel the need to read all of them, I guess, but that's easier said than done. #books #bookstodon
27) Shaman, by Kim Stanley Robinson
It's interesting in its attempt to depict a prehistoric society in the Ice Age, but it falls into the problem Robinson often has of spending so much time describing things that he forgets to bring in an actual story. It's in the same territory as Golding's The Inheritors, but that does this better, making deep time seem much stranger and rawer than this, with its occasional anachronism, does. #books #bookstodon
28) Heart of Maleness: An Exploration, by Raphaël Liogier
A long essay, rather than a full book, so not as wide-ranging as the title might suggest it is, but still interesting. Focuses on misogyny as the heart of patriarchy and the roots of how that's a basis of our society. A lot of different ideas brought in here, but all within that one theme. Interesting read, but has me wanting to find more depth on toxic masculinity as a whole. #books #bookstodon
29) Walk, by James Rice
Found by chance, when a friend spotted it on the shelf at a bookshop and passed it on to me. Glad she did, as this is interesting. Starts like a conventional tale of two young men attempting Offa's Dyke Path, but then adds a different voice into that narrative, changing the nature of the book and the journey within it. A gaze into toxic masculinity and the aimlessness of modern twentysomething life. #books #bookstodon
30) The Last English King, by Julian Rathbone
Years ago, I read this on a train to Inverness, then found a copy of it a few months ago in a charity shop so decided to repeat the experience. Very glad I did: historical fiction, but very conscious of its status as fiction, unafraid of using well-deployed anachronism to tell a tale of how different understandings of the world crashed together in 1066 leaving one England dead, but another fresh-born. #books #bookstodon
31) A Desolation Called Peace, by Arkady Martine
I enjoyed the first part of this (A Memory Called Empire) but really loved this. All the world-building from the first novel is paid off here and the story flows from the way that ended both for the characters and the setting. The boundaries between 'I", "we" and "you" now examined at the level of a civilisation and what happens when they clash. Definitely recommended. #books #bookstodon
32) Galapagos, by Kurt Vonnegut
Read some of this on a ferry, though it didn't follow the book and crash into a remote island where we became the progenitors of a new race of humans after everyone else was wiped out.
A satire on evolution and the danger of "big brains" but more interesting in the asides and digressions than the main story. Still Vonnegut, so there are turns of phrase you'll not find anywhere else, but slight. #books #bookstodon
33) Inferior, by Angela Saini
Thanks to @fkamiah17 for recommending this look at the science rhat supposedly shows the superiority of men (and the immutable borders of sex) then shows how much of it is based on patriarchal assumptions and flawed studies. Sometimes a bit frustrating when she takes her time to show the problems with something very obviously wrong, but a good read. #books #bookstodon
@nickbwalking I loved both these books, the world building is fantastic, a truly imaginative creation.

@nickbwalking I’ve read the first book and have the second one on my bought-but-not-yet-read list.

The first one is definitely among my favourite sci-fi stories. I’ll have to reread it before I start with the second one, but I’m very excited. :D

@nickbwalking I read this a while ago and it really is popcorn but I did love how ridiculous it was
@nickbwalking The film version is really good 👍
@nickbwalking Ah that's a shame. I thought the concept for this sounded interesting. It's sad when a book you have high hopes for is disappointing.
@JennaMPink I've seen some good reviews for it, so it might just be that it didn't click with me
@nickbwalking I have learned to just not read anything by Baxter haha
@nickbwalking is that one of the sequels to Hyperion? Only one of those books I've read, but I thought it was really good. I really enjoyed The Terror by him as well.
@TheQuizGuy Yes, it's the fourth one in the series and the conclusion. I really liked Hyperion too, but the rest aren't as good, especially as they're not as structurally interesting as that is.
@nickbwalking read the Teixcalaan duology by Arkady Martine? Some of the best SF I've read in recent years.
@TheQuizGuy Is that A Memory Called Empire? It's literally sitting on my shelf next in line :)
@nickbwalking it is, and the sequel A Desolation Called Peace. I just finished them a few days ago (second reading for A Memory Called Empire). Enjoy!

@nickbwalking fwiw, each book in the series is much more comprehensible when you have the previous ones fresh in your mind so my recommendation would be to wait until Alecto is out and then read all four. (I really really love the series.)

(And yes I'm going through you "what I've read this year" thread like a creep. 😛 might pick up some of your recs.)

@elmyra it might be creepy if I hadn't already threaded them for that! I think any future Locked Tomb reads will be when I've got time to properly get into it not read bits at a time