This is the time of year I have fun reflecting on my last year's reading list.
Some stats:
Books read: 50
But don't be too impressed: 36% were middle-grade and 12% were YA (which are no less valid, often very thought-provoking and well written...but generally shorter).
Nonfiction: 46%, my highest percentage ever
Of the nonfiction, I read a lot of biography/history/memoir this year. It actually beat my usual highest category: plants/animals.
Of the fiction, I read a good amount of science fiction/fantasy/spec, but the highest category was contemporary (non-thriller, non-mystery, non-romance)
Best-of Awards:
Most bizarre premise: Hope Never Dies: an Obama Biden Mystery, by Andrew Shaffer. Yeah, you read that subtitle right: Biden solves a mystery with the help of his friend, Obama. In FIRST PERSON. Bizarre. But I enjoyed it.
Most
light-heartedly enjoyable speculative fiction for adults: Brandon Sanderson's The Frugal Wizard's
Handbook for Surviving Medieval England.
A bit repetitive in some parts, confusing in others, but the
guidebook entries were priceless.
Most
light-heartedly enjoyable speculative fiction for kids: Pip Bartlett's Guide to Unicorn Training by
Jackson Pearce and Maggie Stiefvater.
Not quite as darling as the first book in the series, but still great. And the guidebook entries were priceless. I think there's a pattern here.
Best
guidebook for how to die while hiking in the Grand Canyon: Tail of the Scorpion, by Mike Graf. The guidebook parts were informative and
seemed factually accurate. But the story
part should have been called How to Kill your Kids in Grand Canyon. You can read my whole rant on Goodreads, but
do NOT start on a major hike of the Grand Canyon at 3:00 pm in August. Just don't.
Best guidebook for how not to die while hiking in the Grand Canyon: Okay, so it wasn't a guidebook at all, but a quietly tense thriller which portrayed the canyon realistically: Getaway, by Zoje Stage.
Best book about people who actually did die while boating the Grand Canyon: Sunk Without a Sound: The Tragic Colorado River Honeymoon of Glen and Bessie Hyde, by Brad Dimock. Well written, comprehensive (but not in a belabored way), and grimly fascinating.
Best relentlessly religious historical fiction book taking
place at the Grand Canyon (yes, there were a couple of themes this year): A Deep Divide, by Kimberley Woodhouse. I didn't realize when I put this on hold that
it was Christian fiction, but I should have, because there doesn't seem to exist
a genre of clean historical romances that doesn't ram religion down our
throats. I loved the locale and the
historical details, and if it hadn't been so preachy, I really would have
enjoyed it. But some people will enjoy
it because of all the talk of God and scripture.
Best book about nature:
Around the World in 80 Birds, written by Mike Unwin, illustrated
by Ryuto Miyake. Interesting little write-ups
of fascinating birds. Beautiful illustrations.
Author whose books I read the most of: Kathleen Krull. I got on a kick and read several of her books
of short biographies written for kids.
They're full of interesting, rapid-fire facts. Maybe not a lot of depth, but fun to read.
Best novel for kids: Across
the Desert, by Dusti Bowling. I love
Dusti Bowling. And the Arizona setting
doesn't hurt any. Check out her books!
Best novel for adults: Other Birds, by Sarah Addison Allen. Interesting setting, engaging writing, slight supernatural element. A very warm and gentle read.
Not sure if this counts, because I listened in audio, but…
Best mountain climbing survival book (yeah, this is a whole
genre I read/listen to a lot of): The
Climb; Tragic Ambition on Everest, by Anatoli Boukreev and G. Weston DeWalt. Like all of these books, it had its flaws—like
how I couldn't keep all of the characters straight—but it was really captivating. I would tell myself I was just going to listen
for 15 minutes before bed, and at the end of 15 minutes I'd set it for another
15 minutes…then another.
Best graphic novels based on historical events and people: ) Guardian of Fukushima, by Ewan Blain & Fabien Grolleau, about the man who defied government orders by staying in the irradiated zone to take care of abandoned animals after the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster. They Called us Enemy, by George Takei, about the Japanese Internment Camps in WWII.
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