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Book rundown, 2023

12/30/2023

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In 2023, I went into business as a fulltime editor. I worked on two dissertations, three scholarly monographs, and thirteen novels, none of which I’ll be discussing here. This \ post is about books I chose to read, not books I got paid to read.

One unforeseen drawback to editing professionally: I have less enthusiasm for pleasure reading in my off time. I’m more likely to reach for music than audiobooks these days. But I still managed more than one book per week, and I would like to take the opportunity—I would like to take every opportunity—to mention that one of those books was War and Peace.


Total books read: 78. That’s 60 books I chose to read, plus another 18 I edited or indexed professionally. For the rest of this post, we’re just going to focus on those 60.

Age levels:
  • Adult: 56
  • YA: 2
  • Children’s: 2
 
Books that were published in 2023: 6

  • Deduct It! Lower Your Small Business Taxes, by Stephen Fishman
  • Perilous Times, by Thomas D. Lee
  • Cry, Baby, by Benjamin Perry
  • The Midnight Kingdom, by Jared Yates Sexton    
  • Mammoths at the Gates, by Nghi Vo
  • System Collapse, by Martha Wells

Nonfiction: 20

Fiction: 40. That feels about right, a two-to-one fiction-to-nonfiction ratio.

Genres: (as some books have more than one genre, total exceeds 60)
  • Nonfiction:
  • Biography – 1
  • Business – 4
  • Editing and grammar – 4
  • Health and wellness – 2
  • History – 9
  • Literary criticism – 2
  • Meditation – 2
  • Memoir – 1
  • Music history – 1
  • Social science – 4
  • Spirituality – 2
 
Fiction:
  • Adventure – 3
  • Crime – 6
  • Fantasy – 13
  • Folk tales – 1
  • Historical fiction – 2
  • Horror – 2
  • Literary fiction – 8
  • Science fiction – 11

Miscellaneous:

  • Annual fat Russian novel: War and Peace
  • Re-reads: 2
  • Audiobooks: 47
  • Unique authors: 55
  • Most read author: Nghi Vo, with her lovely Singing Hills novellas

Best books of the year:

Cover art for A Swim in a Pond in the Rain, with purples and blues
A Swim in a Pond in the Rain, by George Saunders

This is a collection of Russian short stories and literary criticism. Do you understand how hard it is for me to get people to read this book? It is so good though. So good. It is the all the joy of studying writers and stories with none of the Foucault.
Cover art for The Address Book, featuring several images of maps
The Address Book, Deirdre Mask

Here’s another hard sell: a nonfiction book about street addresses! It is captivating, though. Truly. I’ve never thought so much about street names or numbers or how that influences our lives. This is sociology + data nerdery. Also, important thing to note, people in England use filthy names for their streets. They just do not care.

Best audiobook narrators:

Roger Clark, The Searcher (Tana French). Tana French remains my favorite contemporary crime writer. This was my first time enjoying one of her novels as an audiobook. Clark does authentic Irish and American accents throughout.

Frazer Douglas, Song of Achilles (Madeline Miller). The sensuality of this man’s voice needs a warning label.

Various: A Swim in a Pond in the Rain (George Saunders). Saunders narrates the literary criticism part of this book, but the stories themselves are read by various actors:

  • "In the Cart," Chekhov, narrated by Phylicia Rashad
  • "The Singers," Turgenev, narrated by Nick Offerman (my favorite narration in this book)
  • "The Darling," Chekov, narrated by Glenn Close
  • "Master and Man," Tolstoy, narrated by Keith David
  • “The Nose,” Gogol, narrated by Rainn Wilson
  • "Gooseberries," Chekov, narrated by BD Wong
  • “Alyosha the Pot,” Tolstoy, narrated by Renée Elise Goldsberry

Themes:
  • Business books: I think it is delightful if business books are the type of book that you personally enjoy reading. It takes all types, doesn’t it? I myself find them excruciating. The only reason I read any business books was because I started my own business.
  • Russian history: before I went and got the idea to start my own business, I was writing a novel set in eighteenth century Russia.
  • Togetherness, community, belonging: because that’s the only thing that matters.
  • And in fiction: despite the ongoing nightmares in the world, the narrowing world of traditional publishing, and ongoing threats from people who value AI over human creativity, there has never been such a good time to enjoy fantasy and science fiction. So many superb contemporary writers.  

K. J. Parker: Is he still the best?
I will never stop banging this drum. Tom Holt is always terrific and so is his pseudonym, K. J. Parker.

Honorable mentions:
  • A Man Called Ove, by Fredrik Backman. I was not expecting to love this book, but oh gosh. Crotchety Old Man Thawing is such a good genre, when it’s done right.
  • Stone Blind, by Natalie Haynes. A retelling of the Medusa story. This was my first time reading Haynes. I was transfixed. She is a formidable prose stylist and storyteller both. I felt the breadth of human emotion in this book.
  • Under the Whispering Door, by T. J. Klune. Klune is one I ration carefully. One book per year, no more. Mustn’t indulge. Anyway: I typically do not care to read love stories (for unhealthy reasons; it makes me feel bad when characters on a page get to experience something I don’t), but it’s okay with Klune. He always makes my heart feel warm.
  • Song of Achilles, by Madeline Miller. Another astonishingly good Greek retelling, this time focused on Achilles and Patroclus. The grief I felt in this book…
  • The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August, by Claire North. A re-read of one of my favorite science fiction novels. Such fine plotting, such mind-blowing ideas.
  • War and Peace, by Lev Tolstoy. It was wonderful. At times, Tolstoy cosplays a military historian and those passages get a little snoozy, but mostly this book is high drama. Affairs, betrayals, intrigue, secret marriages, bigamy, botched abortions, pistols at dawn.
  • The Cooking Gene, by Michael W. Twitty. A Black man traces his history through food. This is not one of those uplifting, celebratory books. It’s about trauma and violence.
  • The Empress of Salt and Fortune, by Nghi Vo. The first novella in a fantasy series. In a setting reminiscent of Imperial China and Vietnam, a nonbinary cleric travels the land to collect oral histories. The prose is lovely but not overwrought, the way folk stories ought to be, and the action balances nicely with the moments of repose.       
  • System Collapse, by Martha Wells. The Murderbot books continue to deliver. If you’re new to them, start with the first, All Systems Red.

All the books I read, sorted by genre:

Nonfiction

Business

Cather, Karin and Dick Margulis. The Paper It's Written On, 2018
Fishman, Stephen. Deduct It! Lower Your Small Business Taxes, 2023
Pakroo, Peri H. The Small Business Start-Up Kit, 2018
 
Grammar and editing
Dreyer, Benjamin. Dreyer's English, 2019
Harnby, Louise. Business Planning for Editorial Freelancers, 2013
Saller, Carol Fisher. The Subversive Copyeditor, 2016
 
Health and wellness
Albright, Mary Beth. Eat and Flourish, 2022
Murthy, Vivek. Together, 2020

History
Burton-Hill, Clemency. Year of Wonder, 2017
Cleves, Rachel Hope. Charity and Sylvia, 2014
De Madariaga, Isabel. Politics and Culture in Eighteenth-Century Russia, 1998
Figes, Orlando. The Story of Russia, 2022
Hartnett, Lynne Ann. Understanding Russia, 2018
Kytle, Ethan J. and Blain Roberts. Denmark Vesey's Garden, 2018
Rosslyn, Wendy. Women and Gender in 18th-Century Russia, 2003
Sexton, Jared Yates. The Midnight Kingdom, 2023
Twitty, Michael W. The Cooking Gene, 2018
 
Literary criticism
Saunders, George. A Swim in a Pond in the Rain, 2021
 
Meditation
Nhất Hạnh, Thích. The Miracle of Mindfulness, 1975
Selassie, Sebene. You Belong, 2020
 
Social science
Gottschall, Jonathan. The Storytelling Animal, 2012
Mask, Deirdre. The Address Book, 2020
Perry, Benjamin. Cry, Baby, 2023

 
Fiction

Crime
Braithwaite, Oyinkan. My Sister, the Serial Killer, 2018
Christie, Agatha. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, 1926
French, Tana. The Searcher, 2020
Todd, Charles. A Test of Wills, 1996
Tudor, C. J. The Chalk Man, 2018
Winters, Ben H. The Last Policeman, 2012
 
Fantasy
Abercrombie, Joe. Half a King, 2014
Abercrombie, Joe. Half a War, 2015
Abercrombie, Joe. Half a World, 2015
Klune, T. J. Under the Whispering Door, 2021
Lee, Thomas D. Perilous Times, 2023
Nix, Garth. Sabriel, 1994
Vo, Nghi. The Empress of Salt and Fortune, 2020
Vo, Nghi. Into the Riverlands, 2022
Vo, Nghi. Mammoths at the Gates, 2023
Vo, Nghi. When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain, 2020
Weeks, Brent. Beyond the Shadows, 2008
Weeks, Brent. Shadow's Edge, 2008
Weeks, Brent. The Way of Shadows, 2008
 
Folk tales
Afanasyev, Alexander Nikolaievitch. Russian Folk Tales, 1980
 
Horror
Barron, Laird. The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All, 2018
Bradbury, Ray. The Halloween Tree, 1972
 
Literary fiction
Backman, Fredrik. A Man Called Ove, 2019
Capote, Truman. Breakfast at Tiffany's, 1958
Coupland, Douglas. Life After God, 1994
Dickens, Charles. The Pickwick Papers, 1836
Haynes, Natalie. Stone Blind, 2022
Miller, Madeline. Song of Achilles, 2011
Tolstoy, Lev. War and Peace, 1867
 
Science fiction
Adams, Douglas. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, 1979
Banks, Iain M. Consider Phlebas, 1987
Delaney, Samuel R. Babel-17, 1966
Holt, Tom. When It's a Jar, 2013
Le Guin, Ursula K. The Lathe of Heaven, 1971
North, Claire. The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August, 2014
O'Brien, Robert C. Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH, 1971
Wells, Martha. System Collapse, 2023
1 Comment

The Pickwick Papers, by Charles Dickens

12/23/2023

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Cover art for The Pickwick Papers, by Charles Dickens, featuring one of the original illustrations by Phiz (Hablot Knight Browne), in which one gentleman tips his hat to another.
While the rest of you are enjoying Charles Dickens the way God intended, with Muppets, I am here finishing up the first Dickens novel, The Pickwick Papers, serially published in 1836-1837. It follows the adventures of an English gentleman named Pickwick and several of his fellow gentlemen. I cannot overstate how boring these adventures are.

Forgive me. I do not typically speak ill of works by living writers, and even though Dickens is safe from my literary criticism, there are plenty of you out there who like this book, and here I am being unkind to it. I am sorry. I would like to hear what it is you like about it.

The book is a series of linked vingettes. Many of them feel frivolous. It is true there are moments of depth, but the first time I said "Ah, now we're getting somewhere" was p. 564, which is fairly late in the game for a plot to thicken

Pickwick gets himself thrown in debtors' prison, and for a few blessed pages, Dickens writes with the social consciousness that elevates him above so many other writers. That passage would be enough to radicalize anyone into becoming a prison abolitionist. Regrettably, I cannot speak with such fervor about the remaining 700ish pages.

There are also footnotes and appendixes but I have only one wild and precious life.

A couple of years back I listened to an audiobook version of The Christmas Carol. It's in the public domain, so there are quite a few voice actors to pick from, but I quite enjoyed the narration by Tim Curry, and that's what I might recommend before the Pickwick Papers.
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Year of Wonder, by Clemency Burton-Hill

12/16/2023

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Cover art for Year of Wonder, by Clemency Burton-Hill. There's a dark background with lots of music notes and the silhouette of a violin, or maybe a viola, not sure, I'm a brass player myself.Picture
Since January 1, I've been a mini-chapter a day from Year of Wonder, featuring a piece of classical music and an essay.

It's an accessible book for people who don't know a lot about classical music. I was a serious music student in my youth, so I know quite a lot actually, but many of the pieces and composers were unfamiliar to me. Rather than formally surveying the major works, Clemency Burton-Hill takes an organic approach, showcasing lots of lesser-known and contemporary composers. This is less Classical Music 101 and more Let's Do Shots and Listen to Some Cool Shit.

The coolest thing I learned is that Beethoven's music has been sent into space to represent the sounds of the people of earth, should any extra-terrestrials find it: String quartet no. 13 in B flat major, op. 130, 5: Cavatina: Adagio molto espressivo. It's among my favorite pieces of music. Give it a little listen if you're inclined.


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December 09th, 2023

12/9/2023

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PictureCover art for Into the Riverlands, featuring dark purples and blues and a neon colored wild pig with glowing eyes
I talked about Nghi Vo's fantasy series The Singing Hills Cycle a few months ago. The books follow a cleric named Chih, whose religious order focuses more on history than faith. In this third entry, Into the Riverlands, Chih is once again traveling the land, looking for stories to collect. If you haven't read the first two, that's fine. Each novella stands independently.

Vo's prose style is quite good, and her storytelling is masterful. You don't know the details of the plot, going in, but you recognize right away that you're in for a good story. It's a blend of adventure and magic with a setting that recalls the hinterlands of Imperial China, only gayer. Vo's characters express a variety of genders and sexual orientations. And while there are lots of sections with fast action and tense battles with bad guys, the book has a contemplative feel. By which I mean I cried several times.
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The Midnight Kingdom, by Jared Yates Sexton

12/2/2023

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Cover art for The Midnight Kingdom: A History of Power, Paranoia, and the Coming Crisis, which features two photographs. The photograph along the top shows police trying to crack down on a protest. The photograph along the bottom shows the United States capitol building all lit up in a harsh glare.Picture
I picked up Jared Yates Sexton's The Midnight Kingdom not knowing what it was about, but trusting I'd enjoy it based on the author's previous book The Man They Wanted Me to Be, a memoir about masculinity in America.

This one is a history book that helps explain the interesting times we are living in. Some of it is religious history, looking at the origins of Christianity all the way through to contemporary conservative evangelical beliefs. Some of it is a history of race, racism, and white supremacy. And a great deal of it is about the history of capitalism, with a focus on neoliberalism there toward the end.

The Midnight Kingdom is history popcorn if you have progressive politics. If you aren't out here on the lefty side of things, you'll probably hate this book, sorry. And while many of the ideas were familiar to me, I was grateful to have a cohesive narrative laying out the story of how we've reached a point in history that feels, to me anyway, fragile.

I can't pretend this book made me feel better, haha no, humanity keeps repeating the same goddam mistakes only now we've got AI and Elon Musk is the most powerful person in the world, this is exceedingly not good. Also there's climate change.

But I appreciate being better informed. That's something, right? That is still worth something
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    Book talks

    When Covid first hit, I started doing book talks on social media as a way to keep in touch with people. I never got out of the habit. I don't discuss books by my clients, and if I don't like a book, I won't discuss it at all. While I will sometimes focus on craft or offer gentle critical perspectives, as a matter of professional courtesy, I don't trash writers. Unless they're dead. Then the gloves come off.

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