Thursday, December 31, 2020

2020 Reading List

 December, 2020

  1. Murder on the Links -- NEW93
  2. Driving Force --  Re-read
  3. Enquiry -- Re-read
  4. Even Money -- Re-read
  5. The French Powder Mystery -- NEW94
  6. *Tied Up in Tinsel -- NEW95
  7. False Colours -- Re-read
  8. A Far Country --  Re-read
  9. *The Phantom Toolbooth -- Re-read
  10. Faro's Daughter -- Re-read
  11. *Maimonides and Medieval Jewish Philosophy -- NEW96
  12. Flying Finish -- Re-read
  13. Guards, Guards -- Re-read
  14. *An English Murder -- Re-read
  15. High Stakes -- Re-read
  16. The Foundling -- Re-read
  17. *Hogfather -- Re-read
  18. Frederica -- Re-read
*24 Festive Tasks read
 
MTD: Count 18 and Hours 187
 
YTD: 209 Books and 1977 Hours
2019:  217 Books and 1978 Hours

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Looking Forward to 2021

 
 
The year 2021 is going to be a good year for reading, or at least for my reading. 
 
As usual, I have no specific reading plan for the year. I will continue with the Agatha Christie read and with the BL games that I have been playing for the last few years. I hope to spend my 24 annual Audible credits wisely and well and I hope to once again break the 200 book barrier and maybe even .

The new Audible Plus Catalog of free reads will help. They have plenty of the kinds of  stories that I like to read but don't want to spend credits on. It is like having a library card but with more choices.
 
This might be the year that I finally read all three volumes of Master of the Senate and get to the last two volumes of the the Mark Twain Autobiography. There will also be more Discworld, more Inspector Ian Rutledge, more Walt Longmire and a few other newer series that I stumbled into this past year. And I will continue to avoid horror, dystopia, dysfunctional families, self-help, vampires, zombies,  graphic violence and all the other stuff that is not my idea of an enjoyable read. Bring on the brain candy.

Nonetheless, for one who claims to have no reading plans for the coming year, I have been stocking up on titles found in the Audible sale piles and I have been hoarding them, waiting for the new year to dive into my newest acquisitions. Not including Plus Catalog titles, here is what is waiting for me...
 
The Map That Changed the World  By  cover artHeroes  By  cover artA Lady's Guide to Etiquette and Murder  By  cover artThe Mysterious Mr. Quin  By  cover artFoundryside  By  cover artTo the Land of Long Lost Friends  By  cover artBroken Homes  By  cover artA Test of Wills  By  cover artOn Her Majesty's Frightfully Secret Service  By  cover artSalt, Fat, Acid, Heat  By  cover artI Contain Multitudes  By  cover artThe Medici  By  cover artChurchill  By  cover artRocket Boys  By  cover artThe Blank Slate  By  cover artNudge  By  cover artThe Mote in God's Eye  By  cover artThe Lost Man  By  cover artWashington's End  By  cover artDeath in Damascus  By  cover art
The Curse of Braeburn Castle: Halloween Murders at a Scottish Castle  By  cover art

2020: A Bookish Year in Review

 

 

Reading-wise, it has been a delightful year. Read With Me: 5 Tips to Foster a Love for Reading | Edutopia
  • I played bookish games that forced me to read things I might not have otherwise chosen to read. 
  • I joined a group that is celebrating the 100th anniversary of the publication of Agatha Christie first mystery novel by reading all of her mysteries -- one a month over the next five years along with other Golden Age mystery writers. 
  • I found a new mystery series -- Inspector Ian Rutledge -- that I want to devour over the next few years. 
  • I have added a few more Terry Pratchett stories to my bookshelf (but alas, apparently not enough of them because now most of his titles are no longer available on AudibleUS).  
  • I challenged myself with some longer, more involved tomes and enjoyed every moment I spent immersed in them. I re-read first volume of Mark Twain's autobiography and look forward to reading the remaining two volumes. I indulged in yet another edition of Don Quixote simply because it was read by George Guidall and lucked into a fabulous translation by Edith Grossman.
  • In September, Audible introduced its Plus Catalog of free reads, which ostensibly turned Audible into a subscription lending library -- and made so many more books available to me. They might not be the best Audible has to offer but they are free and they are available without waiting and they will fill the hours of the days without me having to buy books that I might read only once. 
  • And, I have read at least a dozen new-to-me authors as I challenge myself to expand my reading horizon.
Yes, yes, it has been a fulfilling and delightfully bookish year.


How to read more effectively — Quartz at Work

 
The Stats
 
Books Read: 209
New titles: a record 97, due in part to Audible's new catalog of free titles
Audible Plus Catalog: 28 books
Books DNF: 5
Hours logged: 1977
Book Read in Bookish Games: 74


Top Five Reads of the Year

  1. The Years of Lyndon B. Johnson: The Passage of  Power by Robert Caro (read by George Guidal) Part of the multi-volume biography that Caro is still working.  As far as I am concerned this is one of the best biographies of the 20th century -- and I still have not read the entire thing; I still have to read the 3 volumes of Master of the Senate.
  2. Don Quixote by Miguel Cervantes (translated by Edith Grossman and read by George Guidall) perfect confluence of translator and reader. This is not the first time I have read DQ but it is the first time I have listened to the entire thing.
  3. The Inspector Ian Rutledge series by Charles Todd. I can't choose one over the other because I have enjoyed then all. Finding this series has been one of the highlights of my bookish year.
  4. The Hardest Job in the World: The American Presidency  by John Dickerson. Recommended by my son. Who got it right, who got it wrong and why. I think this one will go on the re-read pile for 2021.
  5. How to Behave Badly in Elizabethan England by Ruth Goodman. What a delightful romp. This book has it all: unacceptable language obscene, blasphemous and slanderous, telling gestures, social climbing, bad table manners, how to walk in period dress, cross-dressing, body parts and noises, STDs.

The Bottom of the Pile

  1. The Deep Blue Good-bye  by John D. MacDonald-- misogynistic, crass and outdated
  2. The Clockmaker's Daughter by Kate Morton -- just didn't do it for me
  3. Summer Lightning by P.G. Wodehouse -- not the book, the narrator -- unintelligible
  4. Nordic Tales -- the narrator completely sucked out any life this book might have had
  5. The Wars of the Roses  by Dan Jones -- it is not that Jones did a lousy job but more that I just don't have a enough grounding in English history to keep up with so many people who all have the same names.


Life's Too Short: The DNFs

  1. How to Hide an Empire --I got the point in the first chapter and wasn't interested in reading the supporting details
  2. War of the Roses -- I threw myself into the deep end; my lack of basics left confused and bored
  3. Summer Lightning by P.G. Wodehouse, but only because the narrator was unintelligible
  4. Meditations by Marcus Aurelius -- another one killed by the narrator
  5. Howards End by E.M. Forster -- I don't know what I was expecting but I just got bored with it.

The 20 for '20 Challenge

The idea here was to listen to 20 books over 20 hours each in 2020. I managed to complete 7 (3 of which were over 30 hours). I loved what I read but the problem was finding enough books that I was willing to invest that much time in reading. However, I will continue to look for investment-worthy titles in the future, such as finishing the Mark Twain and the LBJ stories.

      1. The Canterbury Tales by Chaucer
      2. Don Quixote by Cervantes, translated by Edith Grossman and read by George Guidall
      3. The Last Tribe by Brad Emanuel
      4. The Voyage of the Beagle by Charles Darwin
      5. The Autobiography of Mark Twain: Volume 1 (of 3)
      6. The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk
      7. The Passage of Power by Robert Caro

The Agatha Christie Centenary Celebration
 
Read in 2020:
Agatha Christie: Poirot Investigates, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, The Secret Adversary, Murder on the Links
Side-reads: The Girl in Blue (Wodehouse), The Circular Staircase (Roberts), The Chinese Orange Mystery (Queen), Thirteen Guests (Farjeon), Tied Up in Tinsel, An English Murder

New Authors in 2020
 
Some of whom I will return to and other of whom I won't...

Ngaio Marsh
Charles Todd (Inspector Ian Rutledge series),
Karen Menuhin (Heathcliff Lennox series)
John Dickerson
Ann Cleeves
Salman Rushdie
Ruth Goodman
Brad Manuel
Sofia Segovia
Cyril Hare
Jeffrey Farjeon
Kate Morton  
    
Cool book art – Tyson Adams

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

ACCC: December, 2020 Side Reads

In the run-off between two books tied for first place, the winner was Envious Casca (aka The Christmas Party) by Georgette Heyer. 

 

However, because of an on-going personal snit over the choice of narrator for the most recent re-issue of the GH mysteries -- all were read by the same utterly horrible narrator -- I chose not to read the winner, even if GH is among my favorite authors. I actually ended up reading two of the titles in the poll and may very well read a few more in the future.

Side-read:  Envious Casca  by Georgette Heyer 
Non-winners:  Tied up in Tinsel by Ngaio Marsh
Thou Shell of Death by Nicholas Blake,
An English Murder by Cyril Hare
Santa Klaus Murder by Mavis Doriel Hay
Night of Fear (Moray Dalton),
A Maigret Christmas (George Simenon) (sadly not much by Simenon on Audible)
Death Comes at Christmas (Gladys Mitchell)
 

The books in bold are on Audible and I have read the titles in color.