December books

Saturday, 1 January 2011 13:48
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (hermione hearts books)
[personal profile] usuallyhats
Happy New Year, everyone! I will repeat what I said on twitter: may all your endeavours prosper and your beards never grow grey. ♥ This year I resolve to be a little braver, kinder and happier than I was last year, and also to clean the marzipan off my laptop's touch pad.

Here are the books I read in December! I sort of ran out of steam with writing about them, so some comments are more desultory than others.

1. The Graveyard Book - Neil Gaiman I enjoyed this a fair bit, but I thought it was a little marred by one aspect of the ending: (skip) Scarlet and her mother (ie half the female characters) getting memory wiped because they "couldn't deal" with the knowledge. NO THANK YOU.

2. Doctor Who: The Janus Conjunction - Trevor Baxendale This was pretty good, very tense and with good Doctor characterisation, but it was also a little more gruesome than I really liked, and pretty macho, too: only one female character (other than Sam) who basically does everything that the one woman does in this sort of book.

3. Have His Carcase - Dorothy L. Sayers I really loved this, especially the tone of the ending (I must admit my eyes glazed over in the codebreaking bit; this is more me than it, though). It's another one I'd heard on the radio but couldn't quite remember the details of, so there were a lot of fun "oh, yes, I remember where this is going!" moments.

4. The Far Side of the World - Patrick O'Brian I feel like I'm hitting a really strong patch with this series; they're all good but this one was really excellent.

5. Delusions of Gender - Cordelia Fine Highly recommended: a fantastic read, if slightly terrifying at times. (I would have liked a little more investigation of the binary idea of gender itself, though.)

6. Bernice Summerfield: Parallel Lives I always feel that I am half a step behind with the Benny series, like there's parts of the puzzle I'm missing. That being said, this was a particularly good one, I thought. The different tones of the three novellas and the linking narrative complemented each other without clashing, which was impressive.

7. The Siege of Krishnapur - J.G. Farrell Rather a grim read for Christmas day, but still a great book.

8. I Shall Wear Midnight - Terry Pratchett ♥! Oh, this was just wonderful: it tied up the threads of the previous Tiffany books beautifully, had some lovely tie-ins to the wider Discworld, and had so many things that made me happy: Preston the trainee guard! (skip) Letitia turning out to be a witch herself and bonding with Tiffany! The fact that witchcraft is something Tiffany's worked at, not something that comes naturally to her! Wise, funny, optimistic, just great.

9. Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury [reread] Really great, powerful book, though personally I would have prefered it to be a little less male-centric: not even George Eliot made it into the list of "authors we must preserve", let alone any other women.

10. Murder Must Advertise - Dorothy L. Sayers Quickly became one of my favourites - I really loved all the advertising stuff, and also the ending was really well handled too: (skip) I love that there was no moustache-twirling Bad Guy, that we (and Wimsey) could really sympathise with Tallboy, despite what he'd done.

11. The Raw Shark Texts - Steven Hall Hugely entertaining! Sets up some great concepts and just romps right through them, taking some great characters along for the ride. I was not entirely pleased with the ending, but I think that's inevitable in this sort of book.

12. Ash - Malinda Lo I've been looking forward to this one for ages, and I was not disappointed: a really lovely retelling of Cinderella, and a great last book of the year.

Total number of books read in 2010: 103, or possibly 106, or 114, depending on how you count A Dance to the Music of Time. (ETA: wait, I read the fourth About Time book this year too! That absolutely counts. So make that 104, 106 or 115 books this year. :D)

Total number of books read so far in 2011: 1. It was Geraldine MacCaughrean's The White Darkness, and I recommended it: a tough, strange, involving, moving, wonderful book.

Date: 1 Jan 2011 14:20 (UTC)
ext_3965: (Books: Wherever They Burn Books - Heine)
From: [identity profile] persiflage-1.livejournal.com
Oh The White Darkness is absolutely BRILLIANT!! I read it when it first came out and was awed...

I still haven't read "Midnight" - I was going to re-read the whole Tiffany series but work's constrained my reading time (well, that and tons of fic-related research!) so um I haven't - yet!

Date: 1 Jan 2011 16:16 (UTC)
ext_3965: (Books: I Am a Part of All I Have Ever Re)
From: [identity profile] persiflage-1.livejournal.com
I'm a huge fan of GM anyway - but The White Darkness is one of her best books so far...

I think I might abandon the attempt to re-read Tiffany and just read Midnight...

Date: 2 Jan 2011 18:31 (UTC)
ext_3965: (Books: My Best Friends Dead 200 Years)
From: [identity profile] persiflage-1.livejournal.com
I haven't heard of 'Comfort Herself' - and haven't read PP in Scarlet. But I highly recommend The Stones are Hatching, The Kite Rider and A Pack of Lies as being very good!

Date: 1 Jan 2011 20:30 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zurcherart.livejournal.com
I'll have to look up a few of the book son your list.

I did read the Raw Shark Texts a few months ago and agree with you. Great romp ... disappointing end ... but really what can you expect. :)

Date: 1 Jan 2011 22:20 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vilakins.livejournal.com
I'm on the waiting list for Midnight (and am reading Cryoburn after months on its list, yay). I'm glad to hear it's good, because the football one disappointed me (and I like football). I've enjoyed all the Tiffany books though; not a dud among them.

I'm also working my way through the Aubrey & Maturin books which I bought cheap as an entire collection in a garage sale, and I'm loving them too. I haven't got as far as you yet though, but I loved the film.

Date: 2 Jan 2011 22:43 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vilakins.livejournal.com
Very much worth the wait, but you have to read the Vorkosigan books in order as they do refer back to previous ones, or at least assume you know all the characters. I started with the two about his parents (also awesome people) and went from there. They're all brilliant characters, esp Miles, who change and evolve throughout the series.

It's the same with the Aubrey & Maturin books; you do need to read them in order. I was so lucky to find the complete set at a garage sale, otherwise I'd be borrowing them from the library one-by-one as I did with the Vorkosigan books. I've always got something to read now. :-)

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