Sunday, December 28, 2008

65 Books

I should start off by admitting that I didn't reach any of my reading goals this year. I'm not telling what they were, I can't face the shame of naming my failure. The drop in my reading clearly coincides with starting the second job: I've only read 15 books since the end of August. 8am-8pm work days will do that to a reading schedule. Also, wedding planning will do that. Geesh. I am not listing the multitudes of wedding books I consulted, but I decided to list a couple that really helped in planning the ceremony, which I read cover-to-cover at least twice. I am also not listing the hundreds of picture books I've read for work, but maybe will come up with a best-of post for that, because there were some really great ones.

My reading was kind of all over the place this year. I read a lot of kids books in attempt to get up to date for work. It was fun and light, but in general, I've noticed that many, many kids books have an interesting premise but no follow-through. Please let me know if you have a suggestion in this department. Nothing I read this year even came close to the Phillip Pulman books. I also read a lot of big, fat books. And I was able, for the first time, to read many books released in 2007-2008. The best were probably Tree of Smoke or The Good Thief.



Books Read in 2008

  1. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay - Michael Chabon

  2. Macbeth - Shakespeare


  3. Revolutionary Road - Richard Yates


  4. A River Runs Through It - Norman Maclean


  5. I Do: A Guide to Creating Your Own Unique Wedding Ceremony - Sidney Barbara Metrick


  6. Wedding Words: Vows - Jennifer Cegielski


  7. 100 Love Sonnets - Pablo Neruda


  8. Middlemarch - George Eliot


  9. Othello - Shakespeare


  10. Winesburg, Ohio - Sherwood Anderson


  11. Tender at the Bone - Ruth Reichl


  12. Falconer - John Cheever


  13. Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH - Robert C. O'Brien


  14. Cold Comfort Farm - Stella Gibbons


  15. Their Eyes Were Watching God - Zora Neale Hurston


  16. If On a Winter's Night a Traveller - Italo Calvino


  17. Grendel - John Gardener


  18. The Sound and the Fury - William Faulkner


  19. The Gastronomical Me - MFK Fisher


  20. The Heart of the Matter - Graham Greene


  21. Bright Lights, Big City - Jay McInerney


  22. On Writing - Eudora Welty


  23. The Master and Margarita - Mikhail Bulgakov


  24. Love Medicine - Louise Erdrich


  25. Mrs. Dalloway - Virginia Woolf


  26. King Lear - Shakespeare


  27. The Crying of Lot 49 - Thomas Pynchon


  28. The House of Widows - Askold Melnyczuk


  29. Moby Dick - Herman Melville


  30. Tree of Smoke - Denis Johnson


  31. In Watermelon Sugar - Richard Brautigan


  32. The Shawl - Cynthia Ozick


  33. The Book of Laughter and Forgetting - Milan Kundera


  34. The Red Pony - John Steinbeck


  35. Coriolanus - Shakespeare


  36. The Color Purple - Alice Walker


  37. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - James Joyce


  38. In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto - Michael Pollan


  39. Jesus' Son - Denis Johnson


  40. Appetite for Life: The Biography of Julia Child - Noël Riley Fitch


  41. Summer - Edith Wharton


  42. The Days of Abandonment - Elena Ferrante


  43. I Capture the Castle - Dodie Smith


  44. Middlesex - Jeffery Eugenides


  45. Scoop - Evelyn Waugh


  46. Setting Free the Bears - John Irving


  47. Twilight - Stephenie Meyer


  48. The Amulet of Samarkand - Jonathan Stroud


  49. Hamlet - Shakespeare


  50. The Lightning Thief - Rick Riordan


  51. Lonesome Dove - Larry McMurtry


  52. From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler - E.L. Konigsburg


  53. The Story of Edgar Sawtelle - David Wroblewski


  54. Timon of Athens - Shakespeare


  55. The Awakening - Kate Chopin


  56. Princess Academy - Shannon Hale


  57. The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks - E. Lockhart


  58. Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte


  59. Inkheart - Cornelia Funke

  60. The Good Thief - Hannah Tinti

  61. The Year of Magical Thinking - Joan Didion

  62. Little Women - Louisa May Alcott

  63. The Anger of Aubergines - Bulbul Sharma


  64. Beware of God - Shalom Auslander

65. Consider the Oyster - MFK Fisher





Stats:
Books over 500 pages: 11

Children's Novels: 11

non-fiction: 9


Top 5 Books Read in 2008:

5. Bright Lights, Big City - I just really liked this book. It was so funny and heartbreaking. I didn't really expect much from it going in, but it just thrilled me.


4. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay - Chabon at the top of his game. Aaron didn't like this as much as I did, for some reason. I think it's brilliant. There were moments (the airplane/dog) when I just fell to pieces over this book.

3. The Sound and the Fury - This is the better of the top three, but the other two just left me smitten the way a book you don't know much about does to you. I knew this would be good going in and it didn't disappoint. Don't let Faulkner scare you, there is nothing to be afraid of.

2. The Master and Margarita - I just loved the humor in it. UMassians, if you even exist in the world anymore, do not pass up the chance to take a class with it's translator, Prof. Burgen in the Russian dept. Umass authorities: think twice before not allowing someone to get english credit for spending a semester reading Tolstoy with this gifted translator like you did to me. I couldn't justify spending so much time and effort - literally thousands of pages - on one class that wouldn't count towards my major and it is one of the things I really regret about college, especially after reading this book.

1. Cold Comfort Farm - I think I read this whole book with a smile on my face. It isn't the best written on the list. I won't even think about the ending as I'm giving it the #1 slot, but there was just something about this book that I really, really loved. It was so funny and sweet.


Honorable Mention: Jesus' Son. It probably should be #1, it is brilliantly written. Denis Johnson feels like a real writer in our time.



A Word about MFK Fisher: It isn't fair to rank her, because her work wasn't read for the same reasons as novels, etc. She is one of the best writers I've come across in recent years. Completely passionate about food, completely pretentious, extremely witty and wise. She is the reason I want to study food writing.

Bottom 5 Books Read in 2008:



5. Middlemarch - Boring.

4. Moby Dick - Wasted precious hours of my life. This is the only time I ever felt that a Reader's Digest Condensed may have been a better idea. It just went on and on. Hardly any of it was actually story, it was mostly antiquated scientific info on whales and other sea mammals. It felt so choppy and so, so long. I read this during the week of my wedding. Why?

3. The Story of Edgar Sawtelle - the first 150 pages were really well done. After that, it got strange and weird and transparent.

2. Can't think of one that really got under my skin enough to list, but this needs to be #1:

1. Twilight - This book sucked big time. What terrible writing. I read it for work, in attempt to get hip to what the kids are reading these days (I feel old). I keep telling myself that I should calm down, that it's written for teenagers. But then I think that I wouldn't have been so easily fooled as a teen reader. Why are kids reading such crappy books? The movie was just as bad. It was cringe-worthy. Saw that for work, too, and seriously eyed the book I had in my handbag the whole time. Kids, read something better.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Chickens and Peppermint Ribbons

Aaron and I recently re-wallpapered the kitchen. The old people that lived here before us had really boring taste (as you can tell from the living room drapes that we still haven't taken down that are featured in many pictures). Here is the before picture of the kitchen wallpaper:






Blah. Totally not me. I always wanted a red kitchen. Red and white. I didn't have a picture in my mind of what I wanted or how exactly it would come together, but I've been slowly accumulating red items for about 10 years (I was the 16 year old that used her Christmas money to buy a red kitchen clock instead of whatever 16 year olds buy). And so, after years of apartment leases that didn't allow painting, when we bought the house I was going to finally do things my way. And I wanted my red kitchen!







As I was trying to decide on how we should do it, I kept thinking Candy Store. Something fun and juicy. We were only re-papering one wall, the others are painted a flat white, so I could go a little wild without creating a monster.


I think Aaron and I turned into monsters trying to hang the wallpaper, though. It sucked big time. We both agreed that we will never do it again. Trying to time everything just right and align everything was frustrating and by the end we weren't speaking to each other. But now it's up, it's cheery, we're happy.

It looks kind of Christmasy. It's like pretty wrapping paper.



We got some beautiful ribbon candy in the mail -- it's so nice looking that I don't want to eat it. I just like putting it in the chicken by the polka dots, and lifting the lid.


Thursday, December 4, 2008

Tree


Confession time: We put our tree up well before Thanksgiving. I was feeling low so Aaron took me to a tree farm. Had I known we were going to have a photo-op, I might have taken a shower and changed out of sweatpants. But I thought we were going to Walmart, and the outfit seemed about right for that kind of shamefulness. Yes, Aaron is wearing two kinds of flannel!

I think we picked a good one. There are a few holes, but you can't really see them because we put them toward the back. We didn't go for the 1/2 room model like last year because, for the first time in my adult life, I have a couch in the living room. We've used futons and day beds and lawn chairs long enough! I am officially an adult. And the cat officially has a new scratching post. Ugh. She's like spiderman: she'll claw her way all the way across the back of it in seconds. I recall similar maneuvers on the box spring Brennan had resting against the wall when we stayed with him when she was a kitten. And Meghan's curtains! Gah. It was embarrassing because I was like "oh, don't worry, she's really well behaved." Two seconds later, she's climbing the walls. We've resorted to the spray bottle. Elf is more afraid of it than she is.

Anyway, this is about the Christmas tree. I had to get in the right mood to decorate it, so I put on a silly sweater, made some hot chocolate, popped some popcorn, and put on the Charlie Brown Christmas album. And all was merry.


We couldn't get Matilda to sit with us
I like putting the lights on first thing in the morning, having a cup of coffee and reading Little Women. You can't beat that.



Now it's December and I don't have to hide my tree. It is open season for the holidays. Bring it.