It may be a couple weeks into January, but I still am motivated to review what I read last year. I counted 69 books - just added a few I read while researching my paper on Wendell Berry's poetry - just barely down from last year's 70. And I did not include literary journals or magazines like Plough that I subscribed to last year. I only skimmmed a local lit journal - Bat City Review and a children's local publication - but I really love Plough. I'm still reading my winter edition. It is only a quarterly, but a bargain at $18 a year, and I love the topics, the writing, the poetry, the photos. I'm not sure if a subscription supports the work of the Bruderhof, but it is worthwhile work.
But I'll shelf that thought and move on to an accounting of my reading hours.
This year I read:
Nonfiction: 14 not counting spiritual books, but counting collections of essays
Favorite: A Continuous Harmony. This early collection of Wendell Berry's essays focuses on connections between literary criticism and social commentary. I enjoyed reading Juneteenth by Annette Gordon-Reed for its local history and the author's honest assessment of her home state. She can accommodate the complex condition of loving a place and disapproving of some of its history. I've only just started to learn more about our local area - which makes me think I should include the books about Walking Austin and 60 Trails Within 60 Miles of San Antonia and Austin a friend gave me as a going away present. I didn't read them straight through, but I have read through all of the first, and most of the second, looking for places to explore. (just boosted my number...) I also liked The Hidden Life of Trees and the Post secular religious fiction for teens book, as well as WSJ children's lit specialist Mary Gurdon's The Enchanted Hour, about reading aloud.
Ficton: 25
Favorite: Busman's Holiday and The Squire. Things Fall Apart. Jayber Crow. I also was surprised at how much I enjoyed reading Octavia Butler's Wild Blood. I read more fast fiction this year, like Liane Moriarity books and Malibu Rising, which are imminently entertaining but like junk food. Yum. Serious fiction reading was Elena Ferrante - I never did get around to reading Bleak House or any real classics this year. The Great Believers about the outbreak of AIDS in Chicago was also really good - well written, interesting, engaging.
Poetry Collections: 7
Fav: New Collected Poems or Blue Horses. Berry and Oliver are easy poets to read. I did like a couple of the poems in the Bat City Review, but many were unintelligible. I read some of Sally Thomas's Motherland, and loved what I read, but did not finish it, so not counting it toward my total. I also enjoyed a number of W. S. Merwin's and Galway Kinnell's poems, but I didn't spend a log of time with them.
Children's Chapter Books: 12
Winner: The Best Christmas Pageant Ever. Always fun to read, even the 4th or 5th time around. Bobbsey Twin books, Penderwicks, and Narnia. See below. I feel like I may have forgotten some titles here - did we read Cupcake Cousins this year? Did I forget them because they were forgettable? I also enjoyed Randa Abdel Fattah's two books about a Muslim girl in Australia. Interesting topical reads.
Spiritual reading: 9
Best of the bunch: This is a tough call. I thought I would like Acedia and Me better. Barking to the Choir was very similar to Fr. Boyle's first book. I was fascinated by the Enneagram book, and I finally read a Richard Rohr book, but this category needs an uplift next year.
Classics: 4 Achebe, Sayers, St Francis de Sales, Bagnold?, and 3 Narnia books - 3 Bobbsey Twins
Rereads: Children's lit series: The Penderwicks, The Bobbsey Twins, and Narnia books - which I have loved reading with our second grader. She loved the first two Penderwicks, but we paused after book 3. I know what comes in Book 5, when the sisters move away, and I know it will make her cry. I'll let her read those on her own. The Bobbsey Twins have been fun to read for the nostalgia factor, but they may be quietly removed from the shelves of many libraries for their portrayal of Dinah and Sam, the black couple who take care of the Bobbseys' house and gardens. For instance, Dinah is compelled to spend a week with the Bobbseys aboard their new houseboat in order to cook for them even though she doesn't want to go because she gets seasick. I couldn't help wondering how big this houseboat was that it had room for a family of six and their cook.
On the other hand, the seven year old began to lose interest in the Narnia books after the Magician's Nephew and The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. We read The Voyage of the Dawn Treader and Prince Caspian, but I also was ready for a break after those four. I was not an enormous Narnia fan as a child, either, I think because the later books are not as charming as the first.
I totally forgot Things Fall Apart. I think I confused it with another book because I was thinking it was a play. Maybe I confused it with something by Wole Soyinka, whom I read for the same modern lit class in college? At any rate, in comparison with the new book by Nigerian author Abbi Dare, The Girl with the Louding Voice, Achebe's writing shines brighter. Dare's book was a good read - entertaining and thoughtful, but it seemed a little like magical realism that this girl would continue to have such good luck, whereas in Things Fall Apart, the good fortune of Okonkwo at the beginning of the book is obviously doomed. Is it personal taste/outlook that I find it harder to believe the book about good fortune? Achebe is obviously a master storyteller, also. His choice of details and dialogue are complete enough to impact readers' imaginations with a movie like depiction of pre-colonial life, but spare enough to convey a sense of loss and longing.
I have enjoyed my book clubs for introducing me to new books - hoping to keep up with some of the Book Riot Challenge again this year to keep up with my San Diego group virtually, but some of the challenges don't appeal to me at all and would require some effort to find. But I do appreciate the challenge to read outside of my comfort box.
Right now I am finishing Tish Warren's Liturgy of the Ordinary and have to finish Lab Girl, which I started months ago. Warren is writer in residence at an Episcopal church in south Austin, which I didn't know when I picked up the book in a little Free Library after seeing it recommended on the internet. This city is home to a fair share of creative people.
Time to run! More to come!
