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Jackie
3:13 pm, Dec 14, 2009 EST
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There were so many good books this year and I had time to read/listen. Here are just some of them:
Olive Kittridge by Elizabeth Strout: she's my new heroine! I like that swetaer scene. Who hasn't wanted to do something like that? Well, Olive not only thought about it, she did it!
Everything written by Karin Slaughter: I did her audio books and enjoyed every minute of them.
Them by Nathan McCall: race relations from different points of view, set in Atlanta (I used to live in Atlanta).
The Hemings of Monticello by Annete Gordon-Reed: while the subject remains controversial, there is so much social history in this book, insights that explain so much of what happened during the 1700s and early 1800s. James Hemings was a fascinating man and his relationship with Thomas Jefferson very complicated.
The English Major by Jim Harrison: I was ready to locate him on his travels and join him.
I'm So Happy For You by Lucinda Rosenfeld: chick lit for sure, but a great story on how jealousy plays into our friendships.
My Sister, My Love by Joyce Carol Oates: wow.
Lit by Mary Karr: what a life and I understood all those southern twists of phrase.
Little Bee by Chris Cleve: listen to the audio for the accent.
Exit Ghost by Philip Roth: his usual sex obsessions
Undress Me In the Temple of Heaven by Susan Gilman: a memoir of traveling China right as the country opened up for foreign travel. Being a true story kept me involved.
Finally, I have read all of your books, Laura and listened to all of them that are also on audio.
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brian stouder
(mail)
6:26 pm, Dec 14, 2009 EST
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OK - off the top of my head - and cheating a little (that is, great books that I may have read in '08 as well as '09, or whatever) -
The Looming Tower by Wright (can't recall his first name); I loved that book; very educational about our al Qaeda enemy, and Sammy bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri. In fact, one of the biggest nuggets I took away was the huge importance of the Egyptian Zawahiri; and the centrality of the Egyptian prisons to the birth of al Qaeda.
Assassin's Gate by....the guy from the New Yorker; very enlightening about our war effort in Iraq. Also, Strongest Tribe by Bing West, but Assassin's Gate is the better book.
Mellon by Carradine; fascinating book - and oddly enough it's quite timely, given our late financial crash. Mellon over-stayed his welcome as Secretary of the Treasury, and the Great Depression came on his watch, and tarnished him badly (plus, FDR went after him relentlessly, but that's another story). Plus - Mellon was almost as clueless about real women as Tiger Woods seems to be
Abraham Lincoln, A Life by Michael Burlingame; really, this counts for about 6 books, since the thing runs 1,600 pages (not counting endnotes). Full Disclosure: I'm only 1,100 pages through it - by my goodness, what a wonderful, wonderful book!
Giants by I don't know who, a sort of parallel biographical outline of the rise of Lincoln and Frederick Douglass; a quick read, and very good stuff. I learned in a footnote in that one that the slave driver that whipped Frederick Douglass, and who Douglass pounded on (a story in itself) owned a place on Maryland's Eastern Shore called Mount Misery that is now owned by (drum roll)...... Donald Rumsfeld!
We'll follow the rules and not mention the very very very best fiction books I read this year, except to say they were all by the same author, and two of them were signed!
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brian stouder
(mail)
9:44 pm, Dec 14, 2009 EST
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Well, in checking my faulty memory (and crowded bookshelf), I didn't have a single 2009 book on my list!
Lawrence Wright's great book was 2006 (I probably read it in '07); Assassin's Gate was written by George Packer and published in 2005 (is that possible??!); Strongest Tribe was published in 2008 (I probably got it for Christmas, '08); David Cannadine wrote the Mellon book, which was published in 2006 (!); John Stauffer published Giants in 2008 (probably another Christmas '08 book).
And what the hell, let's add three more 2008 titles I really enjoyed - Allen Guelzo's Lincoln & Douglas, about the 1858 Senatorial debates; James McPherson's sublime Tried by War, about President Lincoln's conduct of the war - which features my favorite picture of Lincoln on the cover (buttressing my belief that covers DO sell books) and which I got the author to sign in Galesburg, IL last year; and Jon Meacham's superb 2008 book about Andy Jackson, American Lion (I think it won the Pulitzer this past year)
It looks like the only 2009 books that I loved the best are ones which we are proscribed from mentioning.
Oh, well! - call this list my faves of the oughts!
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Barbara the Poet
(mail)
5:15 pm, Dec 15, 2009 EST
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Yes, Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout was one of my faves too.
My other best books read this year:
Then We Came to the End, by Joshua Ferris
Stoner, by John Williams
The Painter of Battles, by Arturo Pérez-Reverte
Out Stealing Horses, by Per Petterson
In the Woods, by Tana French
Old Filth, by Jane Gardam
The Friends of Meager Fortune, by David Adams Richards
Maps and Legends, by Michael Chabon
More detail about all on my blog
www.bmorrison.com/blog
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Laura
9:25 pm, Dec 15, 2009 EST
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Diane,
I know Steve, so I'm biased in his favor. That said, as a former reporter, part of the thrill for me was following his trail. I'm not sure all readers would feel the same way, but I lived vicariously through what he did.
Karen, I think POETS ends on a (subdued, earned) hopeful note, if not a wildly optimistic one. I might not have been able to read if I didn't have a lot of distance from the newspaper world and I literally wept over the sections in which he described the "life of kings."
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Sarah
(web)
2:08 pm, Dec 17, 2009 EST
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As an unabashed Larsson fan who absolutely agrees that the writing can be clunky (and the translation snafus certainly don't help - Steve Murray is an excellent translator, but there was trickery afoot in the line editing, to understate) I think the main reason the Millenium Trilogy has sold in the millions is exactly the same reason Stephen King's books have sold in the multi-millions: characters that, despite being of "stock" variety, you care about because it is patently obvious how much the writer cares about them.
In other words: both guys love, love, love to write, and it shows, even through clunky translations, expository infodumps, and propensity towards cliche. Also, catharsis: the trial scene in book #3 is one of the most pure experience of outrage turning into redemption I've read in a long while.
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