02 January 2013 @ 05:37 pm
Big Book List 2012  
Well it’s that time of year again when we get to review things. First up for me is always what books I’ve read. I didn’t get through as many in 2012 as I have in pervious years, but then I knew that wasn’t going to happen. Goodreads – which is a fun place – tells me that I managed 45. Here they are, grouped how much I enjoyed them rather than just a random list, and if you want any information on any of them or want to chat about them, fire away! Books are love.

Fantastic = the best of the best. The ones that I felt the urge to tell everyone bout, multiple times, including strangers on the bus. The ones that I bought other people because I had to share. The ones that I really, really enjoyed.
Great = the best of the rest. Books that I would reread, or lodged themselves in my head so thoroughly that rereading might be redundant.
Good = books that I enjoyed, but since book-lovers can't afford everything these ones you could save your money on and find them in the library.
Okay = books are books and therefore wonderful, but I can't help feeling that these ones could have been better.
The Bottom of the Pile = well if you have nothing else to read

Fantastic

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
Deathless by Catherinne M. Valente
Thirteen by Kelley Armstrong (last in series)
The Usual Rules by Joyce Maynard
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer
Black Widow: The Name of the Rose by Liu and Acuna (graphic novel)

Great

Uglies by Scott Westerfeld (first of series)
Whispers Under Ground by Ben Aaronovitch (third of series)
Does My Head Look Big in This? by Randa Abdel-Fattah
Dear Zoe by Philip Beard
Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O’Brien
Divergent by Veronica Roth (first of series)
Insurgent by Veronica Roth (second of series)
Warbreaker by Brandon Sanderson
The Mouse That Roared by Leonard Wibberley
A Storm of Swords: Steel and Snow by George RR Martin (fourth of series)
Selected Poems by Simon Armitage (poetry)
Rapture by Carol Ann Duffy (poetry)
Black Widow: The Itsy-Bitsy Spider by Grayson, Rucka, and Jones (graphic novel)
Under the Big Top: A Season with the Circus by Bruce Feiler (non-fiction)

Good

The Magic Toyshop by Angela Carter
Team Human by Sarah Rees Brennan and Justine Larbalestier
Ultraviolet by R. J. Anderson
Guantanamo Boy by Anna Perera
Love is the Higher Law by David Levithan
The Calling by Kelley Armstrong (second in trilogy)
The Hunter and The Hunted by Kelley Armstrong
Of Mutability by Jo Shapcott (poetry)
Circus Mania! by Douglas McPherson (non-fiction)
Black Orchid by Gaiman and McKean (graphic novel)
Avengers: The Intiative (1) Basic Training by Scott and Caselli (graphic novel)
Avengers: The Initiative (2) Killed In Action by Scott and Caselli (graphic novel)

Okay

Chocky by John Wyndham
The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner
Obernewtyn by Isobelle Carmody (first of series)
Bullyville by Francine Prose
Children of the Dust by Louise Lawrence
We All Fall Down by Eric Walters
After The Bomb by Gloria D Milkowitz
The Last War by Martyn Godfrey
X Men Origins by Sean McKeever et al (graphic novel)
X Men Origins II by Stuart Moore et al (graphic novel)

The Bottom of the Pile

If Winter Comes by Lynn Hall
Avengers: Road to Marvel’s Avengers by Peter David et al (graphic novel)

Previous Big Book Lists: 2011, 2010, and 2009.

I’m not sure what the big book releases of 2013 are going to be, but I’m keeping an eye out for: The Rising by Kelley Armstrong, which is the last book in a YA trilogy; the first book in Kelley Armstrong’s new series; the third (and final) Divergent book by Veronica Roth; the third (and final) Justin Cronin and Patrick Rothfuss books (although I think those will be a while coming); and I believe Neil Gaiman has a new novel on the way.

I got Dodger by Terry Pratchett for Christmas and after reading Scott Westerfeld’s Uglies I hunted down the rest of that series in a discount bookstore, so those are currently at the top of my to-read pile. What are everyone else’s to-read lists looking like?
 
 
feeling: thoughtful
 
 
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http://lar_laughs.livejournal.com/: Reading - whenever wherever[identity profile] lar_laughs.livejournal.com on January 7th, 2013 03:42 am (UTC)
I had several friends who were older than me and I helped them write their English papers (in the good "I've got a way with words and can help explain the idea to you" way and not the way that would have gotten me kicked out of school) so I'd also read most of the books early. This one friend of mine did a paper on the significance of colors in The Great Gatsby and I became this HUGE FAN of the book. So much so that I was pressuring my other friends to read it. I think I even got my little sister to read it... and I can't force her to do anything!

For extra credit in a history class, I read The Jungle by Upton Sinclair. Have you ever read that book? DON'T. It turned me off processed meat (and forced labor, mind you) for a good few years.

I've never had much good to say about Dickens. He is very heavy and plodding! I don't even like to watch movies from his books! I'm more of a Jane Austen fan. I like a lot of the war writers from the 20s. I'm a huge CS Lewis and Louisa May Alcott fan. I'm going to attempt more books by people like Henry James and Nathaniel Hawthorne just because I've wanted to for awhile but haven't had them in front of me. I need to FINISH Dracula and read Frankenstein. Really, I'm not a classics girl!

You were so lucky to have a cool librarian! Ours was this old man (even then and he is STILL old) who was weird! In a bad way. In a way that he shouldn't have been around children! Time has proven me more right than I wish I was. I didn't spend as much time in the library as I wish I had. I was more of a hallway girl! Oh! And I took a full year of typing! Just because I have this thing about typewriters (we had a room of half typewriters and half computers) and loved getting to use them. I did yearbook starting when I was junior high and so did that in high school which also put me on the newspaper staff (we were a smallish high school and that staff did both) but I'm NOT a journalist so wrote a bunch of "witty" pieces that were as close to stand-up comedy as I ever got. *grins*

*tries the handshake and ends up getting all twisted around* I'm going to have to practice!

I think books are the most relaxing thing on the planet. They sit there, on the shelf, and never change. Your clothes can not fit or rip and you have to throw them away and get new ones. Your computer is ALWAYS changing with new screens and new places to go. But the books are FOREVER. They say, "Come visit when you can. I'm here whenever you need me. I'll never change. You can always depend on me."

I love books so much!
inkvoices: girl reading[personal profile] inkvoices on January 7th, 2013 06:07 pm (UTC)
I haven't read The Great Gatsby or The Jungle, Dickens, as I said, is not my friend, but I've liked Jane Austen and Louisa May Alcott well enough, and CS Lewis was a childhood staple. Over the last few years I've tried to read more...awardy? type books, so The Shipping News, The Color Purple, One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, and I've found that they're more my kind of 'classics' :)

Our librarian was an ex-punk rocker, or at least ex as far as fashion went lol, great sense of humour, really encouraging, could be stict, but fantastic lady. We had creepy like that teachers though *sigh*. I've always wanted to play with a typewriter! But I know that I'd get really frustrated without a backspace - I go too fast and editing is my friend *grins*. I was on the yearbook group in sixth form college, but it wasn't anything like the uni yearbooks we got or the kind of thing I think you do in the US. Mostly it was a group of us that were friends hanging out eating m&ms and chasing people for their photographs. Fun times.

I have nothing except BOOKS <3